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For
most people in general public would not know
that an airline dispatcher exists.
For people outside the airline
industry the crucial role of an aircraft
dispatcher is unknown. So, here is what they
do. Approximately over 2,000 U.S. dispatchers
play a major role in keeping pilots from
flying into turbulence, volcanic ash and
thunderstorms. They save them from running out
of fuel or arriving at airports where runways
are icy. They serve as the pilots' eyes and
ears on the ground. The pilot is in charge of
the aircraft, and the dispatcher is in charge
of the flight.
Like mechanics and pilots,
dispatchers are licensed by the Federal
Aviation Administration. Their employment by
major and regional airlines in the U.S. is
required by law. Federal regulation created
the job in 1938.
A plane never leaves the ground
until both captain and dispatcher are in
agreement. If a dispatcher is troubled about
visibility at the destination, or a pilot
doesn't like the nonfunctioning component in
the cockpit, even though it is legal fly with,
the flight doesn't go. When the plane is in
the air -- following the flight plan the
dispatcher has designed -- the dispatcher
tracks it, keeping an eye on weather
conditions the plane is approaching.
Dispatchers also watch the
conditions at the destination airport, and the
at the alternate airports where the plane
could be put down in an emergency. They can
order a pilot to divert or reroute the plane.
When a pilot radios in that he has a sick
flight attendant or an unruly passenger, the
first person he speaks to is the dispatcher.
Dispatcher job can be very
stressful, especially when the weather is bad.
But dispatch jobs are coveted because they
bring plenty of responsibility, fast-paced
work that changes constantly. For some
airlines they have to undergo a psychological
evaluations prior being selected. Dispatchers
have to attend six week initial training at a
FAA-certified school, then pass a written test
and an eight hour oral exam. Once they are
employed by an airline, some airlines start
them as assistant dispatchers, working under
the guidance of a licensed dispatcher. After a
year or more when they graduate to actual
dispatcher duties, they must pass another FAA
check. Recurrent training consists of 20 hours
of classroom instructions annually and
spending at least five hours observing and
actual flight from the cockpit.
Dispatchers are just as
knowledgeable as pilots and also are
intimately familiar with aircraft-maintenance
manuals and emergency checklists,
meteorological charts, air-ground radio
systems, the air-traffic control system and
runway layouts at hundreds of airports.
Dispatchers don't wear spiffy
military-style uniforms, carry fat briefcases
full of charts and earn more than $200,000 a
year, as do veteran pilots at the big
airlines. They wear civilian clothes, work
shifts in airline operations centers and earn
between $25,000 and $100,000 a year, depending
on seniority and overtime.
ON TIME GOES OUT
THE WINDOW WHEN IT COME TO SAFETY!!!
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Most
of the above was taken from The Wall Street
Journal-written by Susan Carey Staff Reporter.
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