The pilot made a safety call.
Good, bad or indifferent, it was his call to make.
This. And it should be noted that the controller had nowhere else to put him in that airspace.
Pilot accepted the clearance to the waypoint that everyone else in front of him and behind him was headed for, to enter oceanic airspace as his departure IFR clearance.
Pilot didn’t like what he saw on onboard radar, and said he wouldn’t go there. When he chose (just fine) not to fly that clearance, there’s no room in NYC airspace to do anything but spin him inside that controllers airspace until the controller can take the time to figure out a new plan for him.
Problem was, there was no place else to go. You hear the controller mention it to him in the video that he can’t have him any further north, or he’s in LGA airspace in that weather configuration.
After a few laps and seeing everyone else going to the waypoint, the pilot asked to be sent on to it, but the controller didn’t have a place in the conga line coming off that runway and heading that way. Everybody coming off of that runway was making the left turn.
The controller spun him around again (yes, maybe out of a bit of spite) because there’s really no room to do anything about it when NYC airports are all pushing. You stay in the line or you get spun. It’s the nature of an NYC push. With the BIG weather where it was, the only reasonable route out to the oceanic airspace was the way the controllers were sending everyone... where the little weather was.
When a gap opened up, he put the aircraft right back on the original assigned routing.
The traffic load in NYC is high and there’s three major airports and a bunch of smaller ones sharing a lot of airspace. Call it four in this particular case if you add oceanic Teteroboro departures in big private jets.
Pilot was ****y, he didn’t like how the weather that way looked, controller was ****y because every aircraft for the last hour and every aircraft afterward went that way. No great solution, but if you want out of the conga line in NYC, you’re going to be doing laps somewhere until they figure out what to do with you.
It’s the pilot’s call, safety first, all that... but NYC controllers are acutely aware of the weather and when they have to “flip” runways, they have to coordinate it between a WHOLE bunch of people.
That... was the reason I spent a very long night in a government baby puke green building installing conference call gear one very late night years ago. It was the touch screen driven system the controller supervisors used at all of the facilities to lunch up a conference call on the hoot and holler circuits and have a pow wow about when to flip the airports, amongst other things. Also where they communicated about emergencies, traffic flow problems, you name it.
They gave us 30 minutes to cut it over to new software, including back then, changing multiple EPROMs that stored custom messages and sounds. And it was loaded from floppy. That cut over was TIGHT, once we added mandatory smoke testing to the end of it before it went back into service.
Not ten minutes after we were done with that 1AM maintenance they needed that conference bridge for an inbound emergency to JFK. I was sitting there just hoping none of the new cards had any sort of audio or backplane problems, because the equipment back then didn’t have the greatest self-test capabilities of DSP to backplane communications.
How you found out one of those old systems had a problem was reports of static or dead air from one of the phone lines once the algorithm selected that card and DSP chip to handle that port. You had to fill it with calls and listen to every line manually to see that everything was truly working.
In the case of our FAA contract, we had to have them forego a full up test due to the 30 minute time constraint and accept an engineer sitting on site ready to disable any bad card or DSP manually that sounded wrong.
So there I sat. Until 4AM. Then someone in Denver took over for me at 2AM Mountain so I could go to the roach motel and sleep.
Went back the next day for another four hours or so, and everything was working, so we mostly chatted with the ops guy and managers about airplane stuff and then caught a plane home that evening.
Bottom line, NYC didn’t have any place else to put him, and he said he wouldn’t go into the weather. His call... he’s going to get spun until he decides to press on, or the controller has time to figure out what to do with him, in those conditions in NYC.