- Tue Aug 13, 2024 3:40 pm
#108294
Hi lsatstudent,
The problem with your hypothetical is that you're changing the criteria in judging the efficiency of the personnel. In other words, you're assuming that being late 14 minutes every flight is objectively "worse" or less efficient than being late 30 minutes only 5 times.
While that may seem like a reasonable way to judge efficiency, that's not the criteria being used here. In other words, being late 14 minutes is "considered" on time for all intents and purposes, even though it isn't literally on time. In your hypothetical, the first airline that is always 14 minutes late may be pushing their luck, but they are technically always on time according to the rules.
This doesn't invalidate the ratings; it simply changes what the agency cares about in determining efficiency. If a plane is late by 15 minutes or more, that is the cutoff for being considered inefficient.