Hypothetically, lets say there was a flight school pushing their instructors, resources, airplanes, etc. to their limits. Maybe there are situations where instructors should squawk airplanes, but they don't because they know their flights tomorrow will get cancelled and there aren't many airplanes to begin with. Or maybe lets say opportunities to fly are somewhat limited and the pressure to fly is pretty severe to the point where instructors are consistently "working" 14-15 hour days and flying 4-6 within this period (often times until 2-3AM). Or maybe instructors are asking students to fly at 2AM because thats when the resource is available and then the students are scheduled for a solo time building flight 8AM the next morning. Or maybe instructors are consistently scheduled at night when icing conditions exist and are told, "we'll give you more training to avoid the clouds at night." Or maybe there are consistent maintenance squawks that are never fully taken care of (consistently multiple airplanes with multiple gear issues in the same month). Would you consider these examples of a bad company culture for a flight school?
Outside of leaving this company, how would you handle it? I constantly think back to the swiss cheese model and I think soon some of the holes are going to line up; tired instructor because 2AM, takes a flight in marginal weather, little fuel on board because no 24 hour fuel, gets a broken airplane because student forgot something on preflight, etc.. Obviously, theres a bit more to the hypothetical story, but I think the examples above show some of the pressures, risks, and safety investments the hypothetical company is willing to make.
As "professional" and "commercial" pilots these guys should be PIC and say no or make appropriate decisions, but at some point there has to be multiple mistakes or you might adapt to the pressures to the point of it being normal.
Does the FSDO like to hear about this stuff or do they just say "bring tangible proof, now go away"? I've never talked to the FSDO and hopefully never will, but I'm genuinely curios if they play any roles in situations like these. How would you handle it? Do you think there are issues here?
Outside of leaving this company, how would you handle it? I constantly think back to the swiss cheese model and I think soon some of the holes are going to line up; tired instructor because 2AM, takes a flight in marginal weather, little fuel on board because no 24 hour fuel, gets a broken airplane because student forgot something on preflight, etc.. Obviously, theres a bit more to the hypothetical story, but I think the examples above show some of the pressures, risks, and safety investments the hypothetical company is willing to make.
As "professional" and "commercial" pilots these guys should be PIC and say no or make appropriate decisions, but at some point there has to be multiple mistakes or you might adapt to the pressures to the point of it being normal.
Does the FSDO like to hear about this stuff or do they just say "bring tangible proof, now go away"? I've never talked to the FSDO and hopefully never will, but I'm genuinely curios if they play any roles in situations like these. How would you handle it? Do you think there are issues here?