As Judge Judy would say, "Um is not an answer!"
Maybe your airline hasn't killed any "one" but it's killed more than one career.
After a few years of working for mesa, you're probably dead inside anyway.
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As Judge Judy would say, "Um is not an answer!"
Maybe your airline hasn't killed any "one" but it's killed more than one career.
Pretty good article, with lower than normal factual errors.
Odd that they didn't mention the Comair flight that took off the wrong runway in Lexington. Had the reporter researched that he would have found the NTSB ultimately pinned that accident on the pilot's non-safety-related conversation...90% of which occurred before the flight began.[/Qoute]
Thus why JO was able to get away with saying there were no fatalities.
Nice article but the public really doesn't care, they just want cheap tickets. It will take one (or more) major fiery crashes where the NTSB attributes the cause to fatigue and/or inexperience before anything changes.
Capt. Sasse got totally and completely smeared by the media and the USA Today following that accident. They made a mistake that was directly attributed to fatigue but all the media could talk about was them breaking sterile cockpit.
Something for us all to think about when that little birdie on our shoulder is telling us "Maybe we should just go to the hotel..."
That's because the media doesn't report news, they create news. They spin stories to dovetail with the issue they want to present. So instead of reporting on pilot fatigue (boring) they report on the immaturity and unprofessionalism of those darn kid puddle jumper pilots.
The real problem that should be addressed is the the airlines hiring 200-500tt hour pilots to fly airliners at the regionals. I would rather have an experienced tired pilot than an inexperienced low time fully awake pilot at the controls. JMHO
It's not a "regional" thing...AA in LIT ought to have proved that.Pilots aren't robots. Regionals suck. Leave now.
Low time drivers were hired in droves in the mid-60's, too.The real problem that should be addressed is the the airlines hiring 200-500tt hour pilots to fly airliners at the regionals. I would rather have an experienced tired pilot than an inexperienced low time fully awake pilot at the controls. JMHO
I loved the part about the Pinnacle flight being at an "unauthorizd" altitude. I used to work for Pinnacle, and there was nothing in the FOM at the time prohibiting flights at that altitude. Furthermore, they received a clearance from ATC to climb there.
Nothing unauthorized about it. Foolish, maybe, but certainly not unauthorized by any stretch.
You hit the nail on the head Mr. Inexperience. "they received a clearance from ATC...". So I guess if ATC says we are allowed to do something, I guess the aircraft must be capable. how f'ing dumb are you people?
You hit the nail on the head Mr. Inexperience. "they received a clearance from ATC...". So I guess if ATC says we are allowed to do something, I guess the aircraft must be capable. how f'ing dumb are you people?
You hit the nail on the head Mr. Inexperience. "they received a clearance from ATC...". So I guess if ATC says we are allowed to do something, I guess the aircraft must be capable. how f'ing dumb are you people?
I loved the part about the Pinnacle flight being at an "unauthorizd" altitude. I used to work for Pinnacle, and there was nothing in the FOM at the time prohibiting flights at that altitude. Furthermore, they received a clearance from ATC to climb there.
Nothing unauthorized about it. Foolish, maybe, but certainly not unauthorized by any stretch.
"It's safer to fly an airplane than it is to take a shower," said Jonathan Ornstein, chairman and CEO of Mesa Air Group, which operates regional airlines. "No fatalities last year. That speaks for itself."
Oh my God. That's the stupidest sh** I've ever heard. How does this guy take a shower? Standing on his fu***g head I assume.