Airlines Posts

Sometimes Saying No is Just Plane Stupid
April 22, 2013

Sometimes Saying No is Just Plane Stupid

Looking back on the decade of my life I spent working at FAA I remember one thing for certain. When someone at the agency told me “No,” the reasons were seldom clear.“No,” might have meant something as simple as “No,&#…
Air France 447 and Sleep Deprivation: A Fatal Link
March 17, 2013

Air France 447 and Sleep Deprivation: A Fatal Link

Every journalist who has writtten in the past few years about the 2009 Air France accident has eventually ended up asking the same question … why did an experienced crew react to the weather the way they did, as well as to the failure of some…
Cash for Towers: You Can help
March 13, 2013

Cash for Towers: You Can help

Still Time to Save Some Towers — Straight off the massive printing presses at the General Aviation Airport Coalition in Washington comes late word that a deal is in the works to pull some cash from one place and send it somewhere else. What…
Empty Charter Jets Going Everywhere
March 11, 2013

Empty Charter Jets Going Everywhere

Realizing that I wouldn’t be able to attend the annual Air Charter Safety Foundation’s Safety Symposium (ACSF) in Washington last week got me thinking about how little publiscize charter jets at a transportation assett. For those unfamil…
Sequestration & Our DOT Secretary
Feb. 28, 2013

Sequestration & Our DOT Secretary

I was reading NATCA President Paul Rinaldi‘s remarks yesterday from his luncheon talk at the Washington Aero Club in advance of Friday’s “end of the world” or “no big deal” sequestration day depending on whom you …
A Future View of UAV Safety & Surveillance
Feb. 6, 2013

A Future View of UAV Safety & Surveillance

The 1.8 gigapixel looks at 20 square miles at once.Comments on last week’s post on UAVs focused on safety and privacy, and rightly so. Most offered valid examples of why UAVs won’t work today, and I won’t argue because I agree.…
Move Past LaHood … and the Sooner the Better
Feb. 4, 2013

Move Past LaHood … and the Sooner the Better

Sometimes the best action is to take none, which is precisely the route I chose last week when many people were falling over themselves to tell outgoing Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood how much they appreciated his past four years on the job.…
Is Rise of Civilian Drones Accelerating?
Jan. 27, 2013

Is Rise of Civilian Drones Accelerating?

Many would not expect a prediction of aviation’s future on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, but there it was on January 23. The guest, Missy Cummings, one of the Navy’s first female F-18 drivers and now an association professor of aerona…
Chicago Meigs Field (CGX) is Dead … Really
Jan. 22, 2013

Chicago Meigs Field (CGX) is Dead … Really

Not long ago, I had a chance to visit some old friends here in Chicago when I took the family down to a few of the Chicago museums on the east edge of downtown. Having survived 12 years of the Chicago Public School system, I know the former field-tr…
Aviation Safety: What Has Become of Us?
Jan. 13, 2013

Aviation Safety: What Has Become of Us?

Oh, the irony of progress.In 2005, the FAA issued its first Safety Alert for Operators, “an information tool that alerts, educates, and makes recommendations to the aviation community [that] includes air carrier certificate holders, fractiona…
Has Technology Killed the Art of Flying?
Dec. 9, 2012

Has Technology Killed the Art of Flying?

When he passes through town, a friend, a long-time CFI and designated pilot examiner, calls so we can catch up over coffee. Like many people today, pilots or not, an iPad seems permanently attached to my friend. Curious, I asked how many applicants …
At the Movies, I Can Only Surrender So Much
Nov. 11, 2012

At the Movies, I Can Only Surrender So Much

When a single trip to the bargain matinee equals my monthly Netflix subscription, for most movies my frugality partners with patience and we add the title to our queue. On a 1997 date night, my wife and I saw Air Force One, and she didn’t real…
If I Were an American Airlines Pilot
Oct. 8, 2012

If I Were an American Airlines Pilot

There’s no small amount of irony in the fact that American Airlines axed the contracts of their pilots just a few hours past Labor Day last month. Kind of adds insult to injury. I feel for the pilots having been around to watch the ugliness of…
Bragging Rights & The Future of Flight
Sept. 8, 2012

Bragging Rights & The Future of Flight

Here in Wisconsin, a swing state, we have been incessantly pummeled by political ads of both parties. This onslaught has been painfully punctuated almost daily by political surveys whose questions do little more than support the delusions of the per…
A Little Labor Day Message
Sept. 3, 2012

A Little Labor Day Message

Thanks to my comrades at The Airplane Geeks Show for staying way ahead of me and posting my annual Labor Day message. In case you don’t listen to our show — impossible as that might be — do give this link a quick click. Promise I d…
Sequestration: Don’t Let the Trolls Win
Aug. 20, 2012

Sequestration: Don’t Let the Trolls Win

Until the other day, I thought a troll was one of those horrid little creatures living under bridges just waiting for the chance to reach up and scare the dickens out of some little kid. But lo and behold, as a reader told me, a troll in the Interne…
Another Pilot Shortage — Really?
July 16, 2012

Another Pilot Shortage — Really?

Boeing released its periodic Pilot & Technician Outlook at Farnborough on July 11. In hours the global media started producing stories of future doom because of the shortage and said that the new pilots trained over the next 20 years would be le…
Bird Strike Investigators Want Your Snarge
July 10, 2012

Bird Strike Investigators Want Your Snarge

Bird strikes have been one of my passing interests ever since I watched the head-on confrontation between a seagull and A landing A-6 during a wheels’ watch at NAS Alameda in the early 1970s. (The seagull lost, by the way.) Somewhere over the …
Flying the Airbus A380
July 8, 2012

Flying the Airbus A380

Every so often work becomes fun. OK, admittedly, not very often. When the folks at Aviation International News asked me to check out the new Brake-to-Vacate system Airbus had designed, they mentioned I’d have a chance to see it in action since…
Safety May be the Death of General Aviation
June 25, 2012

Safety May be the Death of General Aviation

In her opening statement at the June 19 convocation addressing General Aviation Safety—Climbing to the Next Level, NTSB Chairman Deborah Hersman said “in spite of improvements to the commercial and corporate aviation safety records, the GA acc…
Air France 447 Final Report Means an Ugly Summer Ahead
June 12, 2012

Air France 447 Final Report Means an Ugly Summer Ahead

I’ve been dreading this summer … for the first time in my life though actually. That’s because next month the final French BEA report on the Air France 447 crash will be released.Most professional pilots have a pretty good idea wh…
Aluminum’s Hidden Benefits for Aerospace
May 31, 2012

Aluminum’s Hidden Benefits for Aerospace

Thierry Dubois and I have known each other for many years although I can’t even recall how we met any longer. I just recall that we became friends years ago once we realized we were both hardcore aviation journalists. But in addition to his Eu…
CFIs Need Career Situational Awareness
May 9, 2012

CFIs Need Career Situational Awareness

Last week, the middle school where I am a substitute teacher held its annual career and hobby day, where students sign up for presentations  that interest them. I was on duty as a student wrangler, not a speaker, and it was happenstance that I ended…
No User Fees for GA … Yet
May 6, 2012

No User Fees for GA … Yet

I was trying to explain some of the subtleties behind the word altruism to my daughter this morning at breakfast, and it made me think about the fight against aviation user fees.And yes, we have a few truly interesting family meals around our house…