Seggy
Well-Known Member
I didn't know you were an expert on the vacation habits of an airline you don't even work for...
I am speaking in general based on my ALPA work.
I didn't know you were an expert on the vacation habits of an airline you don't even work for...
Do you have a rough estimate of pilots who abuse the sick policy? Percentage wise?
I am speaking in general based on my ALPA work.
As you like to remind us, we aren't ALPA. The airlines you're talking about have suck policies... Hmm, maybe there's a correlation?
@PhilosopherPilot, you have never answered how a sick policy would really work in your ideal world.
I have pointed out that by having the safety department as 'head hunters' to look out for sick pilots they cross the line into the Flight Operations discipline area. This, isn't even touching the surface of HIPAA laws that very clearly state that if someone doesn't want to tell what is wrong with them, they don't need to. Are you advocating people to give up protected information under federal law in your ideal world?
At Colgan the sick policy was put in place before ALPA was on property. Our first Communication as a MEC was to the company telling them what we thought of the sick policy.
I didn't say I could build a truly excellent program. That's for people smarter than me. I just said I think it's ridiculous to say that it is impossible.
It's called hiring practices and probation period. That's about the extent. If the company cannot go sufficient background checks on individuals then it is on them in my opinion. Your company likes to phase 2 things. In that time period I'm sure you can discover whether or not people abuse policies.I didn't say I could build a truly excellent program. That's for people smarter than me. I just said I think it's ridiculous to say that it is impossible.
The safety example was purely an alternative I provided to suggest that there may be alternatives "outside the box." It may be a bad example, but the point stands. There are ways it could be done that protect the innocent, and discourage the guilty.
It's all sunshine and rainbows at ALPA...
It's called hiring practices and probation period. That's about the extent. If the company cannot go sufficient background checks on individuals then it is on them in my opinion. Your company likes to phase 2 things. In that time period I'm sure you can discover whether or not people abuse policies.
Even a great pilot can be corrupted by the group around him. I think we just had drift over time. No one was getting any repercussions for abusing the system, so the group as a whole drifted. There are whole fields of study about that kind of drift.
Yea, it's called bad character. If you cannot see character flaws in people then it's your fault.Even a great pilot can be corrupted by the group around him. I think we just had drift over time. No one was getting any repercussions for abusing the system, so the group as a whole drifted. There are whole fields of study about that kind of drift.
Those fields of study also talk about how discipline isn't a good way to deal with that drift.
Yea, it's called bad character. If you cannot see character flaws in people then it's your fault.
I think your experiences have colored your perceptions.
Negative.
@PhilosopherPilot, you have never answered how a sick policy would really work in your ideal world.
I have pointed out that by having the safety department as 'head hunters' to look out for sick pilots they cross the line into the Flight Operations discipline area. This, isn't even touching the surface of HIPAA laws that very clearly state that if someone doesn't want to tell what is wrong with them, they don't need to. Are you advocating people to give up protected information under federal law in your ideal world?