Alright, so I work for Southwest.
Obviously, since I'm on this forum, I'm a pilot myself. Additionally, prior to southwest, I worked for two other airlines and had nearly five years of experience working in the GA industry before that.
Tonight, we had a plane come in. We offloaded it like normal, and since it was not departing for two hours, the rest of the gate crew decided to take a break. Rather than slacking off, I topped up the potable water before giving the aircraft a real walk around.
The walkarounds most of my coworkers do are little more than an exercise routine. Three days ago, I caught FOD damage severe enough to ground the aircraft- after both the gate lead AND first officer had done a preflight "inspection."
Since the plane I was working on tonight was not due to depart anytime soon, I repeated the same process I'd done hundreds of times before- often times in full view of A&Ps and flight crew. (To which none objected.) I actually looked down the static ports, stuck my head into the gear well, and popped open the engine oil access panels on each engine to check the sight glasses. That's when I notice a sight glass on the right engine was completely dry.
I'm not an A&P and, as such, I did not touch anything inside the panel. I snapped a picture of it, as well as the same sight gauge on the opposite engine (which was nominal) and reported it to the PIC.
It's worth noting that, at no point in training, did they prohibit us from opening service panels. Obviously I don't open those I can't reach, those with warnings not to open them, and those that would require tools. The only panels I opened that are not on a ramp agent's job description were the oil panels on each engine. (And only then because I had experience opening them from GA.)
The PIC was clueless as to what the sight gauge was for, stating he had no annunciator in the cockpit and called maintenance.
The other, more senior, ramp agents I had worked with, had told me "that's not your job, don't worry about them.", as if what I was doing was harmless, just unnecessary and that I could take a longer break instead of making sure the aircraft was safe. Eventually, they figured out I was the person who noticed the lack of oil and called management who proceeded to burn me at the stake for it.
MX came out to take a look. The mechanic took me aside and stated that, though he did not agree with how I discovered the low oil condition and that I shouldn't do it again, he thanked me for finding it. Apparently, the aircraft was unsafe without oil, and he left to grab some. Overall, he was gentle and more interested in using it as a teaching moment than seeking blood.
Management, on the other hand, threw a fit. How dare I report an issue that made the aircraft unsafe to fly, causing them to suffer a delay? They have not fired me yet, but it's only been an hour and a half since this all went down. They gave a very stern "final" (more like first, last, and how "f--kn' dare you do that") warning before pushing the flight out after it got oil.
Needless to say, I'm not doing that again. But I can't help but feel like what I did was right. The aircraft was unsafe and, while I may not have the authority to ground the aircraft, I can't help but feel morally obligated to help ensure safety of flight by reporting it to the flight crew. If something had happened, the laws of physics don't give a damn who is at fault.
I'm just kind of stressed out here and am trying to get my thoughts out.
Thoughts?
Obviously, since I'm on this forum, I'm a pilot myself. Additionally, prior to southwest, I worked for two other airlines and had nearly five years of experience working in the GA industry before that.
Tonight, we had a plane come in. We offloaded it like normal, and since it was not departing for two hours, the rest of the gate crew decided to take a break. Rather than slacking off, I topped up the potable water before giving the aircraft a real walk around.
The walkarounds most of my coworkers do are little more than an exercise routine. Three days ago, I caught FOD damage severe enough to ground the aircraft- after both the gate lead AND first officer had done a preflight "inspection."
Since the plane I was working on tonight was not due to depart anytime soon, I repeated the same process I'd done hundreds of times before- often times in full view of A&Ps and flight crew. (To which none objected.) I actually looked down the static ports, stuck my head into the gear well, and popped open the engine oil access panels on each engine to check the sight glasses. That's when I notice a sight glass on the right engine was completely dry.
I'm not an A&P and, as such, I did not touch anything inside the panel. I snapped a picture of it, as well as the same sight gauge on the opposite engine (which was nominal) and reported it to the PIC.
It's worth noting that, at no point in training, did they prohibit us from opening service panels. Obviously I don't open those I can't reach, those with warnings not to open them, and those that would require tools. The only panels I opened that are not on a ramp agent's job description were the oil panels on each engine. (And only then because I had experience opening them from GA.)
The PIC was clueless as to what the sight gauge was for, stating he had no annunciator in the cockpit and called maintenance.
The other, more senior, ramp agents I had worked with, had told me "that's not your job, don't worry about them.", as if what I was doing was harmless, just unnecessary and that I could take a longer break instead of making sure the aircraft was safe. Eventually, they figured out I was the person who noticed the lack of oil and called management who proceeded to burn me at the stake for it.
MX came out to take a look. The mechanic took me aside and stated that, though he did not agree with how I discovered the low oil condition and that I shouldn't do it again, he thanked me for finding it. Apparently, the aircraft was unsafe without oil, and he left to grab some. Overall, he was gentle and more interested in using it as a teaching moment than seeking blood.
Management, on the other hand, threw a fit. How dare I report an issue that made the aircraft unsafe to fly, causing them to suffer a delay? They have not fired me yet, but it's only been an hour and a half since this all went down. They gave a very stern "final" (more like first, last, and how "f--kn' dare you do that") warning before pushing the flight out after it got oil.
Needless to say, I'm not doing that again. But I can't help but feel like what I did was right. The aircraft was unsafe and, while I may not have the authority to ground the aircraft, I can't help but feel morally obligated to help ensure safety of flight by reporting it to the flight crew. If something had happened, the laws of physics don't give a damn who is at fault.
I'm just kind of stressed out here and am trying to get my thoughts out.
Thoughts?