
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Joseph David Emerson, 44, an Alaska Airlines pilot who was driving within the cockpit “jump seat” and is accused of attempting to disable the engines of a Horizon Air jet, seems in Multnomah County courtroom in Portland, Oregon, U.S. October 24, 2023. D
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By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The United States should do extra to prioritize the psychological well being of pilots, air site visitors controllers and different aviation professionals, a high security official stated on Wednesday, after an off-duty Alaska Airlines pilot allegedly tried to crash a industrial flight in October.
The pilot was charged with attempting to disable the engines of a jet in flight and advised police afterward he was struggling a nervous breakdown.
National Transportation Safety Board Chair Jennifer Homendy stated at a day-long discussion board on the difficulty that regulators should empower folks to get assist.
“There is a culture right now that you either lie or you seek help. We can’t have that. That’s not safety,” she advised reporters.
Pilots are required to report sure psychological well being situations to aviation medical experts, who decide health to fly.
Homendy cited challenges corresponding to controllers being compelled to work necessary six-day work weeks due to worker shortages, and backed amnesty for pilots and others to “come forward and be honest about struggles.”
Jeremy Horn, managing security director of Horizon Air, a unit of Alaska Airlines, stated the incident involving the off-duty pilot within the cockpit “jump seat” of the Oct. 22 Horizon flight had prompted a wider dialogue about psychological well being.
Horizon is holding a quarterly security day on Monday targeted on self-care.
The Federal Aviation Administration stated final month it was naming a pilot psychological well being committee with about 20 members to supply suggestions to encourage pilots, air site visitors controllers and others to report psychological well being points.
The FAA stated it should handle open suggestions from a July inspector normal’s workplace report which discovered the company’s skill to scale back security dangers is “limited by pilots’ reluctance to disclose mental health conditions.”
(This story has been refiled to say security official, not regulator, within the headline)