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YPJT
6th Jan 2016, 14:15
Flight Plan 2030—Shaping the future of aviation safety
Register your spot now!
What aviation safety issues do you face today, and how can we meet the challenges facing the industry over the next five, 10 and 15 years?

Join the Director of Aviation Safety, Mark Skidmore AM and CASA executive managers in Perth to have your say in planning a strong and safe Australian aviation future.

When: Thursday 4 February
Where: Aveling Venue, 6 Orion Road Jandakot
Time: 9am until 12pm—free lunch provided for all attendees
Registration: Register now to reserve your spot
RSVP: Friday 29 January—essential for catering purposes
For more information on the forum format, agenda and registration details go https://www.casa.gov.au/fp2030 or contact [email protected]
Should we be naive enough to think that the DAS and his band of henchmen will really be interested in what the actual ones with practical experience and knowledge in this industry will have to say?
Or, is it just another one of those box ticking exercises they go to so that when they want to put the KY in the drawer before shoving the pineapple in sideways they can still go to the minister and say "absolutely sir, we extensively consulted with industry".

My money is on the later.

Lead Balloon
6th Jan 2016, 19:40
You have to go, otherwise you will be at risk of being labelled as someone "who'll never be happy no matter what CASA does", thus justifying whatever CASA does to you. It is quite Orwellian: If you don't go and listen and participate and nod and smile and take it all seriously, you are labelled as part of the problem. It is neither here nor there that decades of CASA's empty rhetoric about the regulatory reform program and evidence-based and risk-based regulation would lead any rational person to ignore more of it.

And before AOTW jumps in and asks how else is anyone going to clean up the mess, the first step is for the CASA DAS to publicly acknowledge that the regulatory reform program is an abject failure and that CASA is not, and never will be, competent to clean up the mess. However, in the Orwellian world of facade government, we're expected to nod and smile as we're told for the thousandth time that it's all going to be cleaned up and fine ... this time by the year 2030. (Gosh - doesn't time fly? Remember when they said it was all going to be cleaned up and fine by the year 2005?)

Arm out the window
6th Jan 2016, 19:54
CASA had a small safety seminar at our local aero club a while back, and the most notable presence, in a bad way, was a bloke whose clear mission was to heckle. He muttered, scoffed like a schoolkid and jumped in with off-topic points intended to put the speaker off. After a while someone turned to him and simply told him how rude he was being, which shut him up thankfully.

My point is, these things are only as useful as the intentions of those who turn up, so if you're already pre judging it as pointless, don't bother. A simple explanation of exactly how a CASA rule is degrading your operation or business, which they can then work to address (let's hope), beats 10 rants any day.

Arm out the window
6th Jan 2016, 19:55
Jeez LB, you're quick this morning! I hadn't even finished typing and you're putting words in my mouth ... :)

Sunfish
6th Jan 2016, 20:25
Arm Out The Window, I accuse you of being a CASA troll because you continualy fail to admit there is any fault whatsoever with CASA, specifically, you completely refuse to acknowledge, let alone address the failings of CASA detailed in the Forsyth Report.

Let me address this latest Pollyana-ish post in more detail.

CASA had a small safety seminar at our local aero club a while back, and the most notable presence, in a bad way, was a bloke whose clear mission was to heckle. He muttered, scoffed like a schoolkid and jumped in with off-topic points intended to put the speaker off. After a while someone turned to him and simply told him how rude he was being, which shut him up thankfully.

My point is, these things are only as useful as the intentions of those who turn up, so if you're already pre judging it as pointless, don't bother. A simple explanation of exactly how a CASA rule is degrading your operation or business, which they can then work to address (let's hope), beats 10 rants any day.


I will avoid the begging question of what CASA possibly knows about the safe operation of non military aircraft that the audience does not already know.

1. A "rude" Heckler? Perhaps the heckler had a grievance against CASA?

2. Intentions of attendees? That cuts both ways. Perhaps you failed to understand the chief finding of the Forsyth review - that CASA has lost the trust of the industry. Under such circumstances and absent any mea culpa from CASA, participants can be excused for assuming that CASA is insincere about wanting feedback except as it benefits their personal interests?

3. "A simple explanation of exactly how a CASA rule is degrading your operation " ?????? Are you kidding???? The cemeteries are full of aviation businesses that did just that - complained about CASA!!!! …And then were driven out of business by the resulting victimisation and harassment by CASA.

Let me make it quite clear. CASA is a failed organisation. CASA cannot be trusted AT ALL - except to pursue its members personal agendas! With such a reputation "consultation" is a meaningless exercise and nothing will improve.

To paraphrase the old Soviet joke "CASA pretend they are listening to our concerns and we pretend to believe they will do something about them".

…And I'm speaking as someone who organised plenty of "industry consultation" in a former existence in Government. We knew what we wanted to get - and we got exactly what we required - a mandate from industry to do what we wanted to do anyway. Sham consultation in simple and I'm sure CASA are masters of it.

What is really needed is a boycott.

Checklist Charlie
6th Jan 2016, 23:11
Flight Plan 2030—Shaping the future of aviation safety

Simple really, implement the recommendations of Forsyth.

CC

thorn bird
7th Jan 2016, 04:53
One thing might get their attention, turn up with a few crates of overripe tomatoes and time expired eggs.
A food fight would certainly gain some media attention.
Then again you'd probably be accused of wasting food by the loony left!
Be fun but:E:E

Ultralights
7th Jan 2016, 05:34
i cant wait for the 100th anniversary of CASA's great aviation reform..

Aussie Bob
7th Jan 2016, 06:23
What is really needed is a boycott.

I am with you totally Sunfish. I don't attend these or any other CASA nonsense meetings. It is high time everyone stopped attending these farces. AOPA (and others) should also stop promoting them. If CASA continually turn up to empty rooms hosting events that no one publicises they may just get a hint.

Arm out the window
7th Jan 2016, 08:05
Let me respond in detail to you then, Sunfish.

Arm Out The Window, I accuse you of being a CASA troll
Not at all - as I've said before, never worked for them and never had anything to do with them except get ramped and do a couple of instructor renewals.

because you continualy fail to admit there is any fault whatsoever with CASA,
Wrong - I do agree there are many faults with them, I just don't think boycotts or other similar bull**** will achieve anything.

1. A "rude" Heckler? Perhaps the heckler had a grievance against CASA?
Yes, he certainly did, but his manner did nothing except to turn the crowd against him - hardly achieving own aim, he made himself look like a total goose and the CASA rep good in comparison!

Under such circumstances and absent any mea culpa from CASA,
Actually, Skidmore has come out and said explicitly that he understands they have stuffed things up in many ways, and he's asking what we think should be done to fix them (and I'm sure simplistic crap such as 'sack the goddamn lot of them will really help, won't it?)


The cemeteries are full of aviation businesses that did just that - complained about CASA
All squeaky clean, no doubt.

"consultation" is a meaningless exercise and nothing will improve.

Great, bring on the realistic and practical alternative.

Mach E Avelli
7th Jan 2016, 09:50
Arm is right. We should not boycott these events, which are well intentioned and often conducted by mere underlings following their Team Leader's direction.

Instead, attend, take a leaf from the politicians and press the flesh, and rather than deride or heckle, engage in conversation to put your point of view across firmly but respectfully. What harm is there in this, as opposed to reinforcing the belief that we are all criminals who just have not been caught yet?

There are other more appropriate avenues for airing grievances. Complete the survey on line. Don't just whinge about how bad CASA is (we know, and by now they know that we know they are bad) but have the cojones to put your name to it and agree to be contacted for further input.

And that friends is 1500 posts. My new year's resolution was to quit posting at this number, so you can poke the bear all you like - there will be no more. Thank Christ for that I hear.

LeadSled
7th Jan 2016, 22:28
All squeaky clean, no doubt.Arm,
There is no such thing as "squeaky clean" in a legal frame work where the "opinion" of the inspector creates the offense. Or a legal framework so complex, convoluted and contradictory that it creates "inadvertent criminals" -- as has been found (in similar words) in inquiry after inquiry.

One of the most glaring examples was Polar Air. Years of audits, then the boss has an argument with an FOI about twin training, the boss refuses to conduct manoeuvers contrary to the CAAP, and the aircraft certification, so said FOI comes back to do an "aggressive" audit.

A rough summary, said owner of Polar found out, after legal expanses in excess of AUD$1M, that , to quote him:"CASA can do whatever they like".

Do you really think all the adverse testimony to the Forsyth inquiry, from airlines down, was evidence of a fair and honest organisation.

Tootle pip!!

CAR42ZE
8th Jan 2016, 00:17
Maybe I'm reading between the lines, but it doesn't actually appear to be open forum. The website says:

To pose your questions at the forum to Mark Skidmore and CASA’s executive managers, please email them in advance to haveyoursay.casa.gov.au/flight-plan-30 (https://haveyoursay.casa.gov.au/flight-plan-2030). I unfortunately made the silly decision to go to the website to see what style of questions were already there (but everything is a few months old for some reason)... Some excellent questions, but the canned replies from the moderator reeked of the standard Sir Humphries subterfuge of not answering the question but pandering to going through the motions.

Sunfish
8th Jan 2016, 01:20
Arm and others, I am afraid that you are accusing me of a negative viewpoint regarding CASA no matter what it does. This is not true.

Like all of us, I want a fair, efficient, proactive and safe regulatory regime.

My negativity comes from the simple fact of my experience as a corporate strategy consultant at Coopers and Lybrand, an MBA and as group general manager, of a reasonably sized IT systems integrator dealing with Government as well as a CEO of another business.

The problem with CASA is lack of trust, period, as described by Forsyth. WIthout trust,, nothing, and I mean nothing, can be achieved.

AVM. Skidmores problem is to restore trust, first and foremost. This cannot come from "consultation" and fine sounding words, the damage is too bad for a mea culpa from CASA and then business as usual. What is required to save CASA is what is called in consultancy speak "a circuit breaker event" or a reset event that indicates to all parties that the previous paradigm is now finished, kaput, over, ended - there is no more business as usual.

The circuit breaker is usually the removal of most of the management team and a new Board in business, and as CASA is a GBE - Government business enterprise the same logic applies to it. This is followed by a new strategic plan assembled by a new team with a new outlook.

The necessity for a circuit breaker event is that without it, CASA staff, the good ones anyway, will not give themselves permission to speak out about what needs to be done because under the old paradigm doing it is a career limiting move. Furthermore, industry is not going to step up to the plate if they see the same tired faces across the conference room table.

Forsyth and the appointment of Skidmore should have been the prelude of a major clean out of the senior management and the appointment of new and talented faces with a mandate for change. Unfortunately that didn't happen. Instead Skidmore and the Board were sold a dummy : the reorganisation of CASA, now underway, which is already a predictable failure if the same senior management remain.

The organisational design name for this phenomena is often called "Freeze" Unfreeze and refreeze" corporate culture is generally frozen in stone, the circuit breaker event - the removal of the senior management team and a round of new (and better) appointments is a signal for the organisation to "unfreeze" and open up to new possibilities, different ways of doing things, new ideas and so on. After a while, maybe Nine months or so, corporate culture then "refreezes" around the new paradigm. The Kennet Government in Victoria modelled this phenomena very quickly in its early days in office - things were so bad then that there was no opposition to the raft of changed the Kennet Government made.

Unless this circuit breaker event has occurred and I missed it, then there is no point in consultation, engagement or any other touchy feel stuff, the floggings will continue until that "circuit breaker", god forbid a smoking hole, galvanises Government into fixing this mess.

Lead Balloon
8th Jan 2016, 03:00
CASA is not a GBE. (However, I don't think that affects the relevance or validity of the points you make. )

actus reus
8th Jan 2016, 03:40
It has always fascinated me how time produces different versions of what a coroner or court established and concluded about events. It happens all the time here when people try to rewrite the factual findings and substitute their own version of events. Generally, it is the version of facts that the court did not find but that the poster wishes they had.
Courts and tribunals are lauded when some posters agree with them and the same courts and tribunals are lamb blasted when they do not agree with some posters opinions.
I have been reading some of the major accident investigations in Australia. Particularly those that occurred when I was not in the country.
I am up to 'Transair' and I have read the voluminous PPRUNE postings on that event.
With all due respect and sympathy for all those touched by this event, the Coroner, Mr Michael Barnes, said on 17th October 2007 in Brisbane:

'I have highlighted what I consider to be a number of deficiencies in CASA's surveillance and audit of Transair and its departure from its own procedures. I have made recommendations about how some of those issues could be addressed, as has the ATSB.
That does not mean that CASA is to blame for the crash. There is no compelling evidence that if it had scrupulously followed all of its procedures and processes, the deficiencies that led to the crash would have been obviated, although it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the risk may have been reduced.
The families of the victims, understandably, want someone to blame for their loss. The passengers were entirely blameless and their deaths have caused extensive and on-going suffering. The pilots are dead; the company is in liquidation and its chief pilot has left the country. It is tempting for those bereaved by the deaths to identify numerous deficiencies or departures from proper standards that Transair had been guilty of in the various operations it was conducting around the country and internationally for five or six years leading up to the crash, aggregate those issues into a cumulative list of failings and say that CASA should have detected them and acted to prevent Transair from operating.
With all due respect to those families, the making of scape goats in that manner is not part of my function.

I find that CASA could have done more to insist that Transair improve certain aspects of its operations but I do not believe that the evidence supports a finding that they could reasonably have stopped it from operating or prevented the crash. (My bold).

All I am saying is that bashing and blaming the regulator, in any country not just Australia, is fine when all the parties, including the operators, are squeaky clean.

Sorry about the length of the post.

Sunfish
8th Jan 2016, 06:57
Actus Reaus, the CASA regulations and business practices make it impossible for any operator to be "squeaky clean" all the time. There is not even a definition of "clean" instead we have "accepted", "acceptable", "appropriate", "sufficient" but not of course "reasonable" appearing everywhere in the regulations so that "squeaky clean" becomes a matter of the opinion of a self interested CASA functionary.

Then of course there is the problem of contradictory regulations that are written in double negative format instead of plain English.

FFS, I spent Six years reading complex venture capital deal documents for a living, but they are like children's books compared to CASA regulations.

Even CASA tacitly admit that regulations are a total mess by the constant need to give exemptions for one thing or another.

To put it another way, it's broken. It can never work.


What we should all be engaged in is a "search for truth" to develop and exemplify safe aviation. CASA is not part of that search. It is instead an impediment. The latest outcome for me is going to have to be a refresher course on the legal pitfalls in filling out an MR. - nothing at all about how to conduct safe maintenance.

Chronic Snoozer
9th Jan 2016, 00:33
Then of course there is the problem of contradictory regulations that are written in double negative format instead of plain English.

FFS, I spent Six years reading complex venture capital deal documents for a living, but they are like children's books compared to CASA regulations.



Would a rewrite of regs into pilot and LAME-speak to simplify them fall foul of the legal department? I'm guessing, most definitely, so the current regulatory mess is a symptom of lawyers being involved to write clauses that meet legal requirements but lose the audience much like a mobile phone contract does.

Is that entirely CASA's fault or a function of the Australian environment because this is far from the only area of Australian government tied up in red tape?

I couldn't agree more though that the art of simple, plain writing is being eroded before our eyes by PC and lawyers. 'I didn't do nothing' - catch phrase of a generation.

cogwheel
9th Jan 2016, 05:26
A CASA conference in Sydney over a decade ago came out with a observation that the greatest hazard to flight safety was the AG's Department (in the way the rules were written - strict liability Etc). It has only got worse. Take some of the iron ring out of the system and it might change(??).

actus reus
10th Jan 2016, 12:34
Sunfish,
I do not disagree with you at all. Even though the 'rule' for drafting anything that may be used in court is that the wording has 'legal certainty', it does not mean that it should be impossible to discover the 'legal' way of doing things or comprehending an AMC without legal training.
If you really want a challenge, try using the NZ regs to certify an 'Asian' built aircraft operated by and registered in a Pacific island nation.
I thought it was going well until this Kiwi guy handed me the 1200 page NZ 'offence' regs!!
NZ regs? If you really want to see technical difficulties, look no further.
Needless to say, we went another way.

Arm out the window
13th Jan 2016, 20:01
A sign of change perhaps:

Chair of CASA’s Board speaks out on unintended problems. Australian Aviation Magazine, January/February 2016 Edition, Prefight Comment feature. In part, article stated: Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) Chairman, Jeff Boyd, recently stated the implementation of CASA Part 61 licensing regulations had been “a debacle”. Boyd was named chairman in July 2015 after joining the board a year earlier. The report stated the nation’s aviation safety regulator has formed a full-time task force and an industry advisory panel in an effort to resolve issues raised by Part 61, which covers pilot ratings, licenses and endorsements, as well as a number of other licensing regulations.



Boyd said the Part 61 regulations were written up without adequate communication with industry and he had lobbied against their introduction before he joined the CASA Board. “We knew Part 61 was never going to work. It got put in a drawer for 12 months and instead of being reworked and rejigged unfortunately the very last day that our previous CEO was in the organisation he promulgated Part 61 as it was 12 months previously,” Boyd said. The results have been horrendous for the organisation and for industry. It’s a debacle.

Lead Balloon
13th Jan 2016, 22:47
At last: Some honesty. In plain English. Well done Mr Boyd. :D

I look forward to the next opportunity he has to speak candidly. At the point he states that the entire regulatory reform program is an abject failure and CASA has no hope of fixing the mess, I will hold a glimmer of hope of some restoration of trust in the regulator. :ok:

Sunfish
13th Jan 2016, 23:18
Agreed Leady. We can but hope.

Eddie Dean
15th Jan 2016, 01:47
Nicely done by Mr Boyd.
Out damned spot comes to mind, as old Bill wrote.

Sunfish
16th Jan 2016, 19:12
However the problems go deeper than regulation, just look at the cluster**** of the Cairns office fitting up a helicopter pilot.

Pantovic and Civil Aviation Safety Authority [2015] AATA 992 (18 December 2015) (http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/AATA/2015/992.html)

Basically once they decide to "get" you, they leave no stone unturned. There is no presumption of innocence and the AAT gleefully joins in the process.


Furthermore a person can make an allegation about you years after the alleged event.

Eddie Dean
16th Jan 2016, 23:53
Have you been to Mt Molloy Sunfish?

Sunfish
17th Jan 2016, 01:45
No Eddie, I don't think so. Have you read the AAT transcript?

aroa
17th Jan 2016, 01:59
Sunny.
It goes well into, and past just the use and abuse of "regulations."
Its a sign of immorality, dishonesty and lack of integrity displayed by so many CAsA employees. All requirements of their 'code'...what a sick joke.

The financial destruction of Pantovic by courtesy of CAsA and a cuckcolded witness with revenge intent is another classic case with 'discrepancies" in the evidence and a 'botched' approach. Nothing new there for CAsA.
Like you say...whatever it takes to make the 'hit'.

And the total cost to the taxpayer was $$s ???
And the safety benefit to Oz aviation is , as usual a big ZERO.

And out of this (infamous) office there is yet another debacle supreme regarding an R 22 ..the damage to. flying of, false MR entries re, evidence dispersed, NO penalties applied to the perp...and many innocent others, falsely accused ending up having to foot the substantial legal bills.!!

The anecdotes about this exercise/half arsed"investigation" would read like some mad criminal comedy script if it wasnt so serious with allegations of bribery and corruption by the perp as well..
CB claim no knowledge of.
Draw your own conclusions as to why.

Until there is a Judicial Inquiry into these issues, so they can be bought out into the open and rectified, nothing will change.

Power corrupts etc .. you know the rest. :mad::mad::mad:

Sunfish
17th Jan 2016, 02:39
What I fail to understand is why a decent, honest, person would wish to work at CASA with the likes of the CASA Cairns office "investigators" whose behaviour, according to the contents of the AAT transcript and in the opinion of the Commissioner, falls rather far short of anything remotely like procedural fairness, equity and natural justice….and I'm being kind.

I doubt that CASA can be 'saved". It's too far gone judging by the crap they spew at AAT hearings as in the case against Pantovic.

To put that another way; CASA is the problem with Australian Aviation. We are never going to see jobs, investment and growth in the aviation industry while they are in power..

ozbiggles
17th Jan 2016, 03:27
Your joking aren't you?
You are using the findings in that report to suggest CASA shouldn't have gone on the offensive with that guy?
Tell me you are joking?
None are so blind...

aroa
17th Jan 2016, 04:08
Oz b..its the method in their madness.

With Pantovic they got lucky that some video existed of the low flight over water with beer in hand. And from the witness with malice.

read #28 and suggest why CAsA did NOT go on the offensive with THAT guy !

Or is the only thing consistent with CAsA is its inconsistencies.?

Examples abound of CAsA serial madness...

Barrier Aviation TERMINATED WITH EXTREME PREJUDICE.
And NO ONE ever prosecuted or found guilty in a court of law.

J Quadrio. Destroyed job wise and financially. NEVER prosecuted or found guilty in a court of law.
A la Pantovic... a dodgy "witness" as well... but that does not worry those in CAsA with an agenda. The end result is all ...however achieved.
Cost to the taxpayer..$million +. Safety benefit ZERO

Sunny's last sentence is ABSOLUTELY TRUE :ok::ok::ok:

Eddie Dean
17th Jan 2016, 05:38
Yes Sunfish, I have read the transcript of Mr Pantovic's appearance before the AAT.

I know the pub, the publican, the bloke who was back doored, his missus, as well as the tree in question.

As to three up in a R22, I have seen more than one take off with 100kilo pilot, ringer not much smaller, a swag and 20 litres of avgas, plus all the other bits and pieces for a three day muster.

Lead Balloon
17th Jan 2016, 07:55
And yet....

The sky didn't come crashing in.

I'm not saying activities like those are 'acceptably safe' and not an accident waiting to happen, Eddie. I'm merely saying that it's an extraordinary amount of resources to allocate to addressing risks to - what - three people at a go?

Lots of other accidents waiting to happen seem to me to get a different treatment from the regulator. The operator of VH-NGA comes to mind. But I'm probably not sufficiently expert to understand the extraordinarily complex grounds for the ostensibly different treatment, if any. ;)

Eddie Dean
17th Jan 2016, 08:18
Indeed Leadballoon, the beer run and excess AUW may be but a trifle to one of your legal background; the AAT Member also viewed it as much ado about nothing, so you may well be correct. On the other hand a belt slip and engine over speed would have made the whole tree backdoor johnny, and helicopter AUW into quite an adventure.

As for your lack of expertise, do not hide your light under a bushel mate.

As old Bill said, kill all the lawyers

scavenger
17th Jan 2016, 09:07
None are so blind...

Are you new here?

Sunfish
17th Jan 2016, 18:25
Ozbiggles, the guilt or innocence of Pantovic is not the issue. The issue is the method CASA used to deal with him.

The normal requirement of the application of ALL law in this land is fairness equity and natural justice or procedural fairness and/or due process. I will not bore you or anyone else with the definitions, you can google them yourselves.

It is sufficient to say that Pantovic received none of the above from CASA and only a small bit of it at great cost from the AAT. Convicted murderers have more rights and access to justice than pilots do, and for free.

To put it another way, CASA investigators have the exact same mentality as an American lynch mob. The evidence of the behaviour of the CASA investigators is contained in the AAT transcript. They set out to "get" Pantovic by whatever means, fair means or foul, they could find. Furthermore the "safety" justification does not cut it. We are talking about a mustering pilot in the middle of nowhere.

This brings the entire organisation into disrepute which leads to my question as to how an honest and upstanding person can continue to work in that place, I certainly could not as I value my reputation.

Frank Arouet
17th Jan 2016, 21:58
A vexatious witness and a vexatious prosecutor make for poor maintenance of the rule of law. CAsA are a poor example of the model litigant.

Lookleft
18th Jan 2016, 00:24
My negativity comes from the simple fact of my experience as a corporate strategy consultant at Coopers and Lybrand, an MBA and as group general manager, of a reasonably sized IT systems integrator dealing with Government as well as a CEO of another business.

Sunny none of your supposed reputation has much weight when you put these positions down on your CV.

actus reus
18th Jan 2016, 05:49
Hmm, interesting how Quadrio is considered a hero.
What was said?

'The expression “fit and proper person” is not defined. I discussed the expression in my reasons in Jones and Civil Aviation Safety Authority [2014] AATA 820. In that case, I concluded the applicant had demonstrated remarkably poor judgment in the operation of a helicopter, while accepting he was a skilful pilot. Good pilots have good judgment, although I accept even good pilots occasionally make errors of judgment. Errors of judgment are a problem where they suggest the person’s judgment is flawed. A person with bad judgment (as opposed to a person who has merely made a mistake) is not fit to hold a pilot’s licence, no matter how skilful he or she may be.
Flying low over water at high speed while consuming alcohol demonstrates remarkably bad judgment, as opposed to a series of individual errors in judgment. (Leaving the helicopter unattended while the engine was running in the mistaken belief that the collective lock was an adequate safeguard was an error of judgment, as was failing to insist that passengers wore life jackets. Either of these transgressions might not, in isolation, reflect on the applicant’s fitness.) It follows I accept the applicant is not a fit and proper person to hold the flight crew licences. But what action should be taken?

I decided Mr Jones’s judgment was not irredeemably flawed in Jones and Civil Aviation Safety Authority. I accepted he had the intelligence and insight to appreciate his errors and learn from them. On that basis, I decided a more lenient regulatory response was justified. The position of Mr Jones can be contrasted with that of the applicant in Quadrio and Civil Aviation Safety Authority [2011] AATA 709. In that case, the applicant actively ignored the rules in order to entertain his passengers. The Tribunal took a tougher line. Mr Pantovic’s errors were in at least one respect more serious than those of Mr Jones: I concluded Mr Jones did not knowingly flout the rules, whereas Mr Pantovic knew he was not permitted to consume alcohol while flying, for example. Having said that, Mr Pantovic’s judgment does not strike me as being as flawed as that of Mr Quadrio, who apparently regarded the regulatory action against him as a form of persecution'.

I wonder what is in paragraphs 16-22 of the decision which have been redacted?

Will CASA appeal to the Federal Court?

The whole thing, this entire event, is a pathetic example of the low level that aviation gets down to in OZ.

Drinking and flying? What are we talking about here while we jump up and down about CASA!!

Too many fools...

aroa
18th Jan 2016, 08:45
The only people who think they are heroes are the CAsA "investigators" who score a "hit". All without any due consideration of how they go about doing it. Legal or otherwise.

Quadrio's no hero, nobody thinks he is, BUT his case is a classic example of the CAsA way of bastardising an individual. Whatever it takes.
And the true story has yet to emerge.

The phrase 'not a fit and proper' person can be as readily applied to people within CAsA as without. No question. Its just that the result differs.

That CAsA even talks about 'due process', 'fairness' and " a just culture".. WETF that might be...is bs/ rubbish/ meaningless.

Individuals can do nothing.. and get slaughtered, and other very serious issues just dont quite seem to make it to the score board.
Why is that..corruption, cronyism, mates or bureaucratic sloth.? Go for the easy bash of an individual?

Which gets us back to the ASRR. One of the changes required,,URGENTLY.

When breaches of the regs are found, the evidence be passed to an agency independent of CAsA to fully and properly investigate the matter.
NOT CAsA dealing with its own interpretations of regs, running any agenda and protecting its own as required.
And convictions and penalties only made in a court of law. Not in the AAT.

What about the other phrase.. 'a dire and imminent threat to aviation safety'

CAsA is just that,:mad::mad::mad:... To the safety of the GA industry and the sanity of aviation participants.

Lead Balloon
18th Jan 2016, 09:40
Hands up everyone who's suggesting that drink flying is a good idea for pilots.

I think you may be missing the point, actus.

actus reus
18th Jan 2016, 10:02
Leadie,
That is my point.
We have all sorts of comments here that reflect the views of many about CASA but the point is that that this bozo was drinking while flying.
Idiot; fullstop; forget CASA!
But some people cannot accept that sometimes it is not "the government's fault", it is not "CASA's fault", it is not the "Full moon's fault", it might actually be the individual's "fault".
"Personal responsibility" is what it is all about but it is easier to blame "rogue" CASA employees (I am not saying that there are none) then to accept that one is responsible for what one does.
Oh, I forgot: CASA's fault; CASA's fault; CASA's fault; ad infinitum.

aroa
18th Jan 2016, 11:56
there were 10 commandments down from the mountain to define social order.

2016 years later we have 2 squillion regulations down from Non Aviation house to attempt to define aviation's well being by its participants. And it aint working.!!

No one believes there should be NO rules.

But the world is full of individuals like JP, hard working, hard drinking in the wilds of Oz...who may or may not do silly. "unsafe" things.
Havent we all ...at some time or other..committed an aviation "indescretion"

Not difficult to do,considering all those convoluted regs...!
Right,, we cant blame CAsA at all times but in their aggressive methodology
there are those in the CAsA system that just shouldnt be there.

They may have had a 'win' with Pantovic,,, but the crediblity of CAsA ,,,due to the behaviour of certain staff.. as a model litigant has taken yet again a colossal hit.
Hardly likely to endear them to the industry they want be friends with, is it.?

Change of culture required. Tony said a reformation. And it better be soon.

The name is Porter
18th Jan 2016, 12:46
All things considered, that is one of the best reads I've had in years :ok: I do question Pantovic's judgement though. Why would you let Gibb in your helicopter after snagging his missus? Must have felt awful sorry for him but that's no excuse :ugh:

Sunfish
18th Jan 2016, 18:44
….and everybody knows that no woman can resist a pilot, especially a helicopter pilot.

Lead Balloon
18th Jan 2016, 19:40
I think you're still missing the point, actus.

Nobody is blaming CASA for a pilot's decision to drink and fly.

The point is about the proportionality of the response to the risk, and the consistency of that response compared with the response in circumstances of greater risk.

If he'd been in the habit of getting half cut and jumping into a car instead of an aircraft, no equivalent rigmarole would have happened. The nearest police sergeant and magistrate would have sorted him out. But because of the mystique of aviation and the extraordinary complexity and really scary risks - doesn't bear thinking about the carnage that could have ensued - the regulatory response turns into the investigation and prosecution of the crime of the century.

Look at what happened to Polar Aviation, simply because one big ego with a folklore-based strong opinion disagreed with another big ego with a different folklore-based strong opinion. (A very common occurrence in the aviation third world that is Australia.)

But, strangely, the same doesn't appear to happen when some other operators pose greater objective risks to more people.

The phrases "easy targets" and "friends in high places" come to mind.

Frank Arouet
18th Jan 2016, 21:51
Yes, either within or without the "Firm" you can check out any time you like, but you can never leave. (Glen Frey).

actus reus
18th Jan 2016, 23:45
Guys,
I am not trying to say anything other than the fact that this person who flew and drank alcohol at the same time is a fool and it is all his own doing.

As for CASA, I support no position when it comes to arbitrary interpretations or applications of the 'rules'. But, it happens all around the world; not just in OZ.

For my sins, I have obtained AOCs for various entities from Malta, the Bahamas, the USA, the UK, HKG, China, NZ and Oz; that is what I do.

I can tell you one thing, Oz may have convoluted regulations but they are not unique amongst regulators in that respect.

For a Chinese company I looked at an Oz AOC as they were that way 'inclined'. So, I checked the newly released (at the time) Part 61.

If you compare the Oz reg 61, single paragraph per page as opposed to, say, the FAA where they use smaller font than Oz and use two columns per page, a word count will show you (different numbers for PDF versus WORD), that the Oz Part 61 compared to the CFAR Part 61 and the 'Special' CFAR Part 61 are within plus or minus 5%.
NZ has more words than both.

So, CASA needs to get itself righted but they are light years ahead of many other nations and ICAO recognises that.

I also noted at the time that the Australian National Audit Office 'Best Practice Regulation Guide' that was published for all Oz government agencies in June/July 2014, had as its example of 'how to do it', CASA's procedures for issuing an AOC!!

Still went with the Bahamas though.

Lead Balloon
19th Jan 2016, 00:43
No. The ANAO Guide does not say anything about how good, bad or indifferent CASA's "Air Operator’s Certificate Process Manual and Handbook" is, or examine whether it's administered in its terms, consistently, by CASA. The ANAO Guide in effect simply says: "Here's one Agency's shelfware for dealing with these issues."

Nonetheless, you could be correct. It may be a very good Manual and Handbook, and it may be administered in its terms, consistently, by CASA. In that case, credit to CASA. :D

actus reus
19th Jan 2016, 00:51
Agreed. I am making no comment on how CASA applies their manual. That is a topic all on its own as we know.

Lead Balloon
19th Jan 2016, 01:13
Wuuuullllll, the yawning gap between the words and the actions is kinda the fundamental point.

Arm out the window
19th Jan 2016, 08:18
"But the world is full of individuals like JP, hard working, hard drinking in the wilds of Oz...who may or may not do silly. "unsafe" things.
Havent we all ...at some time or other..committed an aviation "indescretion"

Not difficult to do,considering all those convoluted regs...!
Right,, we cant blame CAsA at all times but in their aggressive methodology
there are those in the CAsA system that just shouldnt be there."

Get a grip, mate - 'hard drinking, wilds of Oz' .... absolute rubbish.

If you want a world where it's fine to get on the swill and then fly, keep going with your wonderfully balanced campaign. They should have just laughed it off as boys being boys, is that your position? What would you have done, in their shoes?
If it's drink driving, there's a well worn route the cops go down. For something like this, clearly it's a far more difficult process to prove anything - but hey, aroa, let's laugh it off as bush highjinks, eh?

Sunfish
19th Jan 2016, 10:24
AOTW, I think the point is that perhaps CASA, after failing in its "beer run" allegation, went looking for something else…and found it.

This begs the question if the low flying beer drinking allegation would ever have surfaced absent the original allegation.

That, to me, is what appears to be disturbing about CASA investigations; the original allegation triggers a wide ranging unfettered investigation of any and all alleged infractions, no matter how large or small without regard to context.


So the main CASA allegation fails, but there is still a raft of minor stuff with witch to besmirch the pilot - log book errors, missing tire caps, MR entries incorrect and life jackets time expired to build a case that is unrelated to the main allegation.

To put that another way, it is as if the police prosecutor says to the judge; "well, your honour, we agree we can't prove Bloggs murdered Snowy,,, but Bloggs does have Five outstanding parking fines and an unpaid speeding ticket, so you should find him guilty" - and the AAT, true to form, does just that.

This offends my sense of fairness. A single allegation triggers a witch hunt and then CASA rolls it all together into one prosecution. This is not allowed in common law.

Surely CASA would be more effective as a regulator if it didn't do this?

Arm out the window
19th Jan 2016, 11:27
I think that's exactly how they work - get some intel about someone doing dodgy things, and then gather all the info they can to charge them with in the hope that something sticks. Right or wrong, it's a fact of life unless we want to fund a highly skilled team of air police or some such, and it sends a message; keep your nose clean or we'll come gunning for you. If they had the resources and expertise to properly oversee everyone's operations, things might be different. It comes across as a bit Keystone Cops, but I don't know what else they could do that anyone would take notice of.