ShysDad wrote:
I did everything I could to get the national guard out there, it took nearly 6 days for this to happen.
I was told by CAP to not go and look for her, I was told if I walked into one of their search grids they would pull assets out.
If I hired a private plane they would pull their assets. They were allowing other pilots to help but only on a very strict limited basis.
There were at least 7 planes on the ground waiting to be allowed to help. At one point the CAP had a search grid of nearly 2400 square miles and had a plan been filed the search area would have been much much smaller.
At one point CAP even took the word of a psychic and investigated his premonition.
The statements posted above perfectly illustrate the reason, and ultimate responsibility for this tragedy.
Airplanes were not the problem. Lack of a flight plan was not the problem. Lack of resources was not the problem. Lack of a 406 ELT was not the problem. All these things were of course contributing factors to some degree, but
we cannot let any of these ancillary or secondary factors be pushed down everyone's throat as a scapegoat.
If I were the CAP's lawyer,
I would be working overtime to put these secondary factors front and center to misdirect the public's attention away from the actions and policies of the CAP. This is "crisis management 101". I would be doing
anything and
everything to direct the public's attention AWAY from the fact that CAP took deliberate, decisive actions that reduced the number of vehicles and people who were out there searching for survivors while there still might have been time.
Blaming this tragedy on the lack of a flight plan is absolute, utter
nonsense that will sooner or later cost someone else the loss of a loved one. That is not what caused the loss of your daughter, sir. Although I don't know all the facts from both sides, it sure looks like ego, political maneuvering, ass-covering, budget concerns, and jockeying for position and public perception are the larger contributors to this loss.
We had one of the local Los Angeles Sheriff's SAR officers speak at our EAA chapter meeting. He laughed at all the noise about 406 ELT's... he said that after all the satellites and all the government rules and all the BS, if you crashed anywhere in LA County HE was the guy with boots on the ground that would be coming up the mountain to look for you, and HE only had a 121.5 direction finder that did not read the 406 signal.
And if I were the CAP's lawyer and PR firm, I'd be desperately scrambling for any defensible position for their policies and practices. I'm sorry to be repetitive, but if you want to change what went wrong here, don't let anyone steer you towards "fixing" the details and keep you away from the big "elephant in the room".
If I were your lawyer, I'd be making sure that everyone on this planet understood that on one hand the CAP offered to let a $#(#*% psychic help them find your daughter, but on the other hand they threatened the father and a group of citizens to stay away, and quite possibly because of this a child's life was lost. I'm sorry, but in this day and age of media coverage being the primary factor in the decisions made by government, you have to give them an upside to do the right thing, and a very painful downside for doing the wrong thing. Once upon a time this ass-covering did not dominate every word and action by elected officials, but that time has come and gone.
One more thing, take a good close look at the motives and risk/reward of the position of every party in this situation. Most of the people on this discussion group have a personal stake in keeping government regulations within reason, and protecting our ability to fly without being regulated to death. But most of us have kids or family we would certainly want to keep safe at all costs, and it is our ass that is at risk every single time we fly.
The government bureaucrats have a life-or-death stake in making themselves LOOK like they are doing their job and acting for public safety, and taking the obvious and defensible path to prevent them from looking like they are not doing their job. The CAP has a sink-or-swim stake in keeping their budget and their public perception as the good guy, and making sure they cannot get sued.
A government bureaucrat that takes a public stand for 406 gadgets, or flight plans, has a defensible position to say they were doing something... regardless of whether that something was truly the right thing. A CAP general that makes a case for them being the only qualified people to search for downed airplanes... is making a case for justifying their budget and justifying their position of authority. If the CAP admits that they are only one part of a search, and that civilian airplanes would double or triple their effectiveness... they have just minimized the importance of the CAP.