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The captain didn't get in any trouble with the company, but I here he almost got an incident on his record.
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So wait. The captain didn't get in trouble with the company, and ALMOST got an incident on his record? Sounds like blame didn't fall upon the captain then.
Did you have more experiences than this one to base the comment that "captains take the blame" during pushback? From everything I've been told, it's the rampers responsibility and should they do something in error, they are responsible for that error.
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He avoided the blame by hiring a lawyer. Cost him about $2500. In this case NOBODY was awarded an incident. I'd like to hear how he managed that. Maybe I'll send him an email.
As for other situations, I don't really have that much push back experience, since I only flew the 737 for 9 months at Midway. The CRJ was usually a taxi in, taxi out situation w/Mesa since USAirways mainline did NOT want to "waste a jetway" on a CRJ. Exception: Milwaukee hooked us up to a jetway.
But as for wing walking and TAXI incidents - Here is one I remember clearly - at MCO gate 34 in 1997. I was still FO. I watched as a Beech 1900D was being "marshalled" in between another Beech on row 1, and 2 Dash 8s parked at an angle back in row 2. The captain wisely asked for wing walkers.
The marshaller thought he saw the left wingtip go by the Beech, so he turned to look at the wing walker on the right wing tip. He initially did not see the left wing walker frantically waving crossed wands. By the time he turned and looked, the left wing tip had touched the plastic tail cone on the front row Beech.
Everybody gave crossed wands at that point. The captain shut down the aircraft. Somebody called the FAA (thanks a lot buddy) and they called the NTSB. Before you know it there are TV crews everywhere ("tonight on channel 2 ... and Mesa Airlines woes continue ...")
After all the froofraw and report taking, I was standing with the captain and noticed that the plastic tail cone was made of that flexible rubbery type of plastic. "You know, I bet if we push the plane back that thing pops right good as new."
The NTSB did not want to let us near the plane. Finally one of our senior pilots, a "flying lawyer" convinced the NTSB that they had no business near here anyway as there were no injuries or significant damage. They took a bunch of pictures and left. The senior NTSB guy there was a real .... well let's just say I bet his name was Richard Head.
The three of us pushed back on the 1900 - it moved 2 feet and "pop!" the tail cone was good as new. Not even a scratch.
At the end of it all though, the Captain AND the FO were "carpet danced" by the company and the captain received an incident on his record. The wing walkers received nothing.