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Qantas pilots ‘making mistakes after long Covid breaks’

Qantas pilots ‘making mistakes after long Covid breaks’

SOME Qantas pilots are making mistakes as they return from long breaks caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, according to an internal memo reported by Australian media on Wednesday (5).

Among the errors listed in Qantas pilot reports are: starting take-off with the parking brake on and misreading the altitude as airspeed, said a report by the Sydney Morning Herald and Melbourne's Age.


It also cited switches in cockpit panels being in the wrong position, and crew looking back at an event and "not realising that they were overloaded or had lost situational awareness".

The memo by Qantas' fleet operations chiefs reportedly said the Covid-19 related disruption to flights meant pilots had less recent flight experience, a requirement known as "recency".

As a result, the memo is quoted as saying, expert pilots "experienced a subsequent reduction in cognitive capacity".

"Airlines around the world are working through the complex process of returning to pre-Covid operations, including bringing back pilots who experienced extended periods on the ground," a Qantas spokeswoman said.

Qantas recognised very early that it needed to reassess pilots' recent and current flight time requirements as well as its "refamiliarisation programmes", she said.

"We designed an enhanced return-to-work programme fit for the unprecedented challenge facing our industry," the spokeswoman added.

"Safety is our number one priority and all of the data shows that our pilots are coming back with the skills and confidence to do their job safely."

(AFP)

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US senator hits out at India's visa temple and H-1B workers over 'ethnic favouritism'

Highlights

  • Senator Schmitt called H-1B and related visa programmes a "Visa Cartel".
  • He shared an image of Hyderabad's Chilkur Balaji Temple in his posts.
  • India accounts for 70 to 80 per cent of all H-1B approvals annually.
Republican senator Eric Schmitt of Missouri sparked a social media storm this week after posting a series of attacks on India's H-1B visa applicants on X.
Schmitt claimed that US visa programmes, including H-1B, L-1, F-1 and Optional Practical Training, have together created what he called a "Visa Cartel" that displaces American workers, suppresses wages and hollows out the American middle class.

Schmitt also alleged that foreign students, nearly half of whom he said are Indian nationals, receive taxpayer-subsidised work permits while corporations avoid payroll taxes and standard wage protections.

"They flow into H-1B, then green cards, while US grads with debt compete against cheaper labour," he added.

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