
, All good points Scott. Something I hve just thought of is could that controller have been comming down with a short term bug that caused him to go to sleep, quite apart from the body's natural desire to sleep at night. although I'm not an air traffic controller, I work a fair share of nights, some shifts 8 hours and some 10 1/2 hours. I remember one night getting to work at 2030 hours for a 10 1/2 shift feeling quite alright and by 2300 I was sick as a dog. We weren't able to get anyone else to fill in for me so I just had to find a hidey hole somewhere close to the office and if something happened my other 2 colleagues came and woke me up to help them deal with the situation. Another thought is; what happens if the lone controller has had a heart attack; no one there to administer first aid, call the ambulance, get someone else in to replace him/her; the ill controller could die and this not be discovered till morning. How is that fair?
Some 12 years or so ago there was an incident involving a young second year ambulance officer here in a rural NSW ambulance station where he was the single night duty officer and had a serious asthma attack. He didn't have time to administer the salbutamol medication to himself so he got on the phone and dialed 000. The emergency operator at the other end of the line saw that the call was coming from that particular ambulance station and the person making the call was not talking to her. She then assumed that he was pulling a prank on her. Her thinking went something like this, "we reroute calls to ambulance stations not take calls from them, this bloke is obviously having a loan of me" and promptly hung up on him. When his colleagues arrived in the morning he was dead on the station office floor with the telephone receiver still in his hand. The 000 operater hadn't even had the presence of mind to call the local police and have them go around to see if he was ok. And what if someone in that area had needed an ambulance through the night? The next nearest ambulance station was about 50 miles away so that could have been 2 deaths just because an officer was left alone on duty and someone else didn't take his mute cry for help seriously. Oh, and by the way, there are still manning issues in rural ambulance stations to this day, so I say the more people on duty at night, within reasonable bounds, the better and at the very least 2 people at night because we have no idea what may happen to a loan officer, regardless of what his/her duties are.
Cheers,
Ross.