Welcome to Malcolm E. Mason's blog Think True. You can read more about Think True here and about Malcolm here.

Monday, May 11, 2015

German Wings - Clipped Literally

Another Airline Crash, more loss of life. This time a subsidery of Lufthansa when all 150    passengers and crew died on flight 9525 =  Barcelona to Dusseldorf crash landed in the southern French Alps.
.In this case , I believe we had a situation, as per my tweet.

German Wings and Budget Airlines – Too many Airlines; Planes; Flights & over Scheduled, stressed out Crews – Heart Attacks & now Pilots Mental Breakdown – Wake Up World.

This is a classic case of a 'Situation' waiting to happen, within the Budget fleets around the world. This is particularly true in Europe, where there appears to be a 'Mob' of companies with aircraft, criss croosing Europe in an ever frenetic way. Goodness one can hardly see the blue sky for the vapour trails of aircraft passenger carrying and empty schuttles.

Ever increasing flights; ever increasing schedules for ground and aircrews, leading to ever increasing stress on all. This is all propagated by the endemic endeavour to reduce costs.  We all know about meals or the lack of them on these flights. We do not know of any maintainence  shortcuts taken on servicing and or extending the periods between service schedules.

What we do know is that it is easy to recruit young entusiastic cabin crews, who for  a relatively short time, will work any hours; any where at any price.

German Wings appears to have come up with a new one. Cabin crew - one senior experienced pilot, with one very junior co-pilot  ( On a Commercial Flight ) at probably lower pay rate by some margin. Hang on said a friend,the other day, that might not be quite true, wasn't there an incident or in air colllision off the Cannary Islands, some years agoe where there was a problem with a Senior pilot and Rookie. In this tragic case Luthansa knew the young man had problems of a possible mental nature.
Defies belief Lufhansa did not stand him down, a long time agoe.

I will now tell you a story as near as my 79 year old memory can recall. Sad to say, it is a Lufthansa story, with a schedule and routes that could be challenged by a route scheduler. Any way here goes.
A number of years agoe, my wife and I were visiting England, having arrved off the Le Havre – Portsmouth ferry one day, we saw a very nice B & B, in a lovely area of Hampshire,about 100 klms from Londons Heathrow Airport.


Lovely house in a forest and upon retiring for the night we noticed that a wardrobe in our bedroom was painted with pastal coloures in the Barvarian style. After breakfast we sat for a while and talked to the lady of the house and somewhere the subject of Airlines of all kinds came up. The lady was an ex Stewardess, First class, I assumed by her manner and that little aire of authority. So what did husband do, a pilot for Lufthansa came the reply, he is German and very dedicated, I said yes and I'm sure he puts in a full day and that brought forward a story, with the good lady saying-

Only recently and  or it happens on occasion. Up at 5.00 hours and off to Heathrow to do the London – Madrid at 8.00 hours. 14.00 hrs  Madrid – Milan. 17.00 hrs Please shuttle an aircraft to Amsterdam then the normal flight to London arriving 22.00. Up at 5.00hrs  to do a normal day.

Yes ,he does it for Germany. This pilot who had a new child, I think was treated like a number, even though he was senior pilot.

The young man on the German Wings flight 9525 had problems of his own, which apparantly had been indicated to Lufhansa. He wanted to be counted – I believe he was pushed too far by schedules and fatigue and cracked under the strain leading to him crashlanding  and Clipping German Wings literally, if only to bring to notice the practises of Budget Airline Operations.
Sorry Lufhansa, but was it not one of your pilots who had a heart attack on landing in Sydney, some years agoe.  

Another little story on Budget carriers and their staff. A friends son in France , with great joy, joined a budget airline – six months later he was leaving, saying it was all too much – go here go there and at the end if a day fill in on another flight etc. It seems all budget carriers push their aircraft and their sftaff to the limit or pretty well near it.

I call on all the 'Air Authrotities' to regulate very strongly, the carriers operations in all areas.

I once wrote an article, a little criptic I must admit, indicating sometimes they could fly empty planes, on the Non-Return of fares of no show customers. My dear departed sister once said on canceling a trip – oh no, they never refund for anything- cheap enough though. And my niece trips off England to Greece at the drop of a hat, to see her boyfriend quite frequently, adding to the pollution in  the skies.

What has this got to do with 9525, Plenty, in that it is clear Lufhansa and carriers like them, do not always listen to the concerns of staff, they just look at the bottom line, which must be a scary thing in Budget operatons.

All condolences to the friends and relatives of the passengers and crew that fateful flight, which was crash landed on a  Mountian in  France in March 2015. May they rest in peace.

May I quote John Ruskin  in 1819 - 1900

“It's unwise to pay too much but it's unwise to pay too little. When you pay too much you lose a little money that is all.
When you pay too little you sometimes lose everything, because the thing you bought was  incapable of doing the thing you bought it to do.
The common law of business balance prohibits paying a little and getting a lot. It cannot be done. If you deal with the lowest bidder, it is well worth adding something for the risk you run.
And if you do that, you will have enough to pay for something better.”

Those passngers happy with their cheap flight, paid the ulitmate price and I believe the Airline should be held accountable. Only recently there was a case where six Australian navy personal (junior ranks, except one}. They commited suicide whilst under medical observation for medical illness alcohol and ICE, one was actually sent to sea in an armaments section. All should have been. discharged into the care of their families and civilian dioctors. So similar to the Lufhansa situation.

Now let us see what can be done, short of closing them all down. A few ideas from this ex I.A.P.A
member, who over the years has travelled First class to Cattle class around the Word; experienced four air incidents and a number of terrorist events and interogation in Viet Nam (non combatant)
Here are some ideas for ALL carriers big and small, budget or not.

1.                  Upgrade Medical, physical and mental, stadards and examination  by Regulator Doctors, with random checks for alcohol and drugs (ICE in particular these days).
2.                  Both Airline and Regulator Doctors, listen very carefully to the staff. Any hint of problems –
medical; drugs and family matters – Act immediately by removing staffer from duties in areas of Flights; Maintainance and Armamets. Better to cancel a flight than take risks, like German wings, appear to have done.
3.                  Terrorist proof door to Cockpit – A mechanical lock -press button- with say seven digits. The Pilot on each flight, sets the numbers and of course changes them  each time the first pilot talkes control. Maybe for emergency purposes the number is given to the cabin captan via a location, pre determined.
4.                  Never, never ever leave a 'Rookie” young pilot in charge of a commercial passengr aircraft- never.
5.                  In future cockpit design, how about a caravan type toilet. A  hatch for passing refreshments etc, main fusalage to cockpit.

And so we come to the Captain of that fateful flight, of which very little is know. Did he go to the toilet or did he go to talk to the children, who woud have loved to meet 'Captain Marvel' Strange how on such a short journey, he would have to leave cockpit at all. Oh dear what mistakes we all make at some time or other – that spare of the moment thing when we take our eyes off the game and in his case flying an aircraft from one European city to another.Not realising any danger, except of course, that of leaving a young relatively inexperienced fello in charge of a passenger aiorccraft
I hope my thoughts and ideas will be of use, out there in the big world.

I have journeyed with many airlines and visited the 'Cartwheeling' city of Dusseldorf  when I was with the Austin Motor Company and Bruggamen AG? . I still think of the young chap , one Rupert Wulf, yes thats was his name, drove a VW and had a girlfriend, who could chat for an endless time without .taking a breath. I wonder if they ever married and have grand children. It was these kind people who sent a massive bunch on Carnations on our wedding day – memories- too many I'm afraid. Ah yes names Herr Schmit.Buurgellews and Fuchs all people who made me confide nt on my early foreign visits.

Again my condolences to all involved in the loss of friends and relatives and course special thoughts for the parents of the chldren.


Thats it for now. See you next time.

Malcolm E Mason
Mogood, NSW 2538, Australia.

NB. We are deep in a forest, on a river and can set the clock by the passing of a local tubo prop service, Sydney down the coast and on to Melbourne. When we are by the river in summer, and we hear the 15.00 hrs into Moruya, we know its time return to our house, to have a cup of tea . A far cry from Aubiterre in the Charante, with its sky full of vapour trails and the frenetic, schedules of Europe.  Wasn't that a marvelous add by Virgin Rail – Fly by Train. I wonder what Sir Richard Branson would have to say to my blog. Such a long long time since we met briefly in the Virgin Islands in the early seventies when he was looking for a building for a recording studio and I from Australia promoting Mini Mokes, as we had a good customer down in Barbados.

And now I must get dwn to the job of stoping Toyota selling fleets of vehicles to terrorist organistions around the World. I have raised the subject in my writings before, but now I really must get the message out. The other day I was saying to a Sudanese chap, Toyota sell fleets of 20 or so at a time to known groups such as I S. He responded, that in his Country it is more like hundreds.

Bye for now.

No comments: