Federal authorities have been investigating about 5,000 pilots suspected of falsifying their medical records to conceal conditions that could make them unfit to fly.
The entire industry is extremely conservative regarding safety. And that’s one of the fallouts.
Remember the Germanwings pilot who crashed his plane into a mountain? Killed over 200 people. That’s a nightmare not only for the relatives of the victims, but also for everyone in the industry.
Yes, and that is how the problem manifests itself. If mild cases can’t be reported and treated without repercussions to the pilot, this culture of evading checks emerges, and serious cases get hidden, too.
Imagine if the Germanwings guy could have started a conversation that he’s having problems without immediately being grounded, maybe his condition would not have gotten this bad, or maybe when it did, he could have been rightfully grounded.
I can imagine that his colleagues also saw signs, but stayed silent because of the same problem.
I think a big part of it, at least in the states, is how inextricable the career is from the person, because of how dependent our employers make us on them for everything from basic needs to healthcare to a retirement plan. Imagine, that every time you reported a minor issue with the aircraft, you would risk not just your ability to fly ever again, but also your ability to work off the mountain of debt that you accrued learning how to fly a plane, and that if you lost your job your best case scenario would be crushing poverty for the rest of your life?
Of course you’d never say a damn thing - even if it meant a high risk of killing yourself and everyone on board the plane. When your choice is die slowly or die quickly, I know which one I’d take. So is it any surprise that people don’t speak up about it?
The entire industry is extremely conservative regarding safety. And that’s one of the fallouts.
Remember the Germanwings pilot who crashed his plane into a mountain? Killed over 200 people. That’s a nightmare not only for the relatives of the victims, but also for everyone in the industry.
Yes, and that is how the problem manifests itself. If mild cases can’t be reported and treated without repercussions to the pilot, this culture of evading checks emerges, and serious cases get hidden, too.
Imagine if the Germanwings guy could have started a conversation that he’s having problems without immediately being grounded, maybe his condition would not have gotten this bad, or maybe when it did, he could have been rightfully grounded.
I can imagine that his colleagues also saw signs, but stayed silent because of the same problem.
I think a big part of it, at least in the states, is how inextricable the career is from the person, because of how dependent our employers make us on them for everything from basic needs to healthcare to a retirement plan. Imagine, that every time you reported a minor issue with the aircraft, you would risk not just your ability to fly ever again, but also your ability to work off the mountain of debt that you accrued learning how to fly a plane, and that if you lost your job your best case scenario would be crushing poverty for the rest of your life?
Of course you’d never say a damn thing - even if it meant a high risk of killing yourself and everyone on board the plane. When your choice is die slowly or die quickly, I know which one I’d take. So is it any surprise that people don’t speak up about it?