It is surprising to read that larger carriers does not have LoL insurance for their pilots. In Norway we take LoL coverage for granted. Perhaps the Norwegian pilots will have to cover such an insurance by themselves.
Pilots need adequate loss of licence insurance: Lufthansa
CEO
Pilots need to be provided with adequate loss of
licence insurance that will allow them to remain financially secure if they are
mentally unfit to fly, Lufthansa Group chief executive Carsten Spohr has said in
the wake of the tragic Germanwings A320 crash in March.
Germanwings is
the budget arm of Lufthansa, and French prosecutors have accused Germanwings
first officer Andreas Lubitz of deliberately crashing the aircraft into the
French Alps, killing all 150 passengers and crew members on board. Mr Lubitz had
a history of mental health issues before the crash.
Unlike in most other
jobs, pilots that report medical issues such as depression can be declared unfit
to fly and risk losing their income source. Some loss of licence insurance
policies cover mental health issues but others, like the one offered by Qantas
Airways, make payouts - which can reach nearly $1 million depending on the
pilot's age - discretionary in such cases.
Mr Spohr, himself a former
A320 pilot, told a forum at the International Air Transport Association annual
meeting in Miami that the potential to lose a licence made it tricky for pilots
to report mental health issues, so ensuring insurance was adequate was "the
highest measure we can have."
"All airlines should work on that," he
said, without divulging details of the policies available to Lufthansa and
Germanwings pilots.
Etihad Airways chief executive James Hogan agreed the
potential of losing income was a serious concern that could lead pilots to fail
to report health problems.
"One of the biggest challenges for pilots is
loss of licence insurance and what do they do next," he said.
Alaska
Airlines chief executive Brad Tilden said an industry-wide solution was needed
to deal with the issue of future careers for pilots grounded due to health
issues.
"I think the industry needs to work together," he said. "It is a
problem all of us in the industry share."
Mr Spohr said the Germanwings
crash had raised very difficult issues for his airline group and for the
industry as a whole.
"Maybe there is no 100 per cent safety in aviation
no matter how hard we work on it," he said. "Maybe it is something in the
industry we have to live with."
In the Germanwings case, the captain was
locked out of the cockpit by Mr Lubitz and could not reenter because the door
was too secure as a result of post-September 11th security measures.
"It
makes us realise we always thought of the threat coming from outside the cabin
not inside the cabin," said Claudia Sender, the chief executive of Brazilian
carrier TAM. "Part of the systems to protect the aircraft worked the other way
around in this case. How you create redundancies like always making sure there
is a second crew member in the cabin."
Qantas and Virgin Australia both
put in place a policy of having two people on the flight deck at all times after
the Germanwings crash.
Mr Spohr said when discussing the Germanwings
crash, it was important that the public recognised this was not a simple issue
of pilot depression.
"Depression is a very common disease and depression
doesn't cause people to do what our pilot did," he said. "There is more than a
depressive problem here when someone acts that way. We shouldn't put all people
who have depression in this basket as this individual. That is very important.
Depression is a common disease and there is a way to heal it."
The
reporter travelled to Miami as a guest of IATA and Qantas.
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