Landing at the wrong airport is obviously not something to be
taken lightly. Not because of the mistake itself--oftentimes these
mistakes have no threat to the cargo or passengers on board and result in a
safe landing. The part that makes it a concern is the implications that
pilots may not be aware of what's going on. As pilots, we are taught to have a
very good situational awareness. Landing
at an airport demonstrates a complete lack of situational awareness—and that’s
the main concern. The two incidents already discussed--both the Dreamlifter and
747--are the most pro dominant, but this is not the first time this has
happened. On Sept 7th, 2011, Continental Connections flight 3222 was
inbound for a destination of Lake Charles, LA. It landed at the wrong airport
that was eight miles away.
Some of the hazards of this kind of
mistake are very obvious. Others, not so obvious. In this
incident--and those mentioned earlier--no harm was done to passengers or the
cargo. If everything goes well, when landing at the wrong airport there is no
damage done. There are the obvious problematic implications; that the
runway may not longer be enough for takeoff, or possible fuel problems that may
occur if a plane needed to make another takeoff or landing. The less obvious
implications, I think, are more regulatory ones. What if that additional
landing would put the pilots over their rest requirements? Could the pilot
landing at the wrong airport be a sign that the pilot is already fatigued and
shouldn't be flying anyway? It also adds another landing and takeoff to
keep in mind in oncoming up to the next inspection.
Of course, there are reasons for mistakes. There are reasons
for every mistake in every field. And every mistake in every field can always
be attributed to an error somewhere. And, in a perfect world, those mistakes
can always be avoided. But this isn't a perfect world. We, as humans, in any
field are going to make mistakes. I don't know...maybe I just don't think like
a lawyer like most of this country does. However, I do believe incidents like
this aren't as big of a deal as their made out to me. Don't misunderstand
me, landing at the wrong airport IS a mistake and corrective actions should be
taken, however I do feel as thought he media has taken these more recent events
and blown them a tad out of proportion.
A google search of "airplane lands at the wrong
airport" yields dozens of the same result. It takes a little bit of
playing with the words to find other incidents--and there are other incidents--of
Commercial aviation making a meatier mistakes. While these incidents are not
entirely isolated, they are very overhyped in the media, it would seem.
And a little bit of circumstance should be taken into consideration when
evaluating these incidents. Even in the article Al Yuman explains that with regionals they may be
working the same amount of hours but have more takeoffs and landings. I
would be interested in a survey conducted on percentages comparing regional and
major mistakes. If you are doing something more often, there is more room for
error than if a task is only being performed once in a shift.
But even though these incidents aren't entirely isolated, that
also does not mean there should be no ramification when the mistake is made.
In the case on Sept 7th, 2011, the pilots were both suspended, but with
pay. I do feel that is a fair disciplinary action, Largely because
it accepts that safety was not compromised, but that some things need to be
evaluated to ensure this does not happen again. To me, this shows a company
willing to he improve their employees and their customer service--too learn
from their mistakes--rather than discard them.
Aviation is a field that is constantly changing and should
itself be constantly improving. Moving forward is to get away from the
mentality of "cut off the hand of a thief" and instead teach the
thieves to not steal. There will always be mistakes. It is part of what
makes us human. As long as we retain that humanity--the essence as a
species--we need to accept that these mistakes will happen, and perhaps review
the consequence on an individual basis and come with ways to correct it in the
future. Instead of overdramatizing the mistakes, and making people feel
as if certain aspects of aviation are not, accept that mistakes will happen and
move forward!
Allons-y!