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Hi All,
Just got back from the national convention of my type club (insert glowing comments about beautiful planes, wonderful people, fun activities, helpful FBO here) So here's a topic related to Jay's thread "Scary". At the membership meeting, the club's Safety Director rightly pointed out something many here have commented on: every GA accident is "news" these days, and if we want to keep flying (and keep being able to buy insurance) we pilots, as a group, need to lower the accident rate. So how? I have a great deal of respect for this man. He's a stand-up guy, a pilot with breadth and depth of experience, and a long-time CFI. But his "solution" is to have a one-day course, associated with the National Convention, in which pilots pay a hefty fee ($100-$200) for 'recurrant training' done by "national names". Call me a skeptic, but I feel this goes along with WINGS seminars: it's 'preaching to the choir', to a large extent. Maybe 10 or at most, 20% of the membership makes it to the conventions. The ones who would pay to take this course are, like the pilots who show up at the WINGS seminars, those who have already made a mental committment to recurrant training and who, if every safety seminar in the country became extinct, would "roll their own" out of books and magazines and discussions with pilots and CFIs they respect. Most of the pilots who are taking off without proper respect for DA or flying into ice/tstorms/IMC or buzzing their buddy's house, I think, aren't coming to these things. Maybe I'm wrong? Maybe they come, and think "oh, well, only ignorant low-hours pilots have trouble when they try to run cows around with their plane, I'm a super-skilled high-time pilot so *I* can do it just fine" (insert analogous phrase about other activities)? Anyway, here's the question: how DO we reduce the accident rate? How do we preach, not just to the choir, but to the 80-90% of pilots who *don't* attend WINGS seminars or other recurrant training? Cheers, Sydney |
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I agree that just about all safety seminars are attended by people who do
not need encouragement to fly safely, and I am at a loss as to how to reach the others except by person-to-person contact. Few of us are willing to take the bull by the horns and talk to miscreants, so the next best has to be calling in the FSDO safety program manager or an accident prevention counselor. I hope that Jay recorded the clueless VFR pilot's tail number, name, or whatever in order to pass the info on to someone at the FBO where he rented the plane and ultimately to his instructor if possible. This was such an egregious violation that half-measures won't do the job. Bob Gardner "Snowbird" wrote in message om... Hi All, Just got back from the national convention of my type club (insert glowing comments about beautiful planes, wonderful people, fun activities, helpful FBO here) So here's a topic related to Jay's thread "Scary". At the membership meeting, the club's Safety Director rightly pointed out something many here have commented on: every GA accident is "news" these days, and if we want to keep flying (and keep being able to buy insurance) we pilots, as a group, need to lower the accident rate. So how? I have a great deal of respect for this man. He's a stand-up guy, a pilot with breadth and depth of experience, and a long-time CFI. But his "solution" is to have a one-day course, associated with the National Convention, in which pilots pay a hefty fee ($100-$200) for 'recurrant training' done by "national names". Call me a skeptic, but I feel this goes along with WINGS seminars: it's 'preaching to the choir', to a large extent. Maybe 10 or at most, 20% of the membership makes it to the conventions. The ones who would pay to take this course are, like the pilots who show up at the WINGS seminars, those who have already made a mental committment to recurrant training and who, if every safety seminar in the country became extinct, would "roll their own" out of books and magazines and discussions with pilots and CFIs they respect. Most of the pilots who are taking off without proper respect for DA or flying into ice/tstorms/IMC or buzzing their buddy's house, I think, aren't coming to these things. Maybe I'm wrong? Maybe they come, and think "oh, well, only ignorant low-hours pilots have trouble when they try to run cows around with their plane, I'm a super-skilled high-time pilot so *I* can do it just fine" (insert analogous phrase about other activities)? Anyway, here's the question: how DO we reduce the accident rate? How do we preach, not just to the choir, but to the 80-90% of pilots who *don't* attend WINGS seminars or other recurrant training? Cheers, Sydney |
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![]() "Snowbird" wrote: Anyway, here's the question: how DO we reduce the accident rate? How do we preach, not just to the choir, but to the 80-90% of pilots who *don't* attend WINGS seminars or other recurrant training? Wow, talk about your $64 question! I dunno Sydney, I think we might have reached a natural, human factors limit on GA safety under the current regulations: note the more-or-less flat statistics of recent years. And it really doesn't appear that new technology is the answer, NASA's pipedreams notwithstanding. Unless we want to have more stringent rules that further restrict what private pilots can do, I can't think of a way we can reach the less safety conscious members of the pilot population, unless it's with heat-seeking missiles. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
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Dan Luke wrote:
Unless we want to have more stringent rules that further restrict what private pilots can do, I can't think of a way we can reach the less safety conscious members of the pilot population, unless it's with heat-seeking missiles. Maybe. But I'd start with a different question: why don't those that don't attend WINGs programs (and the like) attend WINGs programs (and the like)? I find myself astonished that so many don't (is the 80-90% number accurate?). Perhaps I'm just lucky, in that I'm located in an area where seminars are plentiful and frequent. Attending seminars was just a natural thing to do, even if only as an opportunity to hang out with pilots. Perhaps this isn't so everywhere? Why else not attend? - Andrew |
#5
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![]() "Andrew Gideon" wrote in message online.com... Why else not attend? I think there is a reasonable subset of pilots who frankly enjoy a bit of danger; these pilots may be hard to reach in a safety seminar. Have you ever asked around your airport to see the % of pilots who ride motorcycles? The percentage is astoundingly high. I think this gives a bit of perspective as to the risk management profile of some pilots. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#6
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In article , "Richard Kaplan"
wrote: "Andrew Gideon" wrote in message online.com... Why else not attend? I think there is a reasonable subset of pilots who frankly enjoy a bit of danger; these pilots may be hard to reach in a safety seminar. Have you ever asked around your airport to see the % of pilots who ride motorcycles? The percentage is astoundingly high. I think this gives a bit of perspective as to the risk management profile of some pilots. hmmmm, I've attended most of the Wings seminars in the local area when I can. I also attend the aeroclub's monthly safety meetings even though I don't have to maintain currency in club aircraft. I recently bought a (small) motorcycle - but only after passing a rider safety course. I'm wondering what riding a motorcycle reveals... -- Bob Noel |
#7
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Bob Noel wrote:
Have you ever asked around your airport to see the % of pilots who ride motorcycles? The percentage is astoundingly high. I think this gives a bit of perspective as to the risk management profile of some pilots. Is management the same as avoidance? The layman probably wouldn't say so. The goal isn't part of the "management" equation. How you get there is. Jack |
#8
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On Sun, 11 Jul 2004 19:59:22 -0400, "Richard Kaplan"
wrote: "Andrew Gideon" wrote in message gonline.com... Why else not attend? I think there is a reasonable subset of pilots who frankly enjoy a bit of danger; these pilots may be hard to reach in a safety seminar. Have you ever asked around your airport to see the % of pilots who ride motorcycles? The percentage is astoundingly high. I think this gives a bit of perspective as to the risk management profile of some pilots. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com That is an interesting comment. I have driven motorcycles for 35 years and have been flying for 2 years. I attend every Wings (or other) safety seminar that I can. I think my years of motorcycle riding have predisposed me to a safety concious attitude. You are correct, I believe, that the percentage of motorcycle riders in the pilot community is greater than it is in the general population but I suspect that many of those riders are also very safety concious prior to becoming pilots. The question that I would like to know the answer to is this; is the percentage of motorcycle driving pilots that attends safety seminars different than the percentage of motorcycle driving pilots that do not. I'm not sure that there are any valid conclusions that can be drawn here. Rich Russell P.S. Jay, help me out here. |
#9
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![]() Richard Russell wrote: That is an interesting comment. I have driven motorcycles for 35 years and have been flying for 2 years. I attend every Wings (or other) safety seminar that I can. I think my years of motorcycle riding have predisposed me to a safety concious attitude. You *have* to have a safety concious attitude to survive riding bikes for 35 years. That, plus an accurate understanding that everybody else is trying to kill you. George Patterson In Idaho, tossing a rattlesnake into a crowded room is felony assault. In Tennessee, it's evangelism. |
#10
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"Richard Kaplan" wrote
I think there is a reasonable subset of pilots who frankly enjoy a bit of danger I think that subset includes 100% of all pilots that fly for fun except for some total idiots. Why do I make the exception? Well, it would take a total idiot not to realize that every flight, regardless of the manner in which it is conducted, means some danger. Further, since the flight is for fun rather than a matter of necessity, the danger is unnecessary. Even if the trip itself is made for good reason (rather than simply a $100 burger) almost any other means of making the trip is safer. these pilots may be hard to reach in a safety seminar. On the contrary - a bit of danger is one thing, but taking large pointless risks is quite another. It is probably the pilots who are most aware of the danger who are most careful about managing the risks. But to reach these people, you have to offer something better than "Just say no." Have you ever asked around your airport to see the % of pilots who ride motorcycles? The percentage is astoundingly high. Why go that far? Any auto insurance company will tell you that the safest, most risk-averse drivers are middle aged married women. How many private pilots fit that profile? The percentage is astoundingly low. Aviation has inherent risk to it, and those people who are not comfortable with the added risk soon leave aviation. Those who are left are comfortable with it. Michael |
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