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Pilot who crossed Michael O'Leary resigns from Ryanair
international |
anti-capitalism |
other press
Friday December 24, 2010 11:00 by CEO - (former Cabin Crew) - Safety - not profit - is the bootom line
Sent to 'Siberia'
http://www.rte.ie/news/2010/1207/presswatch-business.html
PILOT WHO CROSSED O'LEARY RESIGNS - The Ryanair pilot who said the airline should replace Michael O'Leary, the low-cost airline's chief executive, with a junior flight attendant to save money has quit after being reassigned from southern France to the "Siberia" of a base in Lithuania, says the Financial Times.
Captain Morgan Fischer was one of almost 30 Ryanair pilots working at Marseilles who had to move after the airline announced in October that it was closing the base following a disagreement with French authorities. The pilots were asked to bid for new bases. Most did so and were offered work at bases in Spain, Italy, Portugal and elsewhere, including some a few hours' drive from Marseilles, where many live with their families.
Captain Morgan Fischer - standing up for Ryanair passenger safety - forced out Capt Fischer, who had worked for Ryanair for almost five years and had spent almost a year resolving a contractual dispute with the airline, said he wanted to discuss any move first, according to a close colleague. This was because he was concerned the low-cost carrier could treat a request to shift bases as an agreement to a new - and possibly inferior - contract. The 41-year-old American, who lives with his family in the pretty town of Aix-en-Provence, was then offered a transfer to Kaunas, Lithuania's second-largest city.
Pilot who crossed O’Leary resigns
By Pilita Clark, Aerospace Correspondent
Financial TImes: December 6 2010
The Ryanair pilot who said the airline should replace Michael O’Leary, the low-cost airline’s chief executive, with a junior flight attendant to save money has quit after being reassigned from southern France to the “Siberia” of a base in Lithuania.
Captain Morgan Fischer was one of almost 30 Ryanair pilots working at Marseilles who had to move after the airline announced in October that it was closing the base following a disagreement with French authorities.
The pilots were asked to bid for new bases. Most did so and were offered work at bases in Spain, Italy,Portugal and elsewhere, including some a few hours’ drive from Marseilles, where many live with their families.
Capt Fischer, who had worked for Ryanair for almost five years and had spent almost a year resolving a contractual dispute with the airline, said he wanted to discuss any move first, according to a close colleague.
This was because he was concerned the low-cost carrier could treat a request to shift bases as an agreement to a new – and possibly inferior – contract.
The 41-year-old American, who lives with his family in the pretty town of Aix-en-Provence, was then offered a transfer to Kaunas, Lithuania’s second-largest city.
“That was a fairly considerable kick in the teeth for him,” said the colleague. “Kaunas is considered Siberia for Ryanair pilots. It’s very unpopular to be sent there. It’s the back of nowhere with a completely different language. You’re in eastern Europe and the money is dreadfully bad.”
As a result, Capt Fischer resigned. He declined to comment but, speaking from France, his colleague said the pilot had the option of going back to work for a US airline.
Capt Fischer’s resignation comes two months after he offered a cheeky riposte to Mr O’Leary’s comments that airlines could save “a fortune” if flight attendants replaced co-pilots on aircraft now so sophisticated that “the computer does most of the flying”.
In a letter to the Financial Times, Capt Fischer suggested his own idea to shave costs: replacing Mr O’Leary with a “probationary cabin crew member currently earning about €13,200 net a year”.
Stephen McNamara, Ryanair’s head of communications, said the airline could not comment on individual employees or their contracts for confidentiality reasons.
But he said fewer than 10 of the almost 30 pilots at Marseilles had not said where they would like to be transferred, “and so these have been offered transfers to other bases in Spain, Italy, the UK and Lithuania, according to where we have pilot vacancies”.
He added: “All of our Marseilles pilots have been offered positions at other Ryanair bases, and the vast majority have already accepted these offers.
“Should some pilots choose not to, and resign, then much as we would regret such a decision, we would respect it and wish them every success with their future careers.”
Get cabin crew to replace Ryanair CEO
Financial TImes: September 13 2010
From Captain Morgan Fischer.
Sir, I would like to share with you a cost-saving suggestion I have proposed to the Ryanair board (“Ryanair’s talk of spree on aircraft casts cloud over dividend hopes”, September 8). I write in my capacity as a B737-800 line training captain assigned to Ryanair’s Marseilles, France base. My primary job responsibility involves the line training and checking of co-pilots and captains on both an initial and a recurrent basis.
As a Ryanair employee, I am aware of the company’s desire to reduce costs whenever feasible, and, in so doing, pass on these lower costs in the form of lower fares to the travelling public.
I would propose that Ryanair replace the chief executive with a probationary cabin crew member currently earning about €13,200 net a year. Ryanair would benefit by saving millions of euros in salary, benefits and stock options. Further, there will be no need to petition either Boeing or governmental aviation regulators for approval to replace the CEO with a cabin crew member; as such approval would not be required.
Finally, the position of CEO could, in fact, become a source of ancillary revenue for Ryanair. Currently, Ryanair’s contract cabin crew providers charge new recruits for the cost of their training – €3,000 in fact. Ryanair could similarly charge €3,000 for the training required to become chief executive.
Captain Morgan Fischer,
LTC, Ryanair/Marseilles,
Aix-en-Provence, France
Ryanair plan to axe co-pilots raises safety issue
Financial Times: September 13 2010
From Captain Evan Cullen.
Sir, I refer to “Ryanair’s talk of spree on aircraft casts cloud over dividend hopes” (September 8) where Michael O’Leary is quoted as saying that the risk of pilot incapacitation does not merit the presence or cost of a qualified co-pilot.
Mr O’Leary is notably skilful at obtaining publicity by means of outrageous statements that the media find newsworthy. However, his misrepresentations in this case demand clarification. His claims that there was only one such incident in 25 years and that the pilot “landed the plane” are incorrect.
In fact, there have been at least two significant events in Ryanair involving crew member incapacitation. In the reported event, the physicians who eventually reached the cockpit determined the captain to be clinically dead. (While he was revived following strenuous efforts he subsequently died.) The captain did not land the aircraft, as was claimed by Mr O’Leary. However, the safety outcome was well within tolerances expected in such rare events. This testifies to the key role played by the co-pilot. In the second incident, the incapacity of a captain gave rise to potentially grave consequences that exceeded acceptable safety tolerances. The safety implications are obvious, as is the reason for having two qualified pilots in the cockpit.
In respect of Mr O’Leary’s comments, members of the deceased captain’s family wish that these matters be clarified. I therefore write to you on their behalf as well as that of my organisation. The family note that the official accident report contains references to failures of training in pilot incapacitation provided to the cabin crew, as well as the elapsed time prior to providing the captain with oxygen and medical assistance. In fact, this most unfortunate event evokes for them unpleasant memories that go beyond the immediate operational consequences of pilot incapacitation. Their appreciation of all the events and circumstances surrounding the incapacitation event is very different from that represented by Mr O’Leary.
Mr O’Leary has been on the board of Ryanair since 1988 and chief executive since 1994. That he is prepared to make such statements while, apparently, not being fully briefed on these important safety matters is entirely consistent with Ryanair’s “innovative” approach to staff relations, safety, pilot fatigue and related matters.
Evan Cullen,
President, Irish Airline Pilots’ Association,
Dublin, Ireland
Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary - wants low paid cabin crew to take co-pilot's job (but not his job)
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Jump To Comment: 5 4 3 2 1Cut prices = cut salaries and working conditions. Next time you buy a cheap shirt or dress think of the sweat labour that produced them.
O'Leary is a bully who instill's fear into his employees , he cares not one miniscule of respect
towards people in general & staff of Ryan Air, in particular .....
We all know a bully is an uneducated prat who is hiding behind their own ignorance .
Ryanair Caught Napping - Channel Four Documentary (48 minutes)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZkKPirksymQ&feature=related
Document compiled from information obtained from a substantial number of Ryanair pilots at different Ryanair bases.
See complete doc at:
http://www.pprune.org/terms-endearment/214074-ryanair-g....html
.....
Ryanair is very much an airline of individuals working for the same employer. The airline apparently does not encourage a sense of common purpose. As a consequence there is often a feeling of impotence against a very assertive and powerful management. Pilots feel uncertain as to their rights and this state of affairs is unlikely to be by accident. It is certainly true that any collective action challenging Ryanair has typically been a very painful and difficult process. Many pilots tend to be relatively apathetic in the face of such difficulties and rationalise their situation as being temporary and, hence, acceptable - “I only have to put up with this for a few years before getting enough hours to get a job with a better employer”.
Ryanair has claimed that it is modeled on the highly successful U.S. Low Cost Carrier Southwest Airlines. This claim has been successfully established in the minds of many external observers including most of the media and investor communities. Those with even a passing familiarity with the realities of life in the two airlines will know that the positive pro-employee disposition of Southwest management is completely different from the employee relations encountered in Ryanair.
Ryanair Pilot Employment Contracts – Some Issues
There appear to be two main types of employment contract, issued under either Irish or UK law. In general “permanent” pilots based in the U.K. have U.K. contracts of employment whilst those employed in Ireland and in all continental bases generally hold Irish contracts of employment. This latter arrangement facilitates Ryanair in a number of ways, including certain practices collectively termed “social dumping” (which refers to the avoidance of social payments in countries having higher employer social contribution rates). So called “contractor” or contract pilots with Ryanair are invariably employed by intermediaries, or external agencies. It is widely believed that some of these are managed by individuals having close contact with Ryanair.
Ryanair is unique in that the Terms and Conditions of employment enjoyed by pilots vary widely and that these Terms and Conditions can be changed, sometimes literally overnight, without any prior notice or discussion. Moreover, some of the contract clauses give considerable power to Ryanair to make changes that may have a radical impact on a pilot’s life. For example, the following appears in recent Ryanair contracts:
It is reported that some pilots have been permanently moved from base to base with remarkably little notice. It will be noted that this will be "without compensation" (and means that the pilot will find and pay for all hotel accommodation). In addition, the reference to being paid “in accordance with prevailing pay at that base" correctly suggests that a new contract will have to be signed, normally with reduced Terms and Conditions of employment. That contract might not be made available until after the move has been completed and will then be offered on a “take it or leave it” basis.
More at....
http://www.pprune.org/terms-endearment/214074-ryanair-g....html
Irish Independent December 22 2010
PASSENGERS escaped without injury yesterday when they were forced to make an emergency evacuation from an aircraft.
There were dramatic scenes at Kerry Airport shortly after 9am as all 160 passengers on board Ryanair flight FR701 from London Stansted had to make their escape via the aircraft's emergency chutes.
Passenger Richard Hartnett said there was "panic" on board when passengers saw "black smoke" coming from the cockpit. He said people fled the scene in terror after firemen told them to "keep running".
"The whole cabin filled up with a fog and it felt like five minutes had passed before anyone did anything," Mr Hartnett told the Irish Independent.
"The pilot came out and told us we were in an evacuation procedure and the slides came out.
Tears
"When I came down the slide the firemen at the end of it said 'keep running' and we had to run to the green bit of ground off the runway.
"Tears were running down my face but I think it was from shock," said Mr Hartnett who was making his way home from London to spend Christmas with his family in Ballyheigue.
"There was just panic with everyone running for their lives and nobody knew what was happening. The way it was handled was dreadful. There were people in their 80s on that flight and one man said he didn't have his medicine."
Spokesman for Kerry Airport Basil Sheerin said the plane landed safely but the captain could smell fumes in the cockpit as the aircraft taxied to the main stand.
"The captain advised Kerry air traffic control and we initiated our emergency procedures which involved the local fire service, gardai and the ambulance service," he said. "The captain stopped the aircraft and advised the passengers that he was instigating an emergency evacuation.
"Kerry Airport personnel were on hand to assist the passengers as they used the chutes and all passengers were evacuated safely."
The aircraft was boarded by airport and fire officers but there was no evidence of burning in the cockpit.
It remained at Kerry Airport yesterday evening while both Ryanair and the air accident investigation unit completed their checks.
There was no major disruption to Kerry Airport operations as a result of the incident and all flights operated on schedule. But the outbound Ryanair to Dublin due to depart at 9.25am was delayed.
Ryanair flight FR701 from London Stansted on the runway at Kerry Airport Dec 21 2010