Norwegian plane interrupts landing to avoid overtime

Norwegian plane interrupts landing to avoid overtime
Updated 01 November 2012
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Norwegian plane interrupts landing to avoid overtime

Norwegian plane interrupts landing to avoid overtime

OSLO: A Norwegian plane carrying 40 passengers turned around and returned to an airport hundreds of kilometers away — despite having already started its descent — just so the crew would not have to work overtime.
The plane was about to land in the small northern town of Mosjoen when it turned back to Trondheim, around 350 kilometers (220 miles) south, local newspaper Rana Blad said in a report.
“Shortly afterwards, the captain himself said on the tannoy that it was unbelievable, but that it had been decided that we had to turn around,” passenger Steinar Henriksen said.
Company Wideroe, a regional carrier owned by Scandinavian airline SAS, said that the last-minute decision was based on Norway’s strict working time regulations.
“Unfortunately, the plane took off with a crew that was about to clock out. We have strict working hours that are imposed by the authorities, which we cannot exceed,” a spokesman for the company, Richard Kongsteien, told the paper.
“If the airplane had landed, it would have had to stay in Mosjoen since we didn’t have a back-up crew there, and the schedule for the rest of the evening would have had to be canceled,” he said, adding that this would have affected more than 200 passengers.