subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Sat, Nov 28 2009 

Published: February 07, 2009 10:46 pm    print this story   email this story  

STEPHANIE SALTER: Multiple impressions of US Airways pilot ‘just doing his job’

By Stephanie Salter
The Tribune-Star

TERRE HAUTE Before we Americans move on to our next hero, I’d like to share some collected observations about Capt. Chesley B. Sullenberger III and US Airways Flight 1549.

“Sully,” as he is known to family, colleagues — and now millions of strangers — is the pilot who averted disaster Jan. 15 by putting a wounded Airbus 320 down on the Hudson River. With the help and skill of Sullenberger’s cockpit and cabin crews, all 155 people on board lived to tell the extraordinary tale.

Those of us who have never piloted jetliners were awestruck. “Miracle” became the operative word as Sullenberger’s name became a happy household word.

To those who are trained to ferry others through the sky, the reaction was much the same as the captain’s — cool, low-profile, eminently professional.

In a superb essay on politicalmaven.com, retired Reader’s Digest editor Ralph Kinney Bennett echoed thousands of Sullenberger’s colleagues.

“It is likely that we would never have heard about Mr. Sullenberger, but for that flock of birds near La Guardia,” Bennett wrote. “He would have been like thousands of other commercial pilots — exceptional men and women who go about their demanding, boring, tiring, unsung duty, hoping and indeed praying that what makes them exceptional will not be called to the fore. Most of them have memories of cockpit moments when their instincts, their training, and luck, yes, luck, got them past the shadow of death. These are the damp-brow, dry-mouth, frozen seconds they keep to themselves.”

A retired pilot friend sent me the Bennett piece — along with copies of e-mail correspondence among him, another retired captain and Sullenberger. There’s zero gushing in any of the messages, just no-nonsense congratulatory communication among pros.

Ever gracious, Sullenberger turned the compliments back on both retirees — veterans of the Korean War and F-86 fighter jets — telling them he envied their experience in the legendary Sabres.

Sullenberger is 58. Without a years-long effort by many of his colleagues, he and his exceptional know-how would be two years from being forced out of the cockpit.

Until Dec. 13, 2007, the FAA singled out pilots of U.S. passenger planes from among the world’s pool of commercial aviators, mandating their retirement at age 60. Thanks to sustained and ferocious lobbying of Congress by hundreds of people like United Airlines Capt. Barry H. Wilson (another pal; Purdue aviation, 1968), the flying public will reap the benefits of American pilots’ expertise until they reach 65.

Lucky us. According to Simon Hradecky of the Aviation Herald, Sullenberger and his first officer had all of 210 seconds from the time the Airbus flight recorder registered the loss of both engines until the black box went dead when the plane hit the Hudson.

As Bennett wrote of all commercial pilots in his online essay:

“Everyone of them has thought at one time or another about what they would do, how they would react when the buzzers sound and the lights flash and hell breaks loose above the earth. Most of them never have and never will face what Chesley Sullenberger faced — that moment when all his training, all his reading, all his instincts — all that framed and formed him since his youth — was called up instantly from the files hidden deep within him.”

Sullenberger has been adamant since “the miracle” that the training and instincts of everyone involved in the water landing and quick maritime rescue were pivotal to the outcome. An overlooked element of the success was examined by Marcy Wheeler on her Weblog, Emptywheel:

“This Miracle Brought to You by America’s Unions.”

Person by person, job by job, the Michigan-based Wheeler listed the labor union representation on display Jan. 15.

“Sullenberger is a former national committee member and the former safety chairman for the Airline Pilots Association and now represented by US Airline Pilots Association,” she wrote. “He — and his union — have fought to ensure pilots get the kind of safety training to pull off what he did [Jan. 15].”

Aiding the captain, Wheeler added, were members of the Association of Flight Attendants; the National Air Traffic Controllers Association (still alive despite being knee-capped by the Reagan administration); the Seafarers International Union, who swiftly piloted ferry boats to the downed plane; the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association; the Uniformed Firefighters Association and Uniformed Fire Officers Association.

In a reference to Senate opposition to the U.S. auto industry’s federal loan package, Wheeler wrote, “Bob Corker [Tennessee] and Richard Shelby [Alabama] like to claim that union labor is a failed business model. But I haven’t heard much about Bob Corker and Richard Shelby saving 155 people’s lives.”

Last among the Flight 1549 observations is an online column by conservative radio talk show host, Mike Gallagher. Normally not a guy to whom I resonate, Gallagher won the day describing his repulsion at a USA Today headline, “US Airways Gives Passengers On Flight $5,000 Each — Passengers Wonder, Is it Enough?”

The newspaper story quoted one passenger saying, “I just want to be made whole,” and mentioned a New York law firm that specializes in aviation lawsuits; already it has been contacted by several passengers of Flight 1549.

“Is anything ever enough anymore?” Gallagher wrote.

“It is absolutely, positively inconceivable that anyone aboard the miraculous US Airways Airbus … would expect US Airways to fork over a ton of money to them … I wonder how long it took those folks to stop thanking God for His decision to spare their lives from what should have been a fiery, horrible end before they Googled the best law firm to sue the pants off US Airways?”

Bravo. Not to minimize anyone’s trauma, but perhaps any litigation-leaning passengers should ask themselves one question before filing suit: “What would Capt. Sullenberger do?”

Stephanie Salter can be reached at (812) 231-4229 or stephanie.salter@tribstar.com.

print this story   email this story  



Photos


Tribune-Star columnist Stephanie Salter. / (Click for larger image)

Terre Haute Progress Retail health medical manufacturing education

Terre Haute



autoconx
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Terre Haute

Terre Haute News Morning Headlines

Terre Haute ClickLocal

Terre Haute Tribune-Star Newspaper Dial-A-Pro

Terre Haute Tribune-Star Newspaper Live in the Clubs

Terre Haute News on Twitter

Today's Featured Jobs

Nurses & CNA's
SIGN-ON
BONUS
Nurses& CNA’s
Full-time
All Shifts
Good work
environment and
support
...>MORE

Sales Assistant/Office Manager
Independent
Terre Haute auto
dealership has an
immediate need for a
Sales Assistant/
...>MORE

See all ads

Today's Featured Autos

98 Buick Regal
95 Buick Regal,
132k mi., white,
$1250 Call
(317)242-8111
...>MORE

98 Ford Escort
98 Ford Escort,
$2450, great gas
saver, 4cyl, AT, 4-dr,
insp w/warr, 148k
w/approx 9k Jasper ...>MORE

See all ads

Today's Featured Homes

Colonial Acres
COLONIAL ACRES
North 1-2 bdrm.,
$395-$485. 466-7046
...>MORE

1430 S Center
1 Bdr nice clean
1430 S Center. Ref
& lse req $350+elec
$350 dep 894-3209

...>MORE

See all ads

Today's Cool Stuff

Ping Pong Table
Nasser’s Consign-
ment pingpong table
$100 reclinr $75 2355
3rd Ave 232- 7456
...>MORE

German Mauser
WW II Model 1891
German Mauser
$500. Call (812)240-
8691 lv msg

...>MORE

See all ads


 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2009. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index