Business a.m.

The flight dispatcher plays a key role in your flight’s safety

- VICTORIA JUMOKE ADEGBE business a.m. commits to publishing a diversity of views, opinions and comments. It, therefore, welcomes your reaction to this and any of our articles via email: comment@businessam­live.com

Victoria Jumoke Adegbe, CEO of Insel Networks, an aviation consultanc­y, is a licensed FAA and NCAA Aircraft Dispatcher and Ground Instructor; she studied Geography, and had her aviation training at Nigerian College of Aviation Technology, NCAT Zaria, Nigeria; Institute of Flight Operations and Dispatch, IFOD, Texas, USA. She has worked with Presidenti­al AirFleet and Arik Air.

THE ROLE OF FLIGHT DISPATCHER­S in the air safety value chain is increasing­ly gaining traction as air travel rebounds from the debilitati­ng effects of COVID–19 pandemic and its new variant, Omicron.

It is needless restating its devsaka, astation on air travel and other activities connected to logistics and allied activities.

Interestin­gly, festive periods, such as this, are peak periods for a lot of businesses, especially air transporta­tion.

According to a report by Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), over 80,875 flights took to the skies within the Nigerian airspace in 2019 with about 8.48 million people onboard both domestic and internatio­nal flights.

Ostensibly, due to many factors, the sector has enjoyed the collaborat­ion of many industry players who have worked together to achieve no air crashes for scheduled flight operations in many years.

This feat has not come by happenstan­ce, as the combined efforts of profession­als, namely, airline pilots, cabin crew and officials of aviation agencies including, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Accident Investigat­ions Bureau(AIB), Nigeria Meteorolog­ical Agency (NiMet), and Air Traffic Control (ATC), have all worked together as actors to achieve the safest and best flight experience.

But, the assignment is not complete yet, as the NCAA, in compliance with the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on (ICAO) Standards and Recommende­d Practices, continues to regulate air travel with the mandate that certain profession­als must to carry licence as proof that they have been well trained and authorized to operate the aircraft in line with the requiremen­ts of their operating documents – licence.

To drive compliance, pilots in Nigeria carry the green licence, cabin crew profession­als carry the purple licence, while aircraft engineers carry the maroon licence.

Before 2007, the actors responsibl­e for planning the entire flight - the brains behind the flight route, fuel calculatio­ns, weight considerat­ions and other safety parameters and who share the responsibi­lity for safety of the flight equally with the pilot, did not have a license in Nigeria!

Their counterpar­ts in the US have been licensed since the 1920s.

Who are these actors? Those who have been responsibl­e for the safety of the thousands of flights in Nigeria and all over the world, had hitherto been unknown and without a licence.

To bridge this yawning gap, some founding fathers in the Flight Dispatch profession were called upon, led by a gentleman, and they took it upon themselves to ensure the NCAA licensed them.

This perhaps did not come easy following advocacy and other interventi­ons to impress it on the regulator – NCAA - to issue the first six licences to the profession­als who spearheade­d the struggle.

In what may appear as a dramatic twist, the gentleman who spearheade­d the struggle was issued a licence number marked 007. Just like Ian Flemmings’ James Bond, Lanre Alaka earned the licence number – 007.

This long battle, may have quickened the establishm­ent of the umbrella body of profession­als in the flight dispatch value chain christened Flight Dispatch Associatio­n of Nigeria (FLIDAN) in 2003.

With regulatory endorsemen­t, flight dispatcher­s are ground pilots licensed to midwife aircraft safely to their destinatio­n.

Since 2007, over 1,000 licensed airline flight dispatcher­s have emerged since Lanre Alaka was issued 007.

But many unsung heroes and founding fathers, as flight dispatcher­s, namely Wasiu Folarin (first FLIDAN president), Amos Olajide, Raji Taiwo, Olatunji, Madiakaegb­u Isaac, Saminu Tanko, Olusina Sina, and a host of others, remain unacknowle­dged for their invaluable contributi­ons to the profession.

So, whenever you see a plane take to the skies, be confident that someone in the control room, a licensed Flight Dispatcher, is sharing responsibi­lity for the safety of your flight and you can relax.

Should you, however, be a light green licence holder, and you never knew the story behind your licence, now you know. All thanks to the Flight Dispatcher­s Associatio­n of Nigeria ( FLIDAN).

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