4CornerFlyer said:
Seems to me it was the captain of that Air-Tran flight who had his head up his ass. I might expect such tomfoolery from the imbecilic reactionaries who staff airport security, but the captain was the one who decided to turn the plane around. Would any of us have made the same decision? Might he have simply poured the water down the drain? Or asked the passenger to drink it? Ridiculous!
Jon
So long as the item is banned as a hazard to the safety of flight, then I can't see where the Capt. has much of a choice.
Let's assume for the moment that the Capt. made a reasonable investigation, determined that the water was really H2O and nothing bad happened on the flight. FA writes in her usual post flight report to the management that she brought this to the CA's attention and that it was a non event, she's got to report it since the pax might complain about the way she treated him so she really has no choice but to put it in her report. Mgt says Wait up there, you brought this to the CA's attention and he did not do anything?
Next thing you know CA is sitting in Chief Pilot's office and his file (before we even start the meeting) shows he's been removed from flight status and is being investigated for a security lapse. (If nothing else happens this will stick with him the remainder of his career).
CP = Chief Pilot
CA = Captain
CP - So CA tell me about flight nnn.
CA - Not much to tell we flew from ATL to LGA.
CP - During the flight did the FA bring to your attention that a bottle of liquid was in the possession of a passenger and had not been distributed by her?
CA - yes she said the guy had a bottle of water he brought on.
CP - what did you do?
CA - I sent the FO back to talk to the pax and see what was up.
CP - and what did he say?
CP - FO said it was a bottle of water, the pax had taken a drink from it while FO watched. The Pax was an average middle aged white guy, slightly over weight and he was travelling from ATL to LGA for a company meeting. Seemed to be it was a harmless security error so I flew on.
CP - Did you notify anybody on the ground that there was an unapproved bottle of liquid on the aircraft?
CA - No
CP - Did you confiscate the bottle?
CA - No
CP - Did you send an ACARS message to dispatch with this information?
CA - No
CP - Did you file an incident report after you landed?
CA - No
CP - Captain you are being suspended for one month without pay for violating the operations manual. I will be issuing a formal letter to you by the end of the week. Please leave your ID with me and when you are back on the payroll you can come to the ticket counter and I will bring it out to you.
CA - What sections of the ops manual did I violate?
CP - First, the ops manual in section xx-xx says that the CA will assure that all security procedures are followed at all times. Since water is a banned substance, you did not comply with that section. Second, the ops manual says that the CA will report any unusual or abnormal occurances at the end of each flight. You did not do that. Third, the ops manual says that no crewmember can leave his station except for physiological needs, or safety of the flight. You sent your FO into a potentially dangerous situation, so you violated that section (by the way its an FAR as well). Fourth the ops manual says that as Captain you will exercise good judgment at all times. WE believe that your failure to declare an emergency and land at the nearest suitable airport was very bad judgment and we may at the end of the suspension demote you to FO, we haven't decided on that one yet.
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That is what happens with a non event, imagine the witch hunt when pilots acutally make mistakes.
No the Captain doesn't have much of a choice in these situations.
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Also, don't forget the TSA, they might decide that the CA was a security risk simply because he failed to respond to what they perceive as a security risk. This can really get ugly!