Major Improvements Needed in Air Safety Emergency Procedures, Report
Says
Report Urges Near Two Dozen Recommendations to Improve
Aviator Performance
By ANDY PASZTOR
Abu Dhabi-Major
improvements in pilot training, flying procedures and management oversight are
needed to ensure airline pilots properly monitor automated flight-controls and
react appropriately in emergencies, according to a report released on Thursday
by a global air-safety advocacy group.
The wide-ranging study-drafted
over two years by representatives of industry, labor, academia and the U.S.
government-sets a new benchmark emphasizing the importance of monitoring
activities performed by pilots. It also includes nearly two dozen immediate and
longer-term recommendations to improve aviator performance, ranging from
changing jetliner design to reducing cockpit distractions, to enhancing
collaboration between captains and co-pilots.
On airliners, historically
one pilot has operated flight controls and issued commands while the other
monitors systems, checks instruments, helps troubleshoot problems and performs
other tasks that don't require actually flying the aircraft. In the U.S. and
many other countries, captains and co-pilots typically switch between those
roles.
But over the decades, as automation has grown increasingly more
complex and essential for routine flight, safety and human-factors experts have
advocated more of a team approach with the nonflying, or monitoring pilot,
assuming a substantially more active role.
"It must become accepted that
monitoring is a core skill," just as important as manipulating controls or
exercising proper decision-making, according to Helena Reidemar, the study
group's co-chair and director of human factors for the Air Line Pilots
Association. "Pilot monitoring is more than observing," she told the conference.
"It is an active role."
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