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The Wolk Law FirmAttorneys Aviation Law Philadelphia
 

 

Big Brother is Watching ... Your Flight
The Dept. of Transportation is aware of every movement of every aircraft, including who is on the plane and it is availalbe to anyone with an Internet connection... [more]

As Close As It Gets
It’s Time For Us, The Passengers, To Take Control Of Aviation Security. The Northwest Airlines near terrorist disaster... [more] 

Repeat Lesson
Landing In Thunderstorms Is Dangerous. American Airlines learned yet again that attempting a landing in a thunderstorm... [more] 

Three Asleep In The Cockpit
The Captain, The First Officer, And The Department Of Homeland Security. All accidents and incidents have more than one cause... [more] 

Hudson River Tragedy
Same Old, Same Old - Inadequate Job by the FAA - Nine people dead and everyone is wondering how this could happen... [more] 

One Level Of Safety
An Elusive Goal For Commuter Airlines. There is only one level of safety. The problem is the experience level of the pilots... [more]  

Stop Faulting Crew
Stop Faulting the Flight Crew for the Crash of Colgan 3407! The flight crew was blameless for this crash and everyone investigating... [more]

Pilatus PC-12 Crash Stinks
Fourteen people killed in an aircraft that can only carry 10 has the stench of carelessness all over it. Most PC-12s can safely... [more] 

Why Turboprop Aircraft Shouldn’t Fly in Ice
The Continental 3407 crash reminds us of long-forgotten lessons. The reality is that large airplane manufacturers gave up... [more] 

Criminalization of Air Disasters
Nothing good comes of criminal prosecutions following air disasters. While such proceedings may satisfy the public’s zeal... [more] 

NASA Deep Sixes Important Safety Information
NASA spent $8,500,000 of our money to study critical safety failures in our aviation system; destroyed report... [more]

The Cure For Carburetor Ice
That Nobody In The Industry Wanted. Carburetor ice has been a problem since airplanes were first invented... [more] 

Change to Advisory Frequency Approved
All too often the pilot switches his primary radio to the advisory frequency without tuning in approach control on the second... [more]

De-Ice Or Anti-Ice
A Decision That Can Cost You Your Life. Aircraft wings and tails have forever been the collectors of enough ice to... [more] 

Illegal Double Engine Failure
NTSB Recommends More Pilot Training... [more] 

Integrity in Government?
How the Party System Has Run Amuck at the NTSB... [more] 

FAA Information Must Remain Public
The FAA in response to pressure from manufacturers has refused to divulge information provided both by the manufacturers... [more]

FAA Needs New Crew At The Top
It is time to overhaul the FAA from the top down, and bottom up... [more] 

NTSB Chairman Fails to Understand
Why Privacy Relating to Cockpit Voice Recorder Tapes Deters Safety, Rather Than Enhancing It... [more]

 
 

Commentaries :: General Commentaries

One Level Of Safety

An elusive goal for commuter airlines

There is only one level of safety. The problem is the experience level of the people who carry out that mission and the airplanes they must carry it out in.

There is no substitute for years in the cockpit and hours in make and model to ensure safety. A pilot can’t be worried that he doesn’t make enough to eat, put gas in his car, get his uniform cleaned or pay the rent if you want him to be clear headed enough to perform optimally. The salaries are too low, the benefits non-existent, the airplanes less than fully capable for the mission and still these kids do a great job. They make more takeoffs and landings in the worst weather and work the worst hours for the worst pay. They are motivated, enthusiastic and do their best to be safe. They are however for the most part youngsters and far less experienced than their big airline brothers.

Their airplanes still have outdated deicing systems but they are expected to fly in the worst icing. They commute to work because they can’t afford to live near their base and they are expected to perform at their highest level. Their dispatch is not to big airline standards and they are expected to deliver their passengers safely no matter what the delays, no matter what the weather and no matter how many legs they have flown in the soup.

Why is there surprise when one of them crashes?

What needs to happen is closer FAA oversight…heard that one before. They need a living wage and benefits. They need airplanes that are modern and safe in every respect i.e. no turboprops. They need the authority to cancel a flight without fear of retribution, read that getting fired, for doing so.

Continental Flight 3407 is an example of what’s wrong not with just commuters but with commercial aviation. They flew an airplane with boots that everyone knows do not work safely in many icing conditions and certainly those in existence that night. They were tired. They were not fully trained to understand the limitations of their aircraft, the limitations of its certification to fly in ice and what cues they would receive that the airplane was failing them and what to do about it. Maybe they should also have been told that if anything happens their company, the manufacturer, other pilots and the Government will turn on them and blame them for something for which they were blameless.

The problem with commuters isn’t their pilots, it’s the people who regulate them, run them and build the airplanes flown by them.

- Arthur Alan Wolk


 
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