Unlike the Op Ed. writer in today's Hartford Courant, I do pay attention to the flight attendant, I know where the exit rows are from my seat, I could open the door if I were seated in an exit row, and I know that I should put my own mask on prior to assisting any child seated next to me. I can't think of anything that would delay and complicate airline travel more than this suggestion. Just what the struggling airlines need; another layer of bureaucracy for passengers who gaze out the window.
Train Airline Passengers Before Takeoff
http://www.courant.com/news/opinion...airplane-emergencies.artjul14,0,1436364.story
By ARTHUR G. SHARP
July 14, 2009
Airplane passengers are seldom prepared for emergency landings. They should be given the opportunity to practice using airplane safety devices and evacuation techniques before each flight. Mock-ups of aircraft in every airport, paid for out of government stimulus funds, will help in that regard.
Emergency landings for airplanes are not uncommon. On July 2, US Airways Flight 752 from Philadelphia to Stockholm made one at Bradley due to a smoke alarm in the cockpit. That landing ended without incident. Not all of them do, however.
Remember US Airways Flight 1549, which landed in the Hudson River on Jan. 15? How many of those passengers were expecting or prepared for an emergency landing? They could have been better prepared if they had the opportunity to practice emergency landing techniques beforehand.
Let's face it: Virtually the only passengers who use the safety devices aboard airplanes are those involved in emergency situations.
Most people including me pay little or no attention to flight attendants as they mechanically explain how to activate an oxygen mask, pull out seat cushions for use as flotation devices and assume crash positions. Nor do they read the cards that explain the emergency evacuation procedures. That has to change.
Here's the plan: Airlines and the Transportation Security Administration should create mock-ups of airliners in airports to train passengers preparing for flights. The mock-ups will include the safety devices used aboard actual aircraft, from oxygen masks to escape chutes.
These trainers will be staffed by personnel who will assist passengers in practicing with the devices. The training will be optional at first. Eventually, it will become mandatory for all passengers on a one-time basis.
The mock-up does not have to be a full-sized aircraft. A few seats, fully operational safety devices, an emergency escape door and a modified escape chute would suffice. Trainers would demonstrate the use of the devices, set in motion-simulated emergencies, help the passengers with the equipment, when necessary, and assess their reactions.
The training will help prepare passengers for emergencies, reduce the level of panic and the potential number of injuries or deaths, free flight attendants to work with passengers who opt out of the practice opportunity and ease the burdens of adults with children.
Generally, children are the least prepared passengers for airplane emergencies. Normally, they rely on their parents or older passengers to activate their safety devices and initiate escape techniques, which delays their own preparations. So, children in particular will benefit from the mock-up training, which will familiarize them with the equipment and procedures associated with emergencies.
Children going through the training could earn official-looking certificates to acknowledge their accomplishments. The certificates will entice more children to complete the training and encourage them to get their parents and guardians involved in it as well. Once the mock-up training becomes mandatory, certificates will be awarded to all passengers, who would show them before boarding a commercial airplane.
Granted, there are plane crashes in which no amount of training with safety devices will be useful, such as Air France's Flight 447, which crashed off the coast of Brazil May 31 and killed 228 people, or the June 30 crash of Yemenia Airlines Flight 626 into the Indian Ocean near Comoros, in which only one of the 153 people aboard survived. But training would be helpful in incidents like the Hudson River landing of Flight 1549.
Airlines carry millions of passengers into the skies annually without providing them with any hands-on training in the use of safety devices. The mock-up sites will remedy that lack of training and increase the numbers of survivors in emergency landings. They should become standard in airports around the world and would provide a beneficial use for stimulus finds in the United States.