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Andrew Sarangan wrote:
Dudley I was responding to the original post by Paul. I am sorry if it came off as 'nailing' anyone. I totally agree with your sentiments about lawyers trying to turn tragedy into income. However, the victim in question was not an airline passenger or even a pedestrian at the airport property. I did not suggest that the victims parents should sue SWA. However, for their peace of mind, they do deserve an answer as to why this freak accident happened. And they deserve to know if it really was a freak accident or an error in judgement. The NTSB is pretty good at sorting these out so I suspect the parents will get an answer in due time. Matt |
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I totally agree.....and my Outlook Express is reading this post normally
:-)) Dudley "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message oups.com... Dudley I was responding to the original post by Paul. I am sorry if it came off as 'nailing' anyone. I totally agree with your sentiments about lawyers trying to turn tragedy into income. However, the victim in question was not an airline passenger or even a pedestrian at the airport property. I did not suggest that the victims parents should sue SWA. However, for their peace of mind, they do deserve an answer as to why this freak accident happened. |
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Andrew Sarangan wrote:
I did not suggest that the victims parents should sue SWA. However, for their peace of mind, they do deserve an answer as to why this freak accident happened. They will eventually get the best information the NTSB can give. They will sue, because ultimately, and always, it comes down to money. That's how we punish those who do not serve us well, or at least those most accessible. The injured families will get a small fraction, in recompense, of the millions which have been saved by, for example: not adding low minimums approaches to MDW's 13C which at least match those on 31C, in order to avoid compounding ORD traffic congestion; not using the power of Eminent Domain, or at least the power of the Daley machine to make of MDW what it should be, in the decades since DC-3's and CV-580's; not spreading more of the air traffic burden to Gary, or DuPage, or Rockford, or any of a number of other politically inexpedient measures. Those trapped by these rock-hard realities are not only the rare crash victims and families, whose losses are immeasurable and not truly compensable. The others, always in the middle from beginning to end of every flight, are the airline cockpit crew members of whom the business can require the wisdom of a Solomon, the deft touch of a surgeon, and the clairvoyance of a Joan of Arc. To sort and select from a menu of imperfect solutions and execute precisely in the midst of a unique four-dimensional dynamic, also depends on the accuracy and timeliness of information obtained from a mixture of human and non-human sources outside of the airplane. An imperfection of focus or judgment or accuracy on a snowy winter's night can sell a million early editions the next morning. Recent years have given Airline crews some fine new equipment with which to work, and a fifty percent reduction in pay for doing that work; a threat environment not seen here at home even during World War Two; a massive loss of jobs, a loss of pay and benefits for active employees, and a loss of pensions and benefits for our retirees who lack financial alternatives. Stock holders have been left with little or nothing in too many cases to list here. But, ignoring the effects of 9/11, that's the way deregulation was supposed to work, and only the ultimate time table was impossible to predict thirty years ago. The next wave to wash over our industry will be that of Foreign Ownership and Control. It's already gaining formal consideration in our legislature. Will the Pound, Franc, Mark, Yen, or Riyal do more than the dollar has done to create a safe and available and pleasant air travel experience? Of course they will not, and the amount of influence US citizens can exert to make needed improvements in Airline safety and service can be expected to erode even further as the next phase of change sweeps over our Airline industry. If one wonders whether we are doing all we can do now, just wait until the answers to questions such as those about the future of airports like MDW lie not in the hands of politicians like Mayor Daley, but in international agreements with governments bound to, and by, Saudi Kings, Japanese Oligarchs, and the Communist Party of China. Jack |
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