I honestly don’t know where it goes. I was astonished to find that in less than 24 hours approximately 150 people knew about it.
Did you see email from NASA or just .mil?
I honestly don’t know where it goes. I was astonished to find that in less than 24 hours approximately 150 people knew about it.
That is not phraseology that I've heard as a stand-alone instruction. Could you provide the full phraseology used in the instruction that referenced the back-taxi? Used alone, I can see how it could cause confusion. Was it preceded by holding instructions and/or 'Expect'? 'which clearly shows that the aircraft was told twice to “back taxi with tower”
Military with the ASRS attached. Not to my email, the chief controllers email
No. I was happy with the apology and acknowledgment of guilt. Hindsight being 20/20….Nothing precludes the reporting party from sharing the report, including sharing with their superiors.
Did you report this as a runway incursion at the time of the occurrence?
Expect was used twice. Even the phrase I hate “be advised “ expect back taxi with tower was used the second timeThat is not phraseology that I've heard as a stand-alone instruction. Could you provide the full phraseology used in the instruction that referenced the back-taxi? Used alone, I can see how it could cause confusion. Was it preceded by holding instructions and/or 'Expect'? '
That’s my understanding. Not a NASA ASRS report. But internally so to speak. Same way an Operational Error or Pilot Deviation would be reported. But in the case of Runway Incursion no loss of separation would have to have occurred. They all must be reported. That’s FAA. The OP works at KDMA, an Air Force Base. I don’t know what their rules are. But he may be getting a little flack for not having reported it. I dunno. Who was right and who was wrong wouldn’t be the point as pertains to this.Aren't runway incursions a mandatory report?
It wouldn’t have ‘zeroed’ in directly. Would probably go something like this. NASA calls the Air Force and says whadda ya know about this. They probably do it directly to the head ATC dude at headquarters. He then calls the facility where it happened and asks whadda ya know about this. Then they zero in and ask the controllers whadda ya know about this and maybe a why haven’t we already heard about it.Yes, I understand that, but in this case and based on everything I thought about ASRS and reinforced by this, https://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/docs/ASRS_ProgramBriefing.pdf, I'm surprised the ASRS team zeroed in on a particular controller at a particular facility.
Just easier to write up everyone these days and let the powers that be sort out the details.
I'm sorry if it sounds like a sermon!
I don't know about the military commanders, but I do know that the FAA (certainly with some exceptions) has migrated from punishment to safety data collection and (possible) retraining. The airlines ASAP program showed the value of getting the mistakes reported outside the cockpit vs keeping things secret. Some have said that ASAP was instrumental in our country's commercial aviation safety record.
For the FAA controllers, ATSAP provided a means of collecting safety data similar to ASAP, and safety trends have been identified and mitigated. So if a controller informs you that a pilot deviation may have occurred, please realize that he/she is just doing what a safety culture is supposed to do. Hopefully the FSDO/CMO person is on board as well.
Lastly, the pilot of the aircraft that has gone out on a runway w/o clearance may have done the same thing at several different airports around the country, each time receiving a stern talking-to by the controller. Without reporting, nobody will know if this is the first time or the fifth. The sixth time could occur just as you are touching down. Nobody wants that.
It wouldn’t have ‘zeroed’ in directly. Would probably go something like this. NASA calls the Air Force and says whadda ya know about this. They probably do it directly to the head ATC dude at headquarters. He then calls the facility where it happened and asks whadda ya know about this. Then they zero in and ask the controllers whadda ya know about this and maybe a why haven’t we already heard about it.
And now, the 35,000 members of POA.I was astonished to find that in less than 24 hours approximately 150 people knew about it.
That removes any ambiguity.Expect was used twice