The Irish Aviation Authority (IAA) has been criticised for failing to fully protect the safety of Irish Coast Guard search and rescue (SAR) helicopter crews.
As The Sunday Independent reports, the Irish Airline Pilots’ Association (IALPA) says the IAA has permitted the current Irish Coast Guard SAR contract holder to allow a 24-hour roster system to be logged as a total of 16.5 hours in total.
The report says that by recording a 24-hour shift as a total of 16 hours and 30 minutes, the employer can increase the number of 24-hour shifts annually from a maximum of 83 to 104, saving on employment costs.
Air crews have been waging a long-running internal campaign to ensure that 24 hours on duty is recognised as such, even when not flying.
Representatives of air crew unions IALPA and Fórsa say that over the past 15 years, the IAA has permitted operations to progressively reduce the amount of working time logged during 24-hour shifts.
It has been 18 hours and 30 minutes’ duty time under previous contract holders to a new total of 16 hours 30 minutes’ duty time.
Bristow Ireland mandates that all air crew must remain on base for the 24-hour shift, whereas previous contract holders had allowed air crew living close enough to bases to return home while on standby.
“The fault is not with the employers but with the regulator, as in the IAA, for allowing this,” an IALPA spokesman told the newspaper.
Fianna Fáil TD for Clare Cathal Crowe has asked the Oireachtas transport committee to invite the IAA to appear before it to take questions on the issue.
After the Rescue 116 crash in March 2017, in which four air crew died, the official investigation introduced a number of recommendations to improve safety, including a fatigue risk management system (FRMS) which both CHC Ireland and Bristow Ireland operate.
The IAA commented that aviation safety is “our priority”.
Read The Sunday Independent here

















































