121.533. If you can't safely flight follow, then stop releasing flights. You have a regulatory duty to flight follow, not keep pumping out releases. I am pretty sure that's an argument your employer doesn't want to have with the FAA.Night guy here, probably average 35 on a normal night with 10 passed on to me from the morning shift. Morning shifts have average of 55 these days. However, when we were short staffed 65 was the norm. That many and I don't believe that you have operational control, but it wasn't my name on the release.
Can anyone at the regional level tell me how many releases they work on an average day and the number of passed down flights they receive?
121.533. If you can't safely flight follow, then stop releasing flights. You have a regulatory duty to flight follow, not keep pumping out releases. I am pretty sure that's an argument your employer doesn't want to have with the FAA.
Your place does it differently unless they changed things since I leftWhile I'm not a dispatcher, I work in the OCC alongside them. For our dispatchers, depends on the shift (there's three shifts: AMs, Mids, and PMs). AMs shift there is usually two dispatchers who work about an average of 18-20 flights each. Mids works 10-15 or so (depending on schedule), and PMs works whatever is usually remaining, anywhere from 10-20 as well.
CPZ9900 said:121.533. If you can't safely flight follow, then stop releasing flights. You have a regulatory duty to flight follow, not keep pumping out releases. I am pretty sure that's an argument your employer doesn't want to have with the FAA.
There is no "magic number" that the FAA is going to say "nope, you go no further".
And here I was so happy he wasn't in my recurrent.Our POI talks a big game. He has a history of forcing changes on the company as well. He recently made appearances in recurrent saying to file ASAP's and use real numbers and if the company won't make a change he will. We shall see what happens with that. With our recent management changes, they seem to agree that there is a workload issue, but at this point its about collecting useful data to find a point where "an average competent dispatcher can do their job without feeling overwhelmed" as one of our managers put it.