Bumblebee
Commodore
well, she figured she could drive faster when you include the Grass Valley component..No Brasilia ride? I'm hurt...
well, she figured she could drive faster when you include the Grass Valley component..No Brasilia ride? I'm hurt...
You don't look cheap.
oh good...I love a good wize ass...
Agree with some of that, but will also throw a few things into the mix. I don't think its really any one thing that is causing some people to make a conscious decision to suck at their job.
1) A combination of wanting to impress people and entitlement. I'm not picking on career changers here. I've flown with many career changers who have been great captains. But I will go out on a limb and say that most captains who I have flown with who aren't very good, have been career changers. To stereotype a bit here, they just want people to see them as an airline pilot, they don't really care to be any good at it. They spend time standing at the flight deck door schmoozing with the passengers while you're stuck doing all the work. Lengthy PA's in their best "airline pilot" voice. They see other regionals and comment on "hah...those _____ guys WISHED they worked here." Even though your regional is just as crappy, if not worse. It's all about how they're perceived. As long as people think they're a good pilot, that's good enough for them. These are the same guys who have very basic piloting skills at best, but throw around "when I go to Delta...." like its a certainty.
2) Complacency/Stagnation. I try to be as professional as possible, but this is the one that is getting to me lately. I've been in the right seat of an RJ for almost 6 years. For the last 3 of those I have been in the same base, flying the same plane, to the same 12-13 places. I know the ATIS frequencies for most airports I go to. I feel like what is supposed to be the best years of my life have been a little bit stolen from me because I haven't seen a raise of more than $2/hr since I moved onto second year pay. I'm supposed to be doing adult things right now. Buying a house, having kids, etc. But because of what has happened to this industry, it's just not in the cards right now. I could leave but 1) there's the supposed light at the end of the tunnel and 2) while I don't make a ton of money, its more than I'd make if I bailed out and started doing something else. Operationally my company is a joke. Going above and beyond to try to get things done on time and with any measure of customer service has exactly the same result as not trying at all, only you're more frustrated and tired. Being motivated to show up to work lately has been a real challenge, but that's where professionalism comes in.
3) Cowboy mentality. The usual, I think I'm a badass because I don't follow the rules. I'm good enough that I don't need them.
I think those are the major 3.
I know exactly what you're talking about, they're painful. My only suggestion is that not all career changers are the same. Pretty big difference from the retired attorney cum airline pilot vs. confused late '20s dude making a career change (me a few years go).
and not all punk kids are the same either....but most of them still do know everythingI know exactly what you're talking about, they're painful. My only suggestion is that not all career changers are the same. Pretty big difference from the retired attorney cum airline pilot vs. confused late '20s dude making a career change (me a few years go).
Has anyone considered filing a safety report..... You know the type where you can't be identified.
YOU SEE SOMETHING WRONG YOU SAY SOMETHING. (Especially if it's within your airline). If you can't say something write something. I'm sure each operator has a safety reporting form that's confidential/anonymous box. Use it!
Also report it here... NASA- Aviation Safety Reporting System..... http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/
For those of you that say you've encountered terrible pilots in the cockpit, do you have a way to anonymously report to your company the problems that that pilot is causing?
Proficiency issues need to be handled through Professional Standards. The union can often arrange additional training for the pilot in a non-punitive environment. If the pilot isn't receptive to the people in Pro Stan, it can be escalated, but that is a last resort.
Since I have 0, 121 time, I don't know exactly how the programs work in those type of operations. How does professional standards find out about a pilot not doing what he/she is supposed to be doing? Is there a way to anonymously let your company know about a problem pilot?
I actually edited my post to remove "Proficiency issues" (that's not necessarily handled by them), but Professional Standards is a union committee. Pilots contact the committee about other pilots, and the matter is handled "in house" without company involvement.
Yes, I suppose you could drop an anonymous note in the Chief Pilot's mailbox about another pilot instead of going through the union first. You don't want to be that guy, though. Special place in hell for guys like that.
Ok, thank you for clarifying that. When the pilot contacts Professional Standards to bring up the issue concerning a fellow aviator, can that be done in an anonymous way? If not, do you think an anonymous line of communication would be helpful to bring in reports that pilots are otherwise hesitant to report concerning fellow co-workers? Or, in larger 121 operations, is anonymity not a concern in that and most other situations?
Yes, it can be reported anonymously to Pro Stan.
and not all punk kids are the same either....but most of them still do know everything![]()
Since I have 0, 121 time, I don't know exactly how the programs work in those type of operations. How does professional standards find out about a pilot not doing what he/she is supposed to be doing? Is there a way to anonymously let your company know about a problem pilot?