Boris Badenov
Fortis Leader
Thanks Boris. I'll turn in my stripes today.
Oh for Christ's sake. Nevermind. I'm probably wrong anyway.
Thanks Boris. I'll turn in my stripes today.
Not a pilot, but I've seen more than one controller busted on failure to report due to the AME being associated professionally with the medical group that preformed the procedure. A simple records search, its not a HIPPA violation.
We need to be a bit compassionate, because guess what, sometimes things do get tougher than an individual can handle.
Granted I was not yet in the industry in 2001, I think the part about terrorism was a little overemphasized. Even though I am sure to comply with all security procedures in place, I can't say I think about the possibility of terrorism much.
I guess it's different for guys who weren't in the industry at the time. I've never really considered that before.
Consider that there are guys now who don't even remember when you could meet an arriving pax or friend right there at the gate, if you wanted to.
Not to mention, when you were a young aviation nerd, you could get into good areas of the terminal to watch airplanes. Maybe YOU weren't, but I was. Still am. I miss that as well.
One of my earliest memories is watching my father board an old turboprop at CAK from the observation deck on top of the terminal. The observation deck was long ago closed down (I assume for security reasons), but you can still see the guard rail up there on the old part of the terminal. Nowadays you can't even stop your car on a boundary road and snap pictures of approaching airliners without attracting the attention of an airport cop.![]()
I agree with Boris 100% I think the faa is crazy to let people take meds to fly. A pilot cannot take a pill that makes him or her tired but it is ok totake mood altering medications?
I have seen what happens when pilots takes these meds to fly. It isn't pretty.
Get help. Don't take pills to make you emotionaly feel better and then fly an airplane. I can't believe this is even open for discussion.
I don't think it was overemphasized at all. But, I was in the industry on 9/11, so my perspective is much different. On the 10th anniversary of 9/11, watching the coverage on TV and seeing those airplanes hit the buildings again, the thought occurred to me that I don't think I've gone to work one single day since 9/11 without thinking about that day. Virtually everything reminds me of it. Locking the cockpit door, the TSA, flying with FFDOs, preflighting the cockpit door entry keypad, etc. These things just didn't exist at the beginning of my career. When I went through my first basic indoc, we were taught the original "basic strategy." Just do what the terrorist tells you, fly him to Cuba where he invariably wants to go, and everything will be fine. Less than a year later, everything changed. And frankly, I don't think I'll ever really forget it, no matter how many years I'll spend in this business. Thirty years from now, in my mind, things will still be "different." I'll still lock that cockpit door and think about how we used to leave it open until taking the runway so the passengers could see up front. I'll still go through security and think about how we all used to carry Leatherman knives through security without a second thought.
I guess it's different for guys who weren't in the industry at the time. I've never really considered that before.
I can just remember when you could get to the gate without a boarding pass.Enough time has passed now, that many in the industry now do not share that experience...
I would be curious to know the exact legalities of that. I've been told the exact opposite. I wonder how an AME would be able to declare someone fit/unfit without actually ever seeing the person in question.