Data, facts & follow-up If you ever thought that aviation is protected

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Data, facts & follow-up
We recently were told by the European Commission that “more data is needed”. More data on problematic industry
practices that make use of ‘social engineering’ to circumvent national labour, tax and social security laws, and
which distort competition on the European aviation market.
Such data is now available – contained in the comprehensive study
report from the Ghent University on ‘Atypical Employment in Aviation’.
But is seems many don’t like what they see in this report – albeit for
different reasons. For sure, we as pilots do not like the study outcome
because we see that dramatic (and possibly detrimental) changes are
taking place in our profession! We see that these so-called ‘atypical
forms’ of employment will soon be rather typical for the aviation
industry. Especially our young colleagues experience a completely
different start of their flying career. “Pay-to-fly” schemes, bogus selfemployment and zero-hour contracts are today's sad reality.
The time, when the relation
between a pilot and his/her
airline was meant to be a
direct one – and maybe
even a lifelong – belongs
to the past.
Dirk Polloczek
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If you ever thought that aviation is
protected against ‘mala fide’ management
and practices. It's not.
The pilot profession has often been glorified as one of the most prestigious:
high pay, professionalism, respect, high social status. The qualifications
and skills required to become a pilot, and the enormous responsibility they
carry, somehow, let us think that aviation – and its employees – are
protected against mala fide management, exploitation and bad labour
conditions. Well, they are not. Pilots have not escaped the perverse logic
dominating the entire industry – cheap, cheaper, cheapest, and if possible
– for free.
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Drones in sight
After publishing a proposal for rules for small drones on 15 February, the
US Federal Aviation Administration is gearing up to collect comments by
industry and drone enthusiasts alike. Judging by the initial strong reactions
– both negative & positive – busy days are ahead for the FAA. The
proposal made Amazon rather unhappy.But does that mean is it time for
drone fans to celebrate? Perhaps not yet. Safety (and security) of the
‘unmanned’ or ‘remotely piloted’ aircraft systems (RPAS), and the way they
are operated, keep prompting new questions globally, including in the EU.
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ECA Releases EU FTL Calculator
On 18 Feb. 2016 latest, one year from today, all European airlines will
have to apply new Flight Time Limitations (FTL) for their pilots and cabin
crew, in line with the FTL rules developed by the European Aviation Safety
Agency (EASA). To mark the start of this countdown, pilot experts from
ECA developed an online ‘EU FTL Calculator’. This new calculator –
launched today – allows air crew, airlines, national authorities and other
stakeholders to calculate their flight duty times under EASA’s new rules.
MORE +
Invitation: Lunch Briefing on
Atypical Employment in Aviation
- 27 March 2015, Brussels
Save the date: 5-7 May FRMS
Forum, Luxembourg
ECA Annual Report 2014
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