It was Autumn 2014 and it was an afternoon shift. At the time, there were numerous âGetting Your Game Face Onâ posters around the Tower; theyâd been on display for a while but if you werenât into rugby they were pretty easy to walk past. I thought it would be an idea, therefore, to share an experience of mine that shows why âGetting Your Game Face Onâ is essential for all of us prior to plugging in.
I had a problem with staffing that day due to sickness and no AAVA cover available; it meant that there would only be 2 controllers on duty after 2000hrs. The traffic was fairly straightforward and not horrifically busy. I did a stint on Radar and then was given a break at 1430hrs. During the break I constructed a break plan which, to my astonishment, worked perfectly, with none of the usual drama associated with break plans and less than optimal staffing. Now, those of you who do break plans will know that this usually means youâve left somebody in position for 2Âœ or even 3 hours, so I was a bit suspicious of it.
OK, I donât have time to check any further because Iâve got to do a couple of breaks in the VCR. Up I go and plug in on Tower. Its straightforward and reasonably quiet. Weâre on 05 and thereâs one at the Golf 1 holding point and one on final to land. Even I can do that, so I take responsibility for the position and clear the arrival to land. Then an Ops vehicle calls me wanting to cross from Charlie to Yankee. I tell them to hold position and decide that Iâll cross them after the landing traffic has passed the intersection.
Meanwhile, as I wait to put my cunning plan into operation, Iâm mentally running through the break plan Iâve done, trying to find where it has obviously gone wrong. The arrival lands and, as it passes Golf 1, I line up the waiting aircraft, warning the crew that there will be a vehicle crossing further down the runway in front of them. I must have made the mistake somewhere around tea break time. Probably got somebody working an extra hour.
âOps vehicle cross Charlie to Yankee report vacatedâ. Then, âArriving aircraft vacate right at Bravo and contact Ground on 121.7â, something Iâve done for more than 30 years, but donât tell my trainees to do. If I havenât made the mistake there, maybe Iâve done it later. Canât think exactly when, though. Ops vehicle reports clear of the runway. I look up and think, no youâre not, you havenât crossed the holding point at Yankee, yet. Maybe the break planâs fine. Maybe I havenât made a mistake and it has just worked out.Then I see the vehicle cross Yankee and acknowledge it. Iâd better check the break plan again when Iâm finished here. Right, the vehicleâs off the runway and I clear the departure for take-off.
As Iâm transmitting this Iâm carrying out my usual visual scan of the runway. I start at the 05 threshold, progress down to the 23 end and then start baâŠ. what the hell is that doing there? Iâve just finished my transmission when I see the arrival still on the runway, just turning towards Bravo but, before I can say anything, the crew of the departure aircraft point that fact out to me. Sod it!
Now Iâll be honest. My first thought, combined with a sneaky wee look around, was âDid anybody notice that? Could I get away with it?â Then of course I realise the ridiculousness of that thought. I acknowledge the pilotâs report, cancel their take off clearance, tell them to hold position, and apologise for my stupidity. I watch the arrival turn onto Bravo and then I clear the departure for take-off.
What an eejit, Iâm thinking (well not exactly, but I donât want to damage anybodyâs sensibilities this early in the New Year). Still, it could have been worse. I get relieved and go back downstairs to send my colleague up to recommence the breaks. Did I say it could have been worse? Well, it got worse. Somebody looked at the Veristore recording of the SMR and spotted that when Iâd cleared the departure for take-off the second time, the arrival hadnât left the clear and graded area.
So thatâs pretty impressive. In the space of a couple of minutes Iâd had two runway safety events. I hadnât exhibited that level of genius since winning the inaugural Golden Shovel award on my Radar course for having 2 technical losses of separation BEFORE clocks on. My reaction was one of anger at myself for being so stupid, coupled with embarrassment that it had happened because it was other ATCOs that did that sort of thing, not me.
The root cause was me being too busy worrying about other things instead of paying full attention to what was going on in front of me. Would it have solved things if Iâd kept the arrival on my frequency and its strip in the runway bay? Possibly, but even after completing an HF interview, I wasnât as convinced as others were. I was distracted by my brilliance with the break plan and my conviction that there must be something wrong with it. It distracted me to the extent that I forgot completely about the arrival, and it persuaded me that the traffic preventing the departure was the Ops vehicle. Iâm not sure I would have properly registered another flight strip in the runway bay.
I failed to concentrate properly on what was going on around me and let myself drift off whilst I mentally checked a plan that I could do nothing to change whilst I was plugged in. This was an excellent demonstration of not getting your game face on. My game face was still in the dressing room trying to spot non-existent errors in a break plan. Donât let that sort of stupidity bite you. When youâre plugging in, your entire concentration needs to be on what youâre doing. When youâre working traffic, your entire concentration needs to be there, not on some bizarre conversation youâre having with a colleague, not on a book, certainly NOT on a smartphone and definitely not on something you were doing before you plugged in.
Itâs incumbent on all of us to avoid distraction from our main task. If you feel you are being distracted by whatever method, be it conversation, noise, whatever, just tell the individual(s) to shut up. Likewise, if you see something that could be a distraction then deal with it, and if youâre responsible then take it on the chin and shut up or move away. Watch Managers and Deputies have to be aware that they need to leave non-operational things behind when they plug in. I didnât and got bitten and bitten badly. Donât let it happen to you.
PROCEDURES FOR INBOUND AIRCRAFT:
PILOTS SHOULD TYPICALLY EXPECT THE FOLLOWING SPEED RESTRICTIONS TO BE ENFORCED: 220KT FROM THE HOLDING FACILITY DURING THE INTERMEDIATE APPROACH PHASE THEREAFTER, AND UNTIL ESTABLISHED ON FINAL APPROACH, THE HIGHEST POSSIBLE SPEED WITHIN THE BAND 160-180KT WHEN ESTABLISHED ON THE ILS AND THEREAFTER UNTIL 4DME, 165KT WITH A TOLERANCE OF +/- 5KT. THESE SPEEDS ARE APPLIED FOR ATC SEPARATION AND RUNWAY CAPACITY PURPOSES AND ARE MANDATORY. IN THE EVENT OF A NEW (NON-SPEED RELATED) ATC CLEARANCE BEING ISSUED (EG AN INSTRUCTION TO DESCEND ON ILS), PILOTS ARE NOT ABSOLVED FROM A REQUIREMENT TO MAINTAIN A PREVIOUSLY ALLOCATED SPEED. ALL SPEED RESTRICTIONS ARE TO BE FLOWN AS ACCURATELY AS POSSIBLE. AIRCRAFT UNABLE TO CONFORM TO THESE SPEEDS SHOULD INFORM ATC AND STATE WHAT SPEEDS WILL BE USED. IN THE INTERESTS OF ACCURATE SPACING, PILOTS ARE REQUESTED TO COMPLY WITH SPEED ADJUSTMENTS AS PROMPTLY AS FEASIBLE WITHIN THEIR OWN OPERATIONAL CONSTRAINTS, ADVISING ATC IF CIRCUMSTANCES NECESSITATE A CHANGE OF SPEED FOR AIRCRAFT PERFORMANCE REASONS. THE SPACING PROVIDED BETWEEN AIRCRAFT WILL BE DESIGNED TO ACHIEVE THE MAXIMUM RUNWAY UTILISATION WITHIN THE PARAMETERS OF SAFE SEPARATION MINIMA (INCLUDING VORTEX EFFECT) AND RUNWAY OCCUPANCY. IT IS IMPORTANT TO THE VALIDITY OF THE SEPARATION PROVIDED THAT RUNWAY OCCUPANCY TIME IS KEPT TO A MINIMUM CONSISTENT WITH THE PREVAILING CONDITIONS.
The issue we had was the urgency to get this out to the community; the NOTAM bridged the gap between implementation and the AIRAC Cycle. Unfortunately the length of the NOTAM was unavoidable due to it having to be exactly as the proposed AIP entry. This NOTAM has since been removed as this information is now published in the AIP.