This is interesting.
I ran this story past the two pilots who work in same office I work in. Well, they used to be pilots, now they're simulator instructors. Anyhow, they're ex-navy EA-6B pilots, with many years experience. They hadn't heard of the incident, so we went online and found it, and listened to it.
They both agreed, with no hesitation whatever, with Ken and Tigs. Then I tried with them what I tried with you people here: “But surely there is a better way to handle this... You canna go around declaring emergencies every time you don't get your way...” The answer was “you're missing the point. If the runway ATC wants me to land on is out of limits for crosswind, and ATC won't listen to my request for another runway, I'd probably have done the same thing this guy did – there's no time to jerk around with a giant airplane full of passengers – we'll talk about it when we're on the ground.”
Which is what Ken & Co. have been saying.
Yep, and I think you would be hard pressed to find a professional pilot who would think any differently.
It really isn't even a close call.
Every person in that airplane is counting on the pilot to put their safety first.
I have zero tolerance for people who purchase a home near an airport and then bitch about the noise! In every single case, the dang airport was there long before the homes were! Politicians listen to bitching home owners and tell you through their votes regarding "preferred runways" and other such decsions how they feel about your safety as a passenger on an airplane!
The controller, sitting in his air conditioned office, is going to go home whether the pilot is able to land safely or not. The pilot and everyone else on the airplane goes home safe only if the pilot lands safely!
It's the old saw about bacon and eggs on your breakfast platter! The chicken who laid the eggs was "involved." The pig with his bacon was "committed!"
The controller is involved. The pilot and his crew are committed, and as passengers, you are along for the ride regardless how it turns out, equally committed, just essentially powerless!
So, if you want to know why we pilots are passionate about this, think about the differences between the pilots and the controllers -- committment and involvement.
My definition of a good air traffic controller? It is simple -- a controller who understands the difference between involvement and commitment, and strives to do whatever is needed to keep the people in that airplane safe. This controller failed. And if I had my way, he'd be put on administrative leave, and only if I determined he was under significant pressure to keep that runway active "or else," would I let him keep his job. If he was being put under pressure to not change the runway despite the weather conditions, then I would put him back in the seat on probation, and fire everyone who put him under that pressure!
Lives count more than noise, more than homeowners pissed off because they bought a house near an airport! Lives are more important than controller convenience. And a crosswind out of limits remains a crosswind out of limits, period, dot.
Cheers,
Ken