From today's Denver Post Newspaper:
United gives warning to pilots after recent errors
By Andy Pasztor
Dow Jones Newswires
Posted: 02/26/2015 12:01:00 AM MSTAdd a Comment | Updated: about 13 hours ago
United Continental Holdings Inc.'s management sent a dramatic safety warning to its pilots last month, calling for increased compliance with rules and procedures following several serious incidents caused by cockpit errors.
The bulletin, issued Jan. 9 under the heading "significant safety concerns," said it was prompted by four separate "safety events and near-misses" in previous weeks, including a plane whose pilots had to execute an emergency pull-up maneuver to avoid crashing into the ground. Another flight cited in the document landed with less than the mandatory minimum fuel reserves.
The two-page memo, signed by the carrier's senior vice president of flight operations and its top safety official, didn't provide specifics about those close calls, which hadn't attracted public attention. But the unusually blunt language focused on the dangers of lax discipline, along with poor crew communication and coordination.
Such a stance allows the company, now the nation's second-largest by traffic, "to adjust our actions when we see some of these potential issues." Officials at the Chicago-based company declined to elaborate.
United gives warning to pilots after recent errors
By Andy Pasztor
Dow Jones Newswires
Posted: 02/26/2015 12:01:00 AM MSTAdd a Comment | Updated: about 13 hours ago
United Continental Holdings Inc.'s management sent a dramatic safety warning to its pilots last month, calling for increased compliance with rules and procedures following several serious incidents caused by cockpit errors.
The bulletin, issued Jan. 9 under the heading "significant safety concerns," said it was prompted by four separate "safety events and near-misses" in previous weeks, including a plane whose pilots had to execute an emergency pull-up maneuver to avoid crashing into the ground. Another flight cited in the document landed with less than the mandatory minimum fuel reserves.
The two-page memo, signed by the carrier's senior vice president of flight operations and its top safety official, didn't provide specifics about those close calls, which hadn't attracted public attention. But the unusually blunt language focused on the dangers of lax discipline, along with poor crew communication and coordination.
Such a stance allows the company, now the nation's second-largest by traffic, "to adjust our actions when we see some of these potential issues." Officials at the Chicago-based company declined to elaborate.
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