thewinchester
Established Member
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2006
- Posts
- 1,771
As usual, there's always more to a story then those lazy journos would have you know (no news, I'm looking at you).
The summary, a whole bunch of unionists using grubby and underhand tactics to make ground in a wages war with the airline - by highlighting supposed safety issues which they signed off on anyway.
The summary, a whole bunch of unionists using grubby and underhand tactics to make ground in a wages war with the airline - by highlighting supposed safety issues which they signed off on anyway.
The untidy story of a ‘blemished’ QF 737 windscreen
Plane Talking
April 3, 2010 – 10:46 am, by Ben Sandilands
The allegations about the Qantas 737 flown with a cracked windscreen early in February that are the centre of yet another safety controversy concerning the airline have run into a major problem with the media.
That is, a need for all black or all white reporting, all within a brief ‘tidy’ report that says ‘Qantas bad’, since ‘Qantas good’ isn’t news.
But the truth, as so far established, isn’t tidy. And it isn’t unequivocally ‘good Qantas’ or ‘bad Qantas’, or for that matter ‘good union’ or ‘bad union.’
It is in fact, an untidy mess, and no-one looks very good at all, at least at this stage.
...
Over a week ago APESMA revealed that it had written to CASA, the air safety regulator, detailing a number of claimed safety breaches by Qantas by non-member managers standing in for its members and making mistakes.
CASA in turn found the issues worthy of investigation, and apparently expects to resolve at least some of them in the near future.
However what the union didn’t draw attention to was that every morning its members peer review and approve, disapprove or recommend the rectification as required of the engineering oversight decisions made by or for Qantas in the previous 24 hours.