Penticton Herald

Pilots urge action on fatigue in wake of near-crash in U.S.

- By The Canadian Press

TORONTO — A near-collision of an Air Canada jet at San Francisco’s airport should be a wake-up call for the federal government to adequately address pilot fatigue for overnight flights, the union representi­ng the airline’s pilots said Wednesday.

“I don’t know what else it would take to wake them up that this is a significan­t concern,” said Capt. Matt Hogan, chairman of the Air Canada Pilots Associatio­n master elected council.

The pilots’ group was responding to the U.S. National Transporta­tion Safety Board, which concluded that pilot error and fatigue were contributi­ng factors to the July 2017 incident.

The NTSB issued 19 findings, including that current Canadian regulation­s don’t, in some circumstan­ces, allow for sufficient rest for reserve pilots. The flight’s captain had been awake for more than 19 hours while the first officer on the flight from Toronto had been awake 12 hours.

“I would suggest that’s a very strong message that they should probably take action sooner (rather) than later and do it properly,” Hogan said in an interview.

The pilots were apparently confused because one of two parallel runways was closed and dark before the late-night incident. The crew was seconds from landing their Airbus A320 jet on a taxiway where other planes loaded with passengers were waiting to take off.

Transport Minister Marc Garneau says the government agrees that pilot fatigue rules need updating and that he has been working on the issue since coming into office in 2015.

“I take the safety or air travellers and the public very seriously, and believe a wellrested pilot is central to this,” he said in a statement.

But Hogan says Ottawa hasn’t gone far enough. He said the flight duty limit for evening and overnight flights should be changed to 8 1/2 hours, in line with NASA recommenda­tions. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion limits crews to eight hours at night on flights that aren’t ultra long haul.

Draft proposals by the government are suggesting the threshold drop from almost 14 hours to a maximum of nine hours for nighttime flights and up to 13 hours for daytime flights.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada