Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Moderators: sky's the limit, sepia, Sulako, North Shore
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
I hope Police Officers, Judges, Politicians will also submit to the same scrutiny.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Why does it bother you so much Altiplano? Specifically.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Rockie, your question isn't specific, but I'll assume you mean:
"Why does not being allowed to leave the flight deck independently to go to the bathroom or stretch on a long flight or the prospect of being screened randomly at work for alcohol and drugs bother me?"
It bothers me because it's a degradation of our profession that serves little to no real benefit and diverts resources from the real issues we face regarding safety in this business... kinda like getting ridden by some catsa muppet because you didn't take off your raic and put it in the tray, or because they are misinformed about LAG exemptions.
if on the other hand you mean:
"Why does the situation for initial pilots in Europe, paying to fly airliners, buying jobs and type ratings bother me?"
It bothers me because it's a degradation of our profession that is akin to a scab crossing a picket line. They think they're getting ahead, but they are hurting us all. Our employers, Pilots, Consumers. The only ones coming out ahead are the upstart ULWCs and perhaps some secondary airports 2 hours outside of a Southern European city...
but if you mean:
"Why do Eurpean Pilots in Canada bother me?"
They don't, I think they should move here and get PR status and TC ATPLs. I think they'd make great immigrants and be a benefit to our country... What bothers me is the pressure foreign labour puts on your and my wages, the pressure they put on our employers and the unfair benefit it gives their employer... Not to mention the cost to our society - access to all our services with no contribution from them or their employer... No CPP, No WCB, No Taxes...
What do you think would happen if GM or Ford brought 300 Venezuelans to Oshawa or Oakville to man the plant during the high season? The public would have a fit and these would be labourers... not licensed professionals... so WTF?
"Why does not being allowed to leave the flight deck independently to go to the bathroom or stretch on a long flight or the prospect of being screened randomly at work for alcohol and drugs bother me?"
It bothers me because it's a degradation of our profession that serves little to no real benefit and diverts resources from the real issues we face regarding safety in this business... kinda like getting ridden by some catsa muppet because you didn't take off your raic and put it in the tray, or because they are misinformed about LAG exemptions.
if on the other hand you mean:
"Why does the situation for initial pilots in Europe, paying to fly airliners, buying jobs and type ratings bother me?"
It bothers me because it's a degradation of our profession that is akin to a scab crossing a picket line. They think they're getting ahead, but they are hurting us all. Our employers, Pilots, Consumers. The only ones coming out ahead are the upstart ULWCs and perhaps some secondary airports 2 hours outside of a Southern European city...
but if you mean:
"Why do Eurpean Pilots in Canada bother me?"
They don't, I think they should move here and get PR status and TC ATPLs. I think they'd make great immigrants and be a benefit to our country... What bothers me is the pressure foreign labour puts on your and my wages, the pressure they put on our employers and the unfair benefit it gives their employer... Not to mention the cost to our society - access to all our services with no contribution from them or their employer... No CPP, No WCB, No Taxes...
What do you think would happen if GM or Ford brought 300 Venezuelans to Oshawa or Oakville to man the plant during the high season? The public would have a fit and these would be labourers... not licensed professionals... so WTF?
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
No Altiplano, I mean why do you take this so personally? Are you offended by GPWS? Do you consider stall warning systems a personal affront to your flying skill?
It would be great if pilots never stalled, hit the ground, or committed suicide after locking the other pilot out of the cockpit...but it happens. We also don't come equipped with a sign on our shirt warning everybody when we're going to do that so safety measures are put in place to mitigate the possibility. It isn't about you.
As for drinking and flying, it's been pointed out that this guy and other guys were stopped. Until such time as they find guys after they've flown the airplane I'd say there isn't a sufficiently serious problem with it. If it is determined there is though and additional safeguards are put in place then suck it up, act like a grown up and accept it as the new reality.
It would be great if pilots never stalled, hit the ground, or committed suicide after locking the other pilot out of the cockpit...but it happens. We also don't come equipped with a sign on our shirt warning everybody when we're going to do that so safety measures are put in place to mitigate the possibility. It isn't about you.
As for drinking and flying, it's been pointed out that this guy and other guys were stopped. Until such time as they find guys after they've flown the airplane I'd say there isn't a sufficiently serious problem with it. If it is determined there is though and additional safeguards are put in place then suck it up, act like a grown up and accept it as the new reality.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/can ... -1.1223222Rockie wrote: As for drinking and flying, it's been pointed out that this guy and other guys were stopped. Until such time as they find guys after they've flown the airplane I'd say there isn't a sufficiently serious problem with it. If it is determined there is though and additional safeguards are put in place then suck it up, act like a grown up and accept it as the new reality.
I think it happens and you don't hear about it because most often they get away with it. At my airline you blow to check in, in the crew room. Non event.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Get real Rockie... GPWS?! Stall warning! Is that your most apt parallel here?Rockie wrote:No Altiplano, I mean why do you take this so personally? Are you offended by GPWS? Do you consider stall warning systems a personal affront to your flying skill?
It would be great if pilots never stalled, hit the ground, or committed suicide after locking the other pilot out of the cockpit...but it happens. We also don't come equipped with a sign on our shirt warning everybody when we're going to do that so safety measures are put in place to mitigate the possibility. It isn't about you.
As for drinking and flying, it's been pointed out that this guy and other guys were stopped. Until such time as they find guys after they've flown the airplane I'd say there isn't a sufficiently serious problem with it. If it is determined there is though and additional safeguards are put in place then suck it up, act like a grown up and accept it as the new reality.
Get some self respect. How far will you let it go? Douche bags like this guy are making you question your own worth. Your own society. It's a tragedy.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Back to the topic.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/a ... -1.3695642
This unfortunately happens everywhere in the world.
I'm happy that they get reported/caught.
No one should fly an aircraft with blood alcohol content.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/a ... -1.3695642
This unfortunately happens everywhere in the world.
I'm happy that they get reported/caught.
No one should fly an aircraft with blood alcohol content.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Ah, your delicate ego is bruised and you feel disrespected.altiplano wrote:Get real Rockie... GPWS?! Stall warning! Is that your most apt parallel here?
Get some self respect. How far will you let it go? Douche bags like this guy are making you question your own worth. Your own society. It's a tragedy.
Do you feel disrespected by Airbus's envelope protections too because you can't be trusted not to stall the airplane? Do you feel like Airbus is "babysitting" you?
It isn't about you Altiplano. Nobody thinks you are going to deliberately crash the airplane. Nobody thinks you are going to show up for work drunk. If TC or your employer thought that you would do that, you wouldn't be allowed within 100 miles of an airplane. But unless you know some other way to reliably identify pilots who really do those things, we'll all have to live with existing mitigation methods despite the grave insult to our precious egos.
Let's try to keep our heads here and realize it's just having a flight attendant in the cockpit for 2 minutes Altiplano. Was that ever an issue for you before TC made it mandatory?
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Rockie, not so long ago Air France pilots were drinking a glass of wine with their meals while crossing over the ocean, and other stories that belong to the past...
Today you can get legal problems, lose your job and be automatically ashamed and found guilty by the medias if you blow 0.01 at the airport.
My perspective is that the culture is changing, pilots are only getting more professional, safer and more aware of the importance to be perfectly fit before starting duty. Nowadays, everyone wants to sue everyone and as a pilot, you are walking a line that is only getting thinner.
Unlike in our respectable Canadian industry, some of those European low cost don't have anything called "pilot support programs", "paid sick days", "long term sick leaves" or "guaranteed days off".
I don't think more regulations are the answers to every problems. Europe has their own problem, US has their own and we have our own issues, to each to find the appropriate solutions. I have no opinion on the min two people in the cockpit, but now that it is there, not sure it is going to go away any time soon.
Today you can get legal problems, lose your job and be automatically ashamed and found guilty by the medias if you blow 0.01 at the airport.
My perspective is that the culture is changing, pilots are only getting more professional, safer and more aware of the importance to be perfectly fit before starting duty. Nowadays, everyone wants to sue everyone and as a pilot, you are walking a line that is only getting thinner.
Unlike in our respectable Canadian industry, some of those European low cost don't have anything called "pilot support programs", "paid sick days", "long term sick leaves" or "guaranteed days off".
I don't think more regulations are the answers to every problems. Europe has their own problem, US has their own and we have our own issues, to each to find the appropriate solutions. I have no opinion on the min two people in the cockpit, but now that it is there, not sure it is going to go away any time soon.
-
- Rank 10
- Posts: 2227
- Joined: Thu Mar 22, 2012 5:51 am
- Location: YUL
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Yes because some foreign pilots obviously may come from countries that have higher standards than Canada. But there is no wording in Canadian FLVC regulations that restricts the issue of FLVCs to pilots those countries with high standards, it is allowed from any ICAO member country. That could be Haiti. So some foreign pilots applying for FLVCs may come from ICAO member countries that are dysfunctional and corrupt.AuxBatOn wrote:Key word: potential.
Transport Canada generally does no background checks on FLVC applicants and FLVCs are issued at the face value of the paperwork that the applicants provide.
From the Transport Canada document "Staff Instructions SI-400-005 Foreign Validation Certificates" version 2 from 2011:
This is a quote from Greg McConnell, President of the Canadian Federal Pilots association, the Union that regroups all Transport Canada pilot inspectors:(i)When an applicant submits original documents, licensing staff must photocopy
each document and certify the copy as a true copy of the original document and
then return the originals to the applicant; and
(ii) Licensing staff are not required to request licence verification unless there are
concerns over the authenticity or validity of the documents presented. It is the
responsibility of the air operator to verify that each licence holder is properly
qualified and holds an appropriate and valid licence and medical certificate.
Basically, you present a nice looking paper and TC issues an FLVC on the basis of that paper.Transport Canada specifically directs staff to not check medicals and licences unless they have a concern," said Greg McConnell with the Canadian Federal Pilots Association, who says it shouldn't be left to airline operators to validate such important information.
When I wanted to transfer my Canadian issued Type rating to my FAA ATPL, I was not able to just walk into an FAA affice and say 'Hey look, I not have a B7378NG Type rating, could you please put it on my US licence ?"
I had to have TC write a letter directly to the FAA, stating I really had said Type rating, and then and only then was I able to walk to the FAA office and have my US licence updated.
Last edited by Gilles Hudicourt on Sun Jan 08, 2017 9:14 am, edited 4 times in total.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
But it is going away Timel...in May
In its place we are asking pilots in their annual medical how they feel, whereas in Europe they must now undergo full on psychological testing. Personally I think two in the flightdeck is a much simpler and direct solution, especially since FA's have already spent time in flightdecks for the last 70 years or so and nobody had a problem with it until now - strangely enough. However periodic psych testing may be coming here in North America as well. If it does, it will do so for a reason just like if we end up having to do random drug and sobriety tests.
Things change, threats change, and we have to adapt and change with them. The FD door is a perfect example. We cannot let our petty egos stand in the way of addressing real threats be they suicidal pilots or ones without the sense to show up for work sober.
In its place we are asking pilots in their annual medical how they feel, whereas in Europe they must now undergo full on psychological testing. Personally I think two in the flightdeck is a much simpler and direct solution, especially since FA's have already spent time in flightdecks for the last 70 years or so and nobody had a problem with it until now - strangely enough. However periodic psych testing may be coming here in North America as well. If it does, it will do so for a reason just like if we end up having to do random drug and sobriety tests.
Things change, threats change, and we have to adapt and change with them. The FD door is a perfect example. We cannot let our petty egos stand in the way of addressing real threats be they suicidal pilots or ones without the sense to show up for work sober.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Not so fast Rockie.Rockie wrote:But it is going away Timel...in May
http://www.newstalk770.com/2017/01/06/r ... ref=direct
Personally, I don't mind nice company in the cockpit.The Canadian government told Global News it’s “too early” to say whether random alcohol testing of pilots will be considered at a spring aviation safety summit after impaired charges were laid against a Sunwing pilot who was found unconscious in a plane at the Calgary airport.
Last edited by timel on Sun Jan 08, 2017 7:58 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
The you go again Rickie.
Envelope protections? Keep your red herrings in your pocket.
Where does it end? It's for show and nothing more. A waste of resources and more BS we will have to deal with.
Why won't they do something about the real safety threats? Guys are falling asleep at the wheel regularly because of our poor rules regarding flight duty and augmentation. They know it and do nothing.
1 guy shows up pissed, and is identified and it's a capital case.
Do you think there are more pilots impaired by fatigue or more pilots impaired by alcohol on a given day?
Envelope protections? Keep your red herrings in your pocket.
Where does it end? It's for show and nothing more. A waste of resources and more BS we will have to deal with.
Why won't they do something about the real safety threats? Guys are falling asleep at the wheel regularly because of our poor rules regarding flight duty and augmentation. They know it and do nothing.
1 guy shows up pissed, and is identified and it's a capital case.
Do you think there are more pilots impaired by fatigue or more pilots impaired by alcohol on a given day?
-
- Rank 2
- Posts: 64
- Joined: Sat Oct 09, 2010 11:37 am
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
I agree, fatigue under Canadian rules affects 100% of pilots everyday, yet no one in Transport does anything about it. Now political powers get embarrassed by a news story and things happen. I guess public perception is more important than actual safety problems that affect all crew all the time while a sensational problem such as being under the influence which only affects .002 % of crew gets 100% attention and resources. Never ceases to amaze me...
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
It's not a red herring Altiplano, it's exactly the same principle. And in fact I do remember guys having their noses out of joint over the envelope protections, non-moving thrust levers and general level of automation and FBW. There are to this day many pilots who scoff at such things as a crutch, you might even be one of them. So no, it's exactly the same misguided ego issue.altiplano wrote:The you go again Rickie.
Envelope protections? Keep your red herrings in your pocket.
Where does it end? It's for show and nothing more. A waste of resources and more BS we will have to deal with.
Why won't they do something about the real safety threats? Guys are falling asleep at the wheel regularly because of our poor rules regarding flight duty and augmentation. They know it and do nothing.
1 guy shows up pissed, and is identified and it's a capital case.
Do you think there are more pilots impaired by fatigue or more pilots impaired by alcohol on a given day?
As for fatigue you are preaching to the choir, but you seem under the impression that because that is a threat pilot intoxication and mental health is not. Are you aware we can tackle more than one threat at once?
Last edited by Rockie on Sun Jan 08, 2017 9:20 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
I've been preaching this for years over Canada's F&DT regulations. Government works like lightning when they get embarrassed and that is the key. Not getting dragged into yet another years long delaying tactic called CARAC.Spaceshuttle wrote:I agree, fatigue under Canadian rules affects 100% of pilots everyday, yet no one in Transport does anything about it. Now political powers get embarrassed by a news story and things happen.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Is anybody else waiting to hear a Sunwing flight check in on arrival with Whiskey yet since this happened?
As an AvCanada discussion grows longer:
-the probability of 'entitlement' being mentioned, approaches 1
-one will be accused of using bad airmanship
-the probability of 'entitlement' being mentioned, approaches 1
-one will be accused of using bad airmanship
-
- Rank 3
- Posts: 178
- Joined: Tue Aug 18, 2009 12:31 pm
- Location: YCO
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
"Was that wrong? Should I not have done that? I tell you, I gotta plead ignorance on this thing, because if anyone had said anything at all when I first started here that that sort of thing was frowned upon …. ‘cause you know, I’ve worked in a lot of airplanes and, I tell you, people do that all the time …"
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Rockie you are misleading the issues talking about Airbus design in the same breath as this.
I guess we'll have to just disagree on the idea that this will enhance safety. I suppose you are a supporter of the recent 20 hour rule too.
I say neither will enhance safety meaningfully. Just like babysitters in the flight deck and my family banned from the flight deck won't enhance safety either.
I guess we'll have to just disagree on the idea that this will enhance safety. I suppose you are a supporter of the recent 20 hour rule too.
I say neither will enhance safety meaningfully. Just like babysitters in the flight deck and my family banned from the flight deck won't enhance safety either.
Re: Sunwing captain passed out drunk in cockpit
Looking good, Jack!NunavutPA-12 wrote:"Was that wrong? Should I not have done that? I tell you, I gotta plead ignorance on this thing, because if anyone had said anything at all when I first started here that that sort of thing was frowned upon …. ‘cause you know, I’ve worked in a lot of airplanes and, I tell you, people do that all the time …"