torsdag 13. desember 2018

Air India og flysikkerhet - Curt Lewis

181 pilots tested positive for alcohol during 2015-2018 (India)


A total of 181 pilots of scheduled and non-scheduled operators tested positive for alcohol during 2015-2018, the Civil Aviation Ministry informed Parliament on Thursday.

Replying to a query in the Lok Sabha, Minister of State for Civil Aviation Jayant Sinha said that in 2015, as many as 43 pilots tested positive for alcohol, followed by 44 in 2016.

In 2017, the number stood at 45 and 49 such cases have come to the fore till November 2018, he said.

In November this year, Air India Captain Arvind Kathpalia, in charge of Director Operations, was sacked a day after the Directorate General of Civil Aviation suspended his license for three years for failing the breath analyser test.


Air India pilots' body decides to not accept last minute duties as part of its 'flight safety week'

Air India's aircraft pilots' body has decided to not accept last minute duties as part of its "flight safety week" and protest the delay in payment of the flying allowance


Air India's narrow-body aircraft pilots' body has decided to resort to "work-to-rule" and not accept last minute duties as part of its "flight safety week" and also protest the delay in payment of the flying allowance.

The Indian Commercial Pilots Association (ICPA), which claims to represent over 700 pilots in the government-run airline, Wednesday issued directives to its members on a range of issues.

"No last minute pullouts for flights is to be accepted. A minimum of 12 hours or more as applicable to be followed for pullouts from the time of communication for change," the ICPA said in the directives to its members.

Earlier, the ICPA had written a letter to AI chairman and managing director Pradeep Singh Kharola, saying the airline was delaying payment of flying allowance which constitutes 80 per cent of their total monthly salary.

In view of this, the ICPA said it would observe "Flight Safety Week" in the interest of the safety of crew and passengers.

The association has also asked its members not to give consent for any exemption in their DGCA-mandated duty hours and rest period norms and also not to perform visual approaches.

"Pilots are advised to report sick if they are fatigued or stressed and follow laid down sick report and fit report procedure," it said in the directives.

Members should "strictly" follow stabilised approaches, it said, adding pilot defect report (PDR or flight report book) will be signed only after all cargo doors are closed and ensuring proper closure of doors by personally carrying out external walk around.

"All defects to be positively written in PDR and cleared on MEL (minimum equipment list). The defect is to be mentioned in the PDR and accept the aircraft only if it is a go item as per MEL," the directives stated.

In its letter to Kharola, the ICPA had said a majority of its members were defaulting on bank EMIs due to the salary delays which was also putting them under a lot of "stress".

"There is already a backlog of one-month flying allowance. This unspecified delay has impaired our financial planning, especially (pilots are) defaulting on loan EMI..

majority of us have defaulted on bank loans and credit card payments while the rest had to arrange funds by taking further loans," the ICPA said in the letter.

This financial problem has made it extremely difficult for the pilots to work "stress-free", it added.

"Stress jeopardises decision-making relevance and cognitive functioning which is fatal to flight safety," the ICPA said in the letter.

Air India spokesperson was, however, not available for comments.

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