No…but who do you know that’s getting hired at a part 121 carrier with an asinine amount of failures? The boogeyman that you and others think is there isn’t.They had 4 tries to pass the USMLE. After that’s its bust.
Pilots literally have no ceiling of those failures.
No…but who do you know that’s getting hired at a part 121 carrier with an asinine amount of failures? The boogeyman that you and others think is there isn’t.
Maybe Duffy could do something more constructive if he had the experience to hold the position he does. I have a laundry list of things for him to tackle.
Let’s just let him be loud and wrong on Presidents’ Day. It’s fitting for the current climate.It's the straw man to keep what's left of his ridiculous base feeding on some philosophical red meat.
No one is getting hired at a decent airline with a boat load of failures. Yet again, he's speaking out of pocket on issues he knows little of.
I've got to admit I agree here. Throughout the years I've run across forum posts where someone (and often someone's spouse) says something like "I've had four checkride failures, do you think I still has a chance to get hired by XYZ?" or "which regional has the easiest training?"They had 4 tries to pass the USMLE. After that’s its bust.
Pilots literally have no ceiling of those failures.
is this just a left wing version of QAnon style conspiracism or is it supported by the evidence? I haven’t paid that much attention since there’s so much other garbage from the administration.The sooner we recognize that Bondi is Drumpf's Ghislaine Maxwell equivalent the clearer her actions become. She has been by his side for decades and is deeply involved in all things pedo-related.
Have folks like that been making it through 121 hiring and training the last few years? I honestly have no idea, since i obviously wouldn’t be the one flying with them. I guess I’ve had the occasional captain slide in a remark about how it’s nice to have someone who knows how to fly, or say something about being well ahead of my peers, but captains say all kinds of things so I kind of haven’t paid too much attention.I've got to admit I agree here. Throughout the years I've run across forum posts where someone (and often someone's spouse) says something like "I've had four checkride failures, do you think I still has a chance to get hired by XYZ?" or "which regional has the easiest training?"
Inevitably the pilot community offers advice and inspiration but seldom does someone say "hey, this job isn't for everyone" "if you love aviation but flying isn't your thing have you considered dispatch? Or ATC? Or maintenance?"
We've all flown with people who we wondered how they got past primary training much less airline training. They can't land on the centerline or don't understand the systems or are clearly operating at the rote level. Just as I believe there should be high barriers to entry into this profession, there should also be backstops to prevent someone who lacks the aptitude from continuing on in perpetuity. Everybody has a bad checkride from time to time. But multiple failures in primary training should be a yellow flag. Multiple failures in 121 should be a red flag. Hard stop.
They had 4 tries to pass the USMLE. After that’s its bust.
Pilots literally have no ceiling of those failures.
It is just perfect to hear someone that has never been part of a training department, recruiting, HR or any other capacity relating to making hiring decision tell the people who currently are and have been involved in such decisions how to do their jobs.
Like I said before, this forum's most prolific Dunning-Krueger.
Have folks like that been making it through 121 hiring and training the last few years? I honestly have no idea, since i obviously wouldn’t be the one flying with them. I guess I’ve had the occasional captain slide in a remark about how it’s nice to have someone who knows how to fly, or say something about being well ahead of my peers, but captains say all kinds of things so I kind of haven’t paid too much attention.
Show me one example of somebody failing an initial 4 times at a company, and being given another chance and pushed through. If you show me that, I will resign from AS.
BTW, you can fail USMLE, and after 4 times you are banned from taking that specific medical license; you can pivot to another medical path. There's always a way...
I've got to admit I agree here. Throughout the years I've run across forum posts where someone (and often someone's spouse) says something like "I've had four checkride failures, do you think I still has a chance to get hired by XYZ?" or "which regional has the easiest training?"
Inevitably the pilot community offers advice and inspiration but seldom does someone say "hey, this job isn't for everyone" "if you love aviation but flying isn't your thing have you considered dispatch? Or ATC? Or maintenance?"
We've all flown with people who we wondered how they got past primary training much less airline training. They can't land on the centerline or don't understand the systems or are clearly operating at the rote level. Just as I believe there should be high barriers to entry into this profession, there should also be backstops to prevent someone who lacks the aptitude from continuing on in perpetuity. Everybody has a bad checkride from time to time. But multiple failures in primary training should be a yellow flag. Multiple failures in 121 should be a red flag. Hard stop.
Well not initial. I mean someone like that Colgan CA. Fail a private/instrument. Then fail the Comm. Then hired at a regional and fail initial Saab 340. Them next year recurrent, fail. And next year recurrent fail. That’s 5. Literally every checking event that ever came, this individual failed. And re-trained to pass.
“Properly certificated and qualified.”
Should not have been driving a car, let alone flying a plane.
They were both properly certificated and qualified. On the notion of whether they were qualified or not, they were. It's not even something you can argue. Now if you wanna have the conversation of changes that can be made, this is where PRIA comes in. I don't disagree with yo that a bigger picture on somebody's record isn't a bad idea, but that's a dangerous path to walk down. Over the course of 25 years, somebody fails 5 events, does that really make them a basket case? Maybe, maybe not...
I agree.
I started a thread about Ravn interview prep gloating how they got a guy with 4 ***Part 121*** checkride failures hired onto a legacy.
Gee thanks for bringing that into a seat for us CAs to deal with.
Not 4 primary failures, four 121 checkride failures! Revoke their certs and tell them they’re lucky they allowed to drive a car.
4 (four separate) Part 121 failures? You shouldn’t touch another 121 cockpit ever again.
Captains deserve better than a crap FO who fails that many times at a 121 airline. And most importantly, the flying public deserves better.
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- Cherokee_Cruiser
- Replies: 252
- Forum: Airline Pilots
By that, anyone who’s ever crashed was properly certificated and qualified.
Should not have been driving a car, let alone flying a plane.
This is real boomer stuff.
I don't know how old you are, but you are neither qualified nor informed enough to know the context of any of that. Again, if that person passes training and passes IOE, they are literally, quite literally QUALIFIED. You really need to be careful about not giving anyone chances to redeem or right themselves. It won't be a good look when you someday might need some redemption or compassion.