Doc wrote:I wasn't going to get into this, but with all the "He said. she said..." going on, the bottom line remains......The pilot is the one that ran the tanks dry. Not the company. Not maintenance. The pilot. And just how easy would it have been to prevent this from happening in the first place. Regardless of the corporate climate that existed at Keystone at the time (and I'm in agreement here, it sucked!) it was the pilot who ran out of gas. The auto-pilot had nothing to do with the outcome. And really, neither did Keystone. Taking enough fuel to do the trip, or topping up somewhere in route is really pretty basic airmanship?
Having it end up in court with criminal charges however, is a really scary thought. I think the guy is guilty as hell. But it should be a law suit thing. And he should pay for his mistake. Because while we all make them...his was inexcusable. It resulted in death. But Jail? We'd just all better watch our butts!
I see you jump on anything and everything else that you don't agree with, and then I see you going easy on keystone here. Does your company have the same cultue? I'm not accusing, I'm asking to see how you came up with what you said.
Everyone agrees with the part that the pilot was at fault. However, I strongly disagree with you when you say that keystoned is not at fault. The owner STILL pushes guys/girls to go on without getting fuel!
I don't know what the reason was for this pilot not to get fuel, I really don't. The pilot is in court, this is done and we're not here to discuss his punishment, right now that's up to the judge. What we are trying to discuss is the culture that keystone promotes. Everyone who's worked for small charter companies know this.
Keystone does not have a healthy culture, rather one that is like a disease. If one pilot turns down a trip, he is called into the office and told that they will cut their wages. They will then send someone else to do the trip and make sure that everyone knows. Seniority? not at keystone, it's whowever gets her done that moves up.
This pilot fucked up, no doubt about it, we've been hearing it since day one of groundschool for our PPL's, PIC at fault no matter what.
How do we teach the young ones so they can prevent this from happening to themselves? It's definetly NOT by comments like yours doc where you tell them it's not keystone's fault. Who at keystone has operational control? Why did they not follow up with the PIC's ops flight plan?
They are they type who tell their pilots to use the destination airport as an alternate and use an en-route airport as destination and then change it in the air, even when it's down to mins at the destination, because after all, you're a moron (according to them), if you're coming to winnipeg and don't get in if it's down to mins. Well, if the mins do get lower, now you're fucked, who's gonna get the blame? you guessed it, the PIC is.