Pilots: To Cut Costs, Airlines Forcing Us To Fly Low On Fuel

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JOAN LOWY | August 8, 2008 12:23 PM EST | AP

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In this June 27, 2007 file photo, a Continental Airlines aircraft lands at Newark Liberty International Airport in Newark, N.J. Pilots are complaining that their airline bosses, desperate to cut fuel costs, are forcing them to fly uncomfortably low on fuel. (AP Photo/Mel Evans, File)

WASHINGTON — Pilots are complaining that their airline bosses, desperate to cut costs, are forcing them to fly uncomfortably low on fuel.

Safety for passengers and crews could be compromised, they say.

The situation got bad enough three years ago, even before the latest surge in fuel prices, that NASA sent a safety alert to federal aviation officials.

No action.

Since then, pilots, flight dispatchers and others have continued to sound off with their own warnings, yet the Federal Aviation Administration says there is no reason to order airlines to back off their effort to keep fuel loads to a minimum.

"We can't dabble in the business policies or the personnel policies of an airline," said FAA spokesman Les Dorr. He said there was no indication safety regulations were being violated.

The September 2005 safety alert was issued by NASA's confidential Aviation Safety Reporting System, which allows air crews to report safety problems without fear their names will be disclosed.

"What we found was that because they carried less fuel on the airplane, they were getting into situations where they had to tell air traffic control, 'I need to get on the ground,'" said Linda Connell, director of the NASA reporting system.

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With fuel prices now their biggest cost, airlines are aggressively enforcing new policies designed to reduce consumption.

In March, for example, an airline pilot told NASA he landed his regional jet with less fuel than required by FAA regulations. "Looking back," he said, "I would have liked more gas yesterday." He also complained that his airline was "ranking" captains according to who landed with the least amount.

A month earlier, a Boeing 747 captain reported running low on fuel after meeting strong headwinds crossing the Atlantic en route to John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York. He said he wanted to stop to add fuel but continued on to Kennedy after consulting his airline's operations manager, who told him there was adequate fuel aboard the jet.

When the plane arrived at Kennedy, the captain said it had so little fuel that had there been any delay in landing, "I would have had to declare a fuel emergency" _ a term that tells air traffic controllers a plane needs immediate priority to land.

The last major U.S. air crash attributed to low fuel was on Jan. 25, 1990, when an Avianca Boeing 707 ran out while waiting to land at Kennedy. Seventy-three of 158 aboard were killed.

FAA regulations require airliners to take off with enough fuel to reach their destination or an alternate airport, plus another 45 minutes of flight. The regulations also say it's up to dispatchers and pilots to decide the size of fuel loads, with pilots making the final call.

Spare fuel beyond the minimum required by FAA is often added to airliners to allow for weather or airport delays. That adds weight, which burns more fuel and increases a plane's operating cost. A Washington-to-Los Angeles flight by an Airbus 320 with 150 passengers burns about 29,500 pounds, or 4,300 gallons, of fuel. That costs about $14,600. Adding an additional 1,500 pounds, about 219 gallons, would cost about $750 more.

Complaints about airlines scrimping on fuel aren't limited to those submitted to the NASA system.

Labor unions at two major airlines _ American Airlines and US Airways _ have filed complaints with FAA, saying the airlines are pressuring members not to request spare fuel for flights.

American notified dispatchers on July 7 that their records on fuel approved for flights would be monitored, and dispatchers not abiding by company guidelines could ultimately be fired.

American said its fuel costs this year were expected to increase to $10 billion, a 52 percent over 2007. "The additional cost of carrying unnecessary fuel adversely affects American's financial success," the airline told dispatchers in a letter.

Union officials responded that "it appears safety has become a second thought" for the company.

At US Airways, the pilots' union took out an ad in USA Today on July 16 charging that eight senior captains had been singled out by the company for requesting extra fuel and had been required to attend training sessions. The union said the training order was a message to other pilots not to request extra fuel.

American and US Airways blame the complaints on heated labor negotiations _ both are in contract talks with the complaining unions.

"It's not a safety issue; it's a contract issue," said John Hotard, a spokesman for American.

US Airways said in a statement to its employees that the eight captains had been adding fuel "well in excess of the norm."

FAA spokeswoman Laura Brown said the agency has conducted several analyses of airline fuel practices but found no instances of the minimum being violated or pilots' fuel requests being denied.

"We didn't see any proposed changes we thought needed to be made," Brown said.

Department of Transportation Inspector General Calvin Scovel recommended in April that the FAA take a nationwide look at airline fuel practices. Five months later, the agency is still developing a survey to send to its inspectors at each airline and has no schedule for sending it out.

Scovel also said the number of pilots reporting low fuel on approach to Newark Liberty International Airport tripled from 2005 to 2007. More than half were Continental Airlines flights, the dominant carrier at Newark.

He suggested the airline was pressuring pilots "to either not stop for fuel when needed or to carry insufficient amounts of fuel." His letter cited two bulletins from Continental's management urging pilots and flight crews to cut back on fuel, including one that noted "adding fuel indiscriminately reduces profit sharing and possibly pension funding."

But Scovel's review of 20 Newark-bound flights _ out of 151 reporting low fuel on approach in 2007 _ found none with less than 45-minutes worth of spare fuel.

Former National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Jim Hall said the situation merits an industrywide investigation by Scovel.

"It's a safety-of-flight issue and it needs to be treated as such," said Hall, now a transportation safety consultant. "If dispatchers and pilots are saying the airlines are pressuring them, and it's having a chilling effect on the decisions they make every day in regard to the fuel loads, and it looks it's like eroding the authority of the pilot in command, then that issue needs the attention of the government regulators who are there to oversee the system."

___

Associated Press Writer David Koenig in Dallas contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — Pilots are complaining that their airline bosses, desperate to cut costs, are forcing them to fly uncomfortably low on fuel. Safety for passengers and crews could be compromised, t...
WASHINGTON — Pilots are complaining that their airline bosses, desperate to cut costs, are forcing them to fly uncomfortably low on fuel. Safety for passengers and crews could be compromised, t...
 
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How would it affect a pilot's decision to take off with a marginal fuel load if doing so exposes him to liabilities for the delays suffered by passengers when the plane diverts to a different landing location due to a fuel emergency?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:36 AM on 08/12/2008
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Boy, hasn't the de-regulation stampede, started by St Ronnie, paid off smartly?
God knows, I feel richer and safer for it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:37 AM on 08/11/2008

Naturally monopolistic functions such as public transportation must be planned, organized, restricted, and proift controlled by laws instructing a central government agency. Deregulation has squandered our public transpotation and cost us dearly in wasted wealth. Running three airplanes on a route that desefves only one is committing financial suicide. Thus, all the American airlines are going broke. Not the case with wiser arising countries that are undemocratic. As a free society, we are being swept under the current of events by fanatically, self-serving ideologies of a pernicious form of money creating, commerce and trade between nations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:08 PM on 08/09/2008
- Paul Peete - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Paul Peete permalink

It's about the dollar to the airlines. Our safety is secondary to profitability. When fuel costs become so high that flying is limited to the wealthy, maybe more Americans will demand the development and deployment of alternatives to the gasoline engine, freeing up oil for needs like this.

Branson is at least trying to find alternatives to jet fuel, although he probably wants it to keep Virgin profitable. I wrote a semi-humorous piece about this in July; a tongue in cheek scenario to get the message out.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-peete/on-a-wing-and-a-prayer_b_113822.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 PM on 08/09/2008

The Avianca Boeing 707 crash was due to pilot error. He failed to declare a fuel emergency or keep controllers clearly advised of his fuel situation and ran out after being diverted. It has been covered in various television programs.

As to putting extra fuel on board, if I were on a trans-Atlantic or trans-Pacific flight I'd like to feel that they have any additional fuel the pilot feels necessary. Big planes don't land well dead-stick as the Air Canada flight did in the Canary Islands. However, flights within the continental U.S. can easily divert to other airports (there are a lot of them) so the minimum extra fuel recommended by FAA is fine with me. In the end, it is the Capitan that has the final say. If he doesn't feel safe then don't take off.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 08/09/2008

The solution to this difficulty is obvious: nationalize the damn airlines.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 AM on 08/09/2008
- lylo I'm a Fan of lylo permalink

Amen! I won't fly again till they do!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:50 AM on 08/09/2008
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Next thing you know, the airlines will announce that in order to save money, the pilots will be laid off.
Who are the numbskull nitwits running these companies?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:46 AM on 08/09/2008

Makes no sense. It costs the same to fly the plane on full as it does half empty. The fuel would be stored somewhere ready for use. The only effect would be a one time reduction in fuel inventory. Meaningless saving in the scheme of things.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 AM on 08/09/2008

Wrong ! Fuel wieghs something,and the more weight onboard ,The more fuel the airplane uses.
Despite that fact : An airplane should have more fuel onboard than is "Needed".
If a pilot doesn't feel good about the aircraft ,He SHOULD refuse to fly it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 08/09/2008
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Fuel for an hour's flight time in the average airliner weighs roughly 10,000 pounds.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 PM on 08/09/2008
- loki I'm a Fan of loki permalink
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When the pilots start boarding wearing parachutes, then maybe the message will sink into peoples heads. They are being forced to fly deadly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 AM on 08/09/2008

Uhh, news flash to HuffPost: This "news" item is nearly three weeks old. It was reported in-depth by MSM. I personally read three separate news stories about it. And it's stuff like this that makes me realize blogs are often nothing more than shallow and ghostlike cut-and-paste imitations of what mainstream journalism has done and continues to do far better than anybody else. If you don't like it, then come up with more detailed and insightful analyses of news stories, instead of parroting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 PM on 08/08/2008
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