Scenario 2:
Standup. 2155 report, the crew does not time out until the next morning at 0855. Many standup/high-speed overnight out-and-backs currently fit well within that timeframe. Even if the airline wants a buffer of 1.5-2 hours for possible MX issues or de-ice delays, the flight could still be scheduled to arrive at around 0700-0730 back at the hub, and we're back to having a crew doing a layover with five hours of sleep again. Right back to square one. Then we're also back to having van time included as rest again, too, although technically it's not even rest. WTF.[/quote
This doesn't make sense. Highspeeds aren't about rest at the "overnight". They are about rest when you get back in the morning till show the next evening. 12+ hours of rest.
Scenario 3:
A couple oceanic flights that would no longer require a third pilot:
So there's two complete trips that would go from 3 pilots, to 2, unless the pilot contract requires a third pilot due to the hours. That's going backwards in safety in my opinion.
From my understanding this study was actually based upon science and research and not opinion based. So while you might have an opinion that safety is compromised, apparently the research shows it is not.
I hope I just haven't read this thing enough yet. I think it will eliminate jobs while making some things safer, and other things not as safe as they already are. I'll be sure to comment in this 60 day window if I'm understanding this stuff correctly right now.
It'll probably be a give and take, my guess is with a net gain at least at the commuter level.