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#1
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OK pilots, try this one on for size. As you likely know, there is a wide
and growing rift between the career FAA bureaucrats (aka FAA Management) who run the monstrosity called the federal Air Traffic Organization, and the career FAA air traffic controllers who make that monstrosity work in the NAS on a daily basis. Regardless of where you stand on the politics of US air traffic control (funding, privatization, user-fees, labor issues, whatever), the ugly, on-going feud between Management and Labor in air traffic control may finally have reached a point where you as a pilot will be personally affected. This just in: *** Notice to all NATCA Bargaining Unit employees Please Post This notice is intended to advise all NATCA Bargaining Unit employees of recent occurrence in the Eastern Service Area. Controllers have been encouraged, through the actions of supervisors, to look the other way when it came to pilot deviations that did not result in a loss of separation. We have all heard supervisors say "no harm, no foul" on more than one occasion. Until now, this has not created problems for bargaining unit employees. Recently a facility in the Southern Region issued formal discipline (Letter of Reprimand) to a NATCA bargaining unit employee for failure to report a pilot deviation. An aircraft (Air Carrier) was told to hold short of a runway, read it back, and proceeded to go onto the runway. This resulted in a go-around with no loss of separation. In the reprimand, the manager acknowledged that the controller was in no way at fault operationally, but that he had violated an FAA order by not reporting the deviation, and as such, was being issued disciplinary action. During recent third level reviews, the Agency has held steadfast to their position. As your [NATCA title deleted], the only advice I can give you is to protect yourself and your career. Your failure to advise your supervisor of a pilot deviation may result in disciplinary action. Even if no loss of separation occurs. Inform your supervisor immediately if you witness a pilot deviation. Put the responsibility on their backs. Be warned!! Taking a "no harm, no foul" attitude with pilots could result in harm to yourself. *** Folks, I see at *least* one pilot deviation a week working traffic in my small slice of the NAS. I don't report them unless separation is lost, because I was trained under the "no harm, no foul" mentality. Pilots help controllers, controllers help pilots, and the NAS ticks along like an old clock. I'm not changing the way I do business, but I wanted you to know that other controllers might, in order to cover themsleves against antagonistic Management. Regards, Chip, ZTL |
#2
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On Sat, 09 Oct 2004 15:08:08 GMT, "Chip Jones"
wrote: I'm not changing the way I do business, but I wanted you to know that other controllers might, in order to cover themsleves against antagonistic Management. What are the steps that are followed after you report a deviation to your supervisor? Thanks for the info. z |
#3
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![]() "Chip Jones" wrote in message link.net... OK pilots, try this one on for size. As you likely know, there is a wide and growing rift between the career FAA bureaucrats (aka FAA Management) who run the monstrosity called the federal Air Traffic Organization, and the career FAA air traffic controllers who make that monstrosity work in the NAS on a daily basis. Regardless of where you stand on the politics of US air traffic control (funding, privatization, user-fees, labor issues, whatever), the ugly, on-going feud between Management and Labor in air traffic control may finally have reached a point where you as a pilot will be personally affected. This just in: *** Notice to all NATCA Bargaining Unit employees Please Post This notice is intended to advise all NATCA Bargaining Unit employees of recent occurrence in the Eastern Service Area. Controllers have been encouraged, through the actions of supervisors, to look the other way when it came to pilot deviations that did not result in a loss of separation. We have all heard supervisors say "no harm, no foul" on more than one occasion. Until now, this has not created problems for bargaining unit employees. Recently a facility in the Southern Region issued formal discipline (Letter of Reprimand) to a NATCA bargaining unit employee for failure to report a pilot deviation. An aircraft (Air Carrier) was told to hold short of a runway, read it back, and proceeded to go onto the runway. This resulted in a go-around with no loss of separation. In the reprimand, the manager acknowledged that the controller was in no way at fault operationally, but that he had violated an FAA order by not reporting the deviation, and as such, was being issued disciplinary action. During recent third level reviews, the Agency has held steadfast to their position. As your [NATCA title deleted], the only advice I can give you is to protect yourself and your career. Your failure to advise your supervisor of a pilot deviation may result in disciplinary action. Even if no loss of separation occurs. Inform your supervisor immediately if you witness a pilot deviation. Put the responsibility on their backs. Be warned!! Taking a "no harm, no foul" attitude with pilots could result in harm to yourself. *** Folks, I see at *least* one pilot deviation a week working traffic in my small slice of the NAS. I don't report them unless separation is lost, because I was trained under the "no harm, no foul" mentality. Pilots help controllers, controllers help pilots, and the NAS ticks along like an old clock. I'm not changing the way I do business, but I wanted you to know that other controllers might, in order to cover themsleves against antagonistic Management. Pilot deviations come in a variety of flavors. A pilot may bust his altitude but if there's no other traffic around there's no hazard. No harm, no foul, no loss of separation. At the other extreme a pilot blowing a runway hold short as another aircraft is about to touch down can be disastrous. On what side of the line should be placed the situation where there was no loss of separation only because an alert controller stepped in? |
#4
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"Steven P. McNicoll" writes:
"Chip Jones" wrote [snip] Folks, I see at *least* one pilot deviation a week working traffic in my small slice of the NAS. I don't report them unless separation is lost, because I was trained under the "no harm, no foul" mentality. Pilots help controllers, controllers help pilots, and the NAS ticks along like an old clock. I'm not changing the way I do business, but I wanted you to know that other controllers might, in order to cover themsleves against antagonistic Management. Pilot deviations come in a variety of flavors. A pilot may bust his altitude but if there's no other traffic around there's no hazard. No harm, no foul, no loss of separation. At the other extreme a pilot blowing a runway hold short as another aircraft is about to touch down can be disastrous. On what side of the line should be placed the situation where there was no loss of separation only because an alert controller stepped in? I thought the FAA was under the gun to gain better and more info regarding runway incursions. It sounds as if a controller may have been admonished/penalized/whatever for failure to make a "required" report of a runway incursion, not just a simple pilot deviation. It seems as if the cited incident was quite serious even though the system worked and no untoward harm came to any of the parties involved. |
#5
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![]() "Everett M. Greene" wrote in message ... I thought the FAA was under the gun to gain better and more info regarding runway incursions. It sounds as if a controller may have been admonished/penalized/whatever for failure to make a "required" report of a runway incursion, not just a simple pilot deviation. It seems as if the cited incident was quite serious even though the system worked and no untoward harm came to any of the parties involved. Yup, runway incursions has been the hot item for several years. |
#6
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A car that runs a red light can get ticketed even if no collision or even
near-collision happens to occur. It wouldn't upset me if pilot deviations were treated similarly, as long as the penalties are not disproportionately harsh. --Gary |
#7
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In most states you can get ticketed for "failure to stop at a stop sign" for
something as simple as not coming to a complete stop. You slow to less than a crawl and the cop sees you look both ways carefully, but if your wheels don't stop turning it's a moving violation. Of course, the cop can also choose to just tell you to watch it. It saves him time that he can use to pursue more important offenders. What Chip's talking about is basically removing some of that discretionary power from controllers. Now, perhaps when management gets deluged with reports of 50' altitude deviations and other trivial mistakes, they'll simply start punting things too, so the "no harm, no foul" policy just gets shifted to a new desk. But in the meantime the volume of trees slaughtered will increase, and with it the hours spent on pointless paperwork for everybody. Safety will probably not benefit. -cwk. "Gary Drescher" wrote in message news:CrU9d.96803$He1.7786@attbi_s01... A car that runs a red light can get ticketed even if no collision or even near-collision happens to occur. It wouldn't upset me if pilot deviations were treated similarly, as long as the penalties are not disproportionately harsh. --Gary |
#8
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"C Kingsbury" wrote in message
link.net... In most states you can get ticketed for "failure to stop at a stop sign" for something as simple as not coming to a complete stop. You slow to less than a crawl and the cop sees you look both ways carefully, but if your wheels don't stop turning it's a moving violation. Of course, the cop can also choose to just tell you to watch it. It saves him time that he can use to pursue more important offenders. What Chip's talking about is basically removing some of that discretionary power from controllers. Now, perhaps when management gets deluged with reports of 50' altitude deviations and other trivial mistakes, they'll simply start punting things too, so the "no harm, no foul" policy just gets shifted to a new desk. But in the meantime the volume of trees slaughtered will increase, and with it the hours spent on pointless paperwork for everybody. Safety will probably not benefit. Hm, I assumed that it's not a deviation if the pilot is within PTS standards; hence, being off by 50' in cruise wouldn't count. --Gary -cwk. "Gary Drescher" wrote in message news:CrU9d.96803$He1.7786@attbi_s01... A car that runs a red light can get ticketed even if no collision or even near-collision happens to occur. It wouldn't upset me if pilot deviations were treated similarly, as long as the penalties are not disproportionately harsh. --Gary |
#9
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![]() "Gary Drescher" wrote in message news:tEW9d.211481$MQ5.87982@attbi_s52... What Chip's talking about is basically removing some of that discretionary power from controllers. Now, perhaps when management gets deluged with reports of 50' altitude deviations and other trivial mistakes, they'll simply start punting things too, so the "no harm, no foul" policy just gets shifted to a new desk. But in the meantime the volume of trees slaughtered will increase, and with it the hours spent on pointless paperwork for everybody. Safety will probably not benefit. Hm, I assumed that it's not a deviation if the pilot is within PTS standards; hence, being off by 50' in cruise wouldn't count. Being off by 50' in cruise wouldn't be noticed. |
#10
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message news:ze1ad.13857 Being off by 50' in cruise wouldn't be noticed. OK, to be precise, 100'+/- is OK, and encoders click over at 51', right? So you'd have to be 151' off for it to show as outside tolerance. Fly over some building cumulus in a 172 sometime- that can left your skirts 100' before you know it. Better have that altitude nailed or you've violated your clearance. -cwk. |
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