PhilosopherPilot
Well-Known Member
I am just a line pilot. Not sure why that would want you to vote no to ALPA.
Because your tone and attitude reek of the stench of ALPA dogma.
I am just a line pilot. Not sure why that would want you to vote no to ALPA.
After the accident at CJC we had no more sick policy. None! Ask me how many section 19 events I either went to or coordinated as a result of no sick policy. I'll make it easy for everyone, 1. That wasn't so much for the abuse of sick time more for the please stop having your wife call scheduling when you get reassigned.You must have a policy in place to outline the limits and expectations, or people will abuse sick calls. We had a pretty big problem, and that drove the policy to be put into place. No one is getting punished for calling in sick. You can all in sick 100 times if you are sick 100 times. You will get into trouble if you call in sick and aren't sick, and as a safety guy, I'm fine with that.
Pilots are into this mindset lately that they never have to answer for anything. And the mere act of asking them to deign to answer a question is discipline. That attitude needs to die.
Except don't you have this horrific health insurance that will make each sick call an out of pocket visit to verify the incident?You must have a policy in place to outline the limits and expectations, or people will abuse sick calls. We had a pretty big problem, and that drove the policy to be put into place. No one is getting punished for calling in sick. You can all in sick 100 times if you are sick 100 times. You will get into trouble if you call in sick and aren't sick, and as a safety guy, I'm fine with that.
Pilots are into this mindset lately that they never have to answer for anything. And the mere act of asking them to deign to answer a question is discipline. That attitude needs to die.
You must have a policy in place to outline the limits and expectations, or people will abuse sick calls. We had a pretty big problem, and that drove the policy to be put into place. No one is getting punished for calling in sick. You can all in sick 100 times if you are sick 100 times. You will get into trouble if you call in sick and aren't sick, and as a safety guy, I'm fine with that.
Pilots are into this mindset lately that they never have to answer for anything. And the mere act of asking them to deign to answer a question is discipline. That attitude needs to die.
After the accident at CJC we had no more sick policy. None! Ask me how many section 19 events I either went to or coordinated as a result of no sick policy. I'll make it easy for everyone, 1. That wasn't so much for the abuse of sick time more for the please stop having your wife call scheduling when you get reassigned.
Because your tone and attitude reek of the stench of ALPA dogma.
The one that always made me scratch my head was the clause that said something to the extent of, "if you call in sick and it cancels a flight, discipline could lead to termination". Since it has been almost five years since the crash, that was the excuse the first officer made for the reason she was flying that night.What was the policy before the accident?
@PhilosopherPilot, I got the call from the VP of Flight Operations saying they are doing away with the sick policy a few days prior to the NTSB hearing. Guess who told them to get rid of it? The law firm defending the company. Why do you think that was?
Pilots are into this mindset lately that they never have to answer for anything. And the mere act of asking them to deign to answer a question is discipline. That attitude needs to die.
@PhilosopherPilot, they actually reopened the CVR Group on the Colgan Accident to properly note coughs, sneezes, sniffles, from the sick First Officer. That was extremely rare.
No question, Colgan didn't have a good policy.
Face it, you just don't like the idea of a pilot having to answer any questions. If you're sick when you call out, you've got nothing to worry about. We had a saying at here, "If you can't Flic it, sick it." In other words, if you can't drop a trip legally in Flica, just call in sick. I flew with lots of captains who just called out when they didn't want to fly a trip, regardless of their fitness for duty. Management did what they did as a result of the crews, not in spite of them.
We aren't going to agree on your absolute statement that sick policies can NEVER be safe. I do agree that the Colgan policy wasn't a good policy, but your blanket and absolute statement that ANY policy is unsafe is just absurd. There are any number of ways a policy could be built to engender a positive relationship with the crews. You could form a safety committee that reviews sick calls independent of the CPO, for instance.
I'm not defending JetBlue's policy. I think it was hasty and poorly implemented, but your statements are too absolute to be true. Few things in life are black/white.
We aren't going to agree on your absolute statement that sick policies can NEVER be safe. I do agree that the Colgan policy wasn't a good policy, but your blanket and absolute statement that ANY policy is unsafe is just absurd. There are any number of ways a policy could be built to engender a positive relationship with the crews. You could form a safety committee that reviews sick calls independent of the CPO, for instance.
Likely because their simulations said "We need X number more pilots to deal with this" and you were in that X number. We did the same thing last summer. That's a bit different than just carrying extra reserves for an IROP. What we do at Blue is offer extra reserve shifts for line holders at 150% if they use you or not. It's cheaper than carrying an extra person for the whole year.Actually, yeah, you can. When I was hired at US Airways last year, the VP of Ops specifically told me he was hiring me for Age 65 attrition and the new rest rules. This was in December of 2012.
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The rest behind the door was known two years ago when the rules first came out. Pretty black and white, however, according to @kellwolf, JetBlue was waiting for the FAA to call JetBlue back to get an interpretation? So what is really going on there?
This may have been true in the past, and, while I can't speak for national, on the local level with my experience it's more or a self-serving, what can I do for me than safety.ALPA is a safety organization first. Having a sick policy isn't safe in this line of work.
You must have a policy in place to outline the limits and expectations, or people will abuse sick calls. We had a pretty big problem, and that drove the policy to be put into place. No one is getting punished for calling in sick. You can all in sick 100 times if you are sick 100 times. You will get into trouble if you call in sick and aren't sick, and as a safety guy, I'm fine with that.
Pilots are into this mindset lately that they never have to answer for anything. And the mere act of asking them to deign to answer a question is discipline. That attitude needs to die.
The bold, scares me.
Setting aside family and self preservation, I answer to the FAA FIRST, when it comes to how the privelages of my certificates are used. The mindset that an employer has any power or say over how and when I determine my fitness for flight is asinine. There is no "buck up, toughen up, grind through it, etc" clause on the back of my medical or anywhere in the FARs.
Short of violating a reg, bending metal, etc, no, I don't need to answer for anything. The answer was already given "Unfit for duty/flight/whatever".
Not all of the IMSAFE checklist (vital part of determining fitness for flight / validity of medical on any particular flight day) includes "sickness".
Illness
Medication
Stress
Alcohol
Fatigue
Eating
Any of those could lead to a call to scheduling stating "I'm sick".