MT said:I was management as well as a check dispatcher. No one passed my comp check that could not read a metar and taf. When I taught part 65. I would not let anyone go sit with a DADE that couldn't read a metar and taf. Sure it's a somewhat quick and cheap certificate to get when compared against other certificates but that doesn't minimize the responsibility that the certificate lets you exercise.
Exactly my point. True there are some license mills out there, but it is not nearly as rampant as some here were making you to believe. Regardless, this has gotten a touch silly. Can we go back to the happy board?I'm curious as to how it's actually possible to go through dispatch school, get signed off by the instructors to take the written, oral and practical exams AND have an examiner pass you without being able to read a METAR or TAF? Even worse, how can a licensed dispatcher can then get hired by an airline and pass a comp check without being able to do the simplest of tasks?!? The idea that this actually happens is appalling...and a true failure on every level from the aspiring-then licensed dispatcher, the school, examiners, hiring managers and lead dispatchers doing comp checks. What a failure of the system...
MT said:Exactly my point. True there are some license mills out there, but it is not nearly as rampant as some here were making you to believe. Regardless, this has gotten a touch silly. Can we go back to the happy board?
Every major airline supported the FAA relaxing rules to outsource dispatching. If they could, they would have computers doing most of what we do.
My manager can not read metars or tafs, or even big words