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(Ebook) The Next Crash : How Short-Term Profit Seeking Trumps Airline Safety by Amy L. Fraher ISBN 9780801470493, 0801470498

  • SKU: EBN-51383038
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Instant download (eBook) The Next Crash : How Short-Term Profit Seeking Trumps Airline Safety after payment.
Authors:Amy L. Fraher
Pages:235 pages.
Year:2014
Editon:1
Publisher:Cornell University Press
Language:english
File Size:1.36 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9780801470493, 0801470498
Categories: Ebooks

Product desciption

(Ebook) The Next Crash : How Short-Term Profit Seeking Trumps Airline Safety by Amy L. Fraher ISBN 9780801470493, 0801470498

If you are one of over 700 million passengers who will fly in America this year, you need to read this book. The Next Crash offers a shocking perspective on the aviation industry by a former United Airlines pilot. Weaving insider knowledge with hundreds of employee interviews, Amy L. Fraher uncovers the story airline executives and government regulators would rather not tell. While the FAA claims "This is the golden age of safety," and other aviation researchers assure us the chance of dying in an airline accident is infinitesimal, The Next Crash reports that 70 percent of commercial pilots believe a major airline accident will happen soon. Who should we believe? As one captain explained, "Everybody wants their $99 ticket," but "you don’t get [Captain] Sully for ninety-nine bucks." Drawing parallels between the 2008 financial industry implosion and the post-9/11 airline industry, The Next Crash explains how aviation industry risk management processes have not kept pace with a rapidly changing environment. To stay safe the system increasingly relies on the experience and professionalism of airline employees who are already stressed, fatigued, and working more while earning less. As one copilot reported, employees are so distracted "it’s almost a miracle that there wasn’t bent metal and dead people" at his airline. Although opinions like this are pervasive, for reasons discussed in this book, employees’ issues do not concern the right people—namely airline executives, aviation industry regulators, politicians, watchdog groups, or even the flying public—in the right way often enough. In contrast to popular notions that airliner accidents are a thing of the past, Fraher makes clear America is entering a period of unprecedented aviation risk.
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