MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
My point exactly.I'm not sure what that pertains to
My point exactly.I'm not sure what that pertains to
Which is pointless...My point exactly.
only because it’s beyond your range of vision.Which is pointless...
I'd say based upon your responses you're the one being myopic and unwilling to consider other views.only because it’s beyond your range of vision.
Ok…so explain to me how a knee-jerk reaction by Congress to assign blame within the FAA for an accident and increase qualification requirements in an airline cockpit to a level that was exceeded by the accident crew to make the general populace feel safer about aviation has no bearing on fears within the FAA that making it easier for those with alcohol dependency or mental illness to get into the cockpit.I'd say based upon your responses you're the one being myopic and unwilling to consider other views.
Let's keep the discussion constructive vs. levying personal attacks when there is a different viewpoint. It makes for a more productive forum.
No, I wouldn't, and they aren't.So, you would ground sober/long term abstinent alcoholics and recovered drug addicts from flying? Really?
Was the accident caused by a pilot flying drunk or a known/active substance abuse problem or a known mental illness?Ok…so explain to me how a knee-jerk reaction by Congress to assign blame within the FAA for an accident and increase qualification requirements in an airline cockpit to a level that was exceeded by the accident crew to make the general populace feel safer about aviation has no bearing on fears within the FAA that making it easier for those with alcohol dependency or mental illness to get into the cockpit.
They aren't what?No, I wouldn't, and they aren't.
No, it was caused by pilots whom the FAA let fly, but the general populace believes shouldn’t have been allowed to. Same effect.Was the accident caused by a pilot flying drunk or a known/active substance abuse problem or a known mental illness?
Well, those are 2 very different things. One is pilot ability, which can only be addressed by more training, experience and the pilot's commitment to continued mastery of their craft (which is never ending).No, it was caused by pilots whom the FAA let fly, but the general populace believes shouldn’t have been allowed to. Same effect.
They aren't what?
You clearly don’t understand your opponents.Well, those are 2 very different things. One is pilot ability, which can only be addressed by more training, experience and the pilot's commitment to continued mastery of their craft (which is never ending).
The other is pilot health related and is treated by qualified physicians.
I'd take a better skilled pilot being treated for anxiety or who is an abstaining/sober alcoholic every time over a perfectly healthy person that's less skilled. The better skilled pilot has more potential scenarios that could lead to a safe landing or fatal crash where ability is the determining factor.
Would I prefer the best of both, of course. But there are far more pilots involved in accidents due to pilot error vs. some medical condition contributing to an accident.
And I must reiterate, that for hire/commercial requirements should be different than class 3/GA requirements, of course.
That’s been my fight this whole time.
That’s a loaded way to ask, and everyone, including myself would say absolutely not if posed the way you’re asking it. If the question is “would you be okay with a recovered alcoholic or drug addict flying commercial airplanes?” I’d ask, how long have they been sober? Any longterm impairments caused by the former lifestyle? No? Then I’m okay with that if they are continuing treatment to maintain sobriety and the employer is monitoring this."View attachment 136284
Long-term abstinent alcoholics and recovered drug addicts aren't grounded.
I think you really need to touch grass. And while you're outside, ask some normals how they feel about alcoholics, drug addicts, and the mentally ill flying planes.
To be fair the 121 1500 hour screwing was forced on them by legislation that pilot unions lobbied for under the guise of safety.The faa doesn’t have a good track record with changes…
Had to rethink their 3 yr registration debacle.
Had to rethink their lifetime HIMS debacle.
Had to rethink their SSRI posture.
Their 1500 hr part 121 project aint doing great.
There are more.
They just aren’t very, uh, how do you put it… good.
YOU would ask those questions. The majority of people in the U.S. wouldn’t care about the differentiation. That’s what you don’t understand, and why your tilting at windmills will ultimately fail.That’s a loaded way to ask, and everyone, including myself would say absolutely not if posed the way you’re asking it. If the question is “would you be okay with a recovered alcoholic or drug addict flying commerial airplanes?” I’d ask, how long have they been sober? Any longterm impairments caused by the former lifestyle? No? Then I’m okay with that if they are contuing treatment to maintain sobriety and the employer is monitoring this."
And please define mentally ill. Are we talking schizophrenic, anxiety, depression, gender disphoria, OCD, Jordan Neely on the subway? What are we talking about here?
That doesn’t mean I have to throw my hands up and say I give up. Congress is already moving to reform the FAA’s stance on certain conditions, because it’s needed and, for whatever reason, there is an ever increasing % of the population being diagnosed with mental or mood disorders. This will only get worse if nothing is done.You clearly don’t understand your opponents.
It’ll also get worse if the right thing isn’t done, which is where you are.That doesn’t mean I have to throw my hands up and say I give up. Congress is already moving to reform the FAA’s stance on certain conditions, because it’s needed and, for whatever reason, there is an ever increasing % of the population being diagnosed with mental or mood disorders. This will only get worse if nothing is done.
Time will tell, the FAA is already moving closer to my position on mental health items. So there is progress, albeit at government pace.YOU would ask those questions. The majority of people in the U.S. wouldn’t care about the differentiation. That’s what you don’t understand, and why your tilting at windmills will ultimately fail.
I’m for common sense reform…I’m not asking for dangerous people to be flying. I’m asking for the FAA to implement a faster process for issuance for those that have already been determined fit to fly by HIMS psychologists/neuropsychologists faster than 12 months from application submission to issuance.It’ll also get worse if the right thing isn’t done, which is where you are.
Maybe they should be. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanwings_Flight_9525I can’t think of a single person that’s ever said I’m scared the pilot is going to intentionally fly the plane into the ground.
Rephrase the question, "Sir, how do you feel about the FAA directing more attention towards allowing and encouraging pilots to seek treatment for mental/physical illnesses and addiction like past alcoholism/anxiety/and mild depression?"And while you're outside, ask some normals how they feel about alcoholics, drug addicts, and the mentally ill flying planes.
I definitely agree. I have stated more than I can count on this forum that the main issue I have is the timeline the FAA works under and take issue with the fact that certain deferrals require you to visit FAA approved specialists in those fields. Those specialists make their determination withing a few weeks but then the reports go to the FAA to sit for 8-12 months to collect dust. If the specialists recommend issuance or SI, then the AME should be required to issue in 99% of the cases.I think people have lost the original crux of the issue here. And that is the FAA needs to be more efficient not more lax.
Its, "The FAA needs to be better at finding out whose safe to fly and letting them fly" vs. "The FAA needs to just let more people fly."
You can't really argue against the first point, you can say its unlikely, or there is no profit incentive, but you can't really say its a bad thing.
Rephrase the question, "Sir, how do you feel about the FAA directing more attention towards allowing and encouraging pilots to seek treatment for mental/physical illnesses and addiction like past alcoholism/anxiety/and mild depression?"
You would still get some mixed answers, but I think fairly positive.
Wrong person. Send to Sec Trans.I actually codified an entire method to do that, using recognized board certified specialists, removing all but administrative responsibility from the FAA (as that’s ALL they should be liable for), decentralized a bunch, built in automatic flexibility and metrics for performance… sent it all to Homendy. Crickets.
Tools - DM me. I’d be happy to run parallel efforts communicating the same things.I actually codified an entire method to do that, using recognized board certified specialists, removing all but administrative responsibility from the FAA (as that’s ALL they should be liable for), decentralized a bunch, built in automatic flexibility and metrics for performance… sent it all to Homendy. Crickets.
This kind of a wrong assumption is one of the reasons we have such a crazy system.Like it or not, the general public (the ones constantly trying to shut down airports) feel safer knowing that pilots are held to a higher level of scrutiny, both medically and in training.
Like everything with the public, it all depends on what and how you tell them. Make the message about safety and QoL for pilots (which is not a lie) and "the public" will be in support.If the public knew ANYTHING about and had any say in FAA medical scrutiny, we'd have no pilots.
For those that have not seen the news:
FAA Postpones Medical Certification Changes
Move came five days after backlash on new policy to deny deferred medicals if they didn't have complete documentation.www.avweb.com
FAA: “The decision to implement this change was not associated with the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2024, but the need to provide immediate answers to airmen regarding the medical certification process.”For those that have not seen the news:
FAA Postpones Medical Certification Changes
Move came five days after backlash on new policy to deny deferred medicals if they didn't have complete documentation.www.avweb.com
I'm sure if they get hit with more backlash during the listening sessions...especially if some of the people at the sessions are aviation attorneys, they may back off.They’re just giving themselves time to educate us about how wonderful their change is.
“Postponing allows the FAA additional time to educate the pilot community and to host a listening session with various aviation associations in early January."
They were clearly hit with backlash over it. I've a feeling the listening sessions they speak of may be productive enough to get them to back off.FAA: “The decision to implement this change was not associated with the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2024, but the need to provide immediate answers to airmen regarding the medical certification process.”
This is the dumbest $h!t I’ve read. So rather than doing their job in a timely manner or making changes that actually fix the issues, the decision was to just deny the applicant in order to “provide the immediate answers to airmen…” and give the applicant a timely response…a denial. These folks suck so incredibly bad. How can anyone defend this??
How long does it take for these jokers to even determine if it’s incomplete? 6 months?
F them.
I’m sure they will back off, but it does nothing to fix the overall rot that is at the FAA. The more I learn the more it seems they just make it up as they go along and with zero accountability.They were clearly hit with backlash over it. I've a feeling the listening sessions they speak of may be productive enough to get them to back off.
They’re just giving themselves time to educate us about how wonderful their change is.
“Postponing allows the FAA additional time to educate the pilot community and to host a listening session with various aviation associations in early January."
I really hope so as well. They need to put a statute of limitations on all criminal offenses. If it's older than 10 years old, it's off limits. And anyone who was forced into HIMS based on offenses that were 10+ years old at the time they were forced into HIMS need to have that requirement removed. If they otherwise meet standards, they can be returned to an unrestricted medical certificate, effective immediately.I’m sure they will back off, but it does nothing to fix the overall rot that is at the FAA. The more I learn the more it seems they just make it up as they go along and with zero accountability.
It’s infurating. I REALLY hope DOGE comes out swinging and get the Gov working for us again vs. us working for the Gov.