Back to Squawk list
  • 19

NTSB Says Midair Pilot Overshot Pattern Turns

प्रस्तुत
 
The NTSB has cited airmanship and an air traffic control failure in the midair collision of a Cirrus SR22 and a Key Lime Air Swearingen SA226TC at Centennial Airport in Englewood, Colorado on May 12, 2021. (www.avweb.com) और अधिक...

Sort type: [Top] [Newest]


vmartinek
Victor Martinek 5
14 CFR 91.3
(a) The pilot in command of an aircraft is directly responsible for, and is the final authority as to, the operation of that aircraft. (b) In an in-flight emergency requiring immediate action, the pilot in command may deviate from any rule of this part to the extent required to meet that emergency.
TiredTom
Tom Bruce 4
looks like the parallels close together... surprised that the traffic is separated with 2 controllers on 2 frequencies.. seems to be a disaster just waiting to happen..old tower controller...
sgbelverta
sharon bias 8
If every pilot and ATC has to pass the same courses and exams, then race or income has no bearing on the job. But anyone can pass a course and still not be good at their jobs. An individual with a 70% pass rate for an ATC position is probably not as good as someone with a 100% pass rate. But the government will let both folks handle air traffic. I know which individual I'd want in the tower.
STEPHANIEWALLACH
STEPHANIE WALLACH 3
The thing that concerns me the most now, especially around pilot hiring, has nothing to do with race or gender, but the lowering of standards and requirements due to the severe pilot shortage. Airlines and commuters are
requiring less experience, less education and, by default I think, less dedication to the career. When I got hired by Braniff in 1975, everyone had
at least 2000 hours, a flight engineer rating, a first class medical, 4 years of college and all our ratings. Jobs were really tough to come by and when you finally did land one you were so grateful, so excited that you were supercharged to do it right, to perform excellently, to protect that coveted opportunity.
We were all in love with aviation. We weren't just doing it because, "Like, wow, flying looks like fun and I can make money." I worry that this new generation of pilots will be the first generation who, because it all comes so easily to them, will not uphold the standards of profession.
JoelRugeno
Joel Rugeno 9
What a heap of shit these comments are, blame the rich idiot pilot and praise the professional one. Enough said
frankidee
Frank DeLeon 13
In the late 90s the FAA, along with the union, decided to begin applying a more "liberal" approach to their hiring and certification procedures. Sadly, I think the chickens have come home to roost.
ktnxpi
Rich Pelkowski 6
Regretaby I must agree; this from a Pttsburgh area newspaper at the time:

December 2013, the FAA dropped the preference for CTI (Collegiate Training Initiative) graduates and instead relied only on a biographical questionnaire controller positions.
The colleges believe the FAA changes were made based on an agency diversity study that examined the race and gender of CTI graduates.
WALLACE24
WALLACE24 7
Rewarding less qualified started before the 90’s for many jobs. When I got back from Vietnam in 1971 I was the wrong sex/color for many company and government jobs. Motivated me to hire myself though. Lol
jbsimms
James Simms 1
Eva Air 15 16 Dec 2016 out of LAX

https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=192082
yaledad63
Bill Conn 4
Knowledge, training and experience are the factors that should always be in the forefront of filling ANY POSITION, be it for a career or a position in education!
BillOverdue
Bill Overdue 4
Unfortunately, that's simply not the case anymore!
linbb
linbb 5
Looks like another ATC problem too many mistakes are cropping up with ours. Could be a quality of employee problem trying to staff them. Cannot think back with our ATC having this many problems in such a short amount of time.
conmanflyer
conmanflyer 4
In this case, ATC appeared to fail to warn the other aircraft about a potential future mistake that the Cirrus pilot might make. There are a lot more instances out there where ATC DOES catch those mistakes, but aren't talked about. And staffing is terrible, there are facilities on 6 day work weeks but the DOT SEC says everything is fine, the FAA says everything is fine...
godutch
godutch -6
Whatdoyawannabet they are on top of and on point with adult CRT training. I'm quite sure they meet THOSE training standards
joeserdynski
Joe Serdynski -1
the current air traffic has reached saturation . . .
RJBrown409
Randy Brown 2
Two issues here.
A stupid rich, typical Cirrus pilot, who felt he had a cloak of safety.
A distracted controller.
While I was training at Centennial there was a controller named Narzell. He never got good at his job. He was generally allowed to control only 17R/35L the shorter training runway. He never worked nights or alone. Post solo but prior to getting my ticket I was in the pattern with at least 6 others. He mixed up who was who and called my right turn right after take off cutting me in front of two others in the pattern. I took over his job and got things back in shape.
ewrcap
David Beattie 0
Number one, this accident happened because an incompetent pilot (and instructor) were totally lost and in over their head. Number two, whether or not ATC warned the Key Lime pilot, he routinely flew out of APA as I do. Anyone who flies out of APA and is not aware of parallel operations, is not paying attention. There are three very busy flight schools operating here and there are always parallel operations. It’s usually noted in ATIS along with a full minute of CYA legal boilerplate.

Of course, there is always an opening for the downtrodden racist and mysoginist white man to air his grievances on this site. Having started my flight training in the 70s, I got to see white male pilots routinely crash perfectly good airplanes. Tenerife, UA at PDX (twice), UA at SLC (twice), EAL at MIA, JFK CLT etc. Most were stupid mistakes made by white men. Nobody ever blamed their gender or color for an accident. Since losing a court case in the early 80s, UA has been hiring more women and minorities than any other US airline. Their safety record has improved greatly in this period.
tongo
Dan Grelinger 2
“racist and mysoginist white man”. Very civil.
bazeemuth
bazeemuth -3
Do you feel personally attacked, Dan? Hard to tell the difference between civil and incivil discussion when you feel like you're the subject, huh?
strickerje
strickerje 1
I see no mention of race or gender prior to your comment...
STEPHANIEWALLACH
STEPHANIE WALLACH 1
Thank you, Mr. Beattie.

लॉगिन

क्या आपका कोई खाता नहीं है? अनुकूलित विशेषताओं, फ्लाइट अलर्टों,और अधिक के लिए अब(नि:शुल्क) रजिस्टर करें!
Did you know that FlightAware flight tracking is supported by advertising?
You can help us keep FlightAware free by allowing ads from FlightAware.com. We work hard to keep our advertising relevant and unobtrusive to create a great experience. It's quick and easy to whitelist ads on FlightAware or please consider our premium accounts.
Dismiss