Operations Control Specialist - Phoenix, Arizona
Join Our Life-Saving Team in Phoenix, AZ!
Who We Are:
PHI Health is the leading air ambulance provider in the United States. With an unmatched safety record and the best aviation, medical and communication specialists in the field, we set the standard in the air medical industry. We transport more than 22,000 patients each year from our more than 80 bases across the country, all while offering services and outreach education to local communities and leading healthcare systems. Our mission is simple: move communities to health while maintaining the highest standard of safety, period.
JOB SUMMARY
- Coordinate with Communications Center personnel; Aviation Managers and Base Pilots with requests for PHI air medical staff, when conditions indicate that risk factors or weather place a base or area under risk that must be mitigated.
- Coordinate the resolution of operational control issues as they arise.
- Coordinate as above when conditions warrant a return to a "Green" status.
- Conference with pilots to confirm weather conditions reported by AWOS/ASOS systems.
- Assist pilots with weather updates as required or requested.
- Monitors and tracks aircraft utilizing "Satellite aircraft tracking systems" (if equipped) when operating in "Yellow" or "Green" conditions, workload permitting
- Access current Aviation publications and reference materials on Web Manuals and via the internet.
- Notify Manager, Operations Air Medical or On Call Manager (as appropriate) if OCC functions become degraded or systems fail due to equipment malfunctions.
- Place work orders to appropriate agencies for malfunctioning equipment and software interface.
- Responsible for supporting company Safety Management System activities.
- Complying with company HS&E policies and procedures.
- The scope of this work involves assisting other pilots in making difficult decisions about whether to fly IAW CFR 14 Part 135.617 & 135.619
- The position requires a person with experience in the field and a strong working knowledge of the pressures that a typical air medical pilot faces.
- The Operational Control Specialist is not a "decision-maker" in the true sense; rather this person acts as a mentor, advisor and council to pilots.
- The dimension of the work includes the ability to "think ahead" of the pilot, checking weather enroute, or using experience to anticipate situations that might arise.
- Then, being able to advise the EMS pilot about the conditions, teaching as well as protecting the pilot, the crew, the patient, public and the organization from possible bad out comes.
SCHEDULE/LOCATION
- 6 days on & 6 days off (Required by CFR 14, Part 135-619, duty hours limited to 10 hours daily and 6 consecutive days on duty.)
- OCC, Phoenix, AZ, OCC, Lexington KY
- Must live within one hour drive of the base