Crew scheduling
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Crew scheduling is the process of assigning crews to operate transportation systems, such as rail lines or aircraft.
Complex
Most transportation systems use software to manage the crew scheduling process. Crew scheduling becomes more and more complex as you add variables to the problem. These variables can be as simple as 1 location, 1 skill requirement, 1 shift of work and 1 set roster of people. In the Transportation industries, such as Rail or mainly Air Travel, these variables become very complex. In Air Travel for instance, there are numerous rules or "constraints" that are introduced. These mainly deal with legalities relating to work shifts and time, and a crew members qualifications for working on a particular aircraft. Add numerous locations to the equation and Collective Bargaining and Federal labor laws and these become new considerations for the problem solving method. Fuel is also a major consideration as aircraft and other vehicles require a lot of costly fuel to operate. Finding the most efficient route and staffing it with properly qualified personnel is a critical financial consideration. The same applies to rail travel.
The problem is computationally difficult and there are competing mathematical methods of solving the problem. Although not easy to describe in one sentence, the goal is the essentially same for any method of attacking the problem:
Within a set of constraints and rules, move a set roster of people with certain qualifications, from place to place with the least amount of personnel and aircraft or vehicles in the least amount of time.
Lowest cost has traditionally been the major driver for any crew scheduling solution.
4 Parts
Although not a "rule", We can describe at least 4 parts of the equation that are ingested by the computational process:
- People and their qualifications and abilities.
- Aircraft or vehicles and their "People" qualification requirements and their cost to operate over distance.
- Locations and the time and distance between each location.
- Work rules for the personnel, including Shift hours and seniority.
In crew scheduling the rules and constraints are typically a combination of:
- government regulations concerning flight time, duty time and required rest, designed to promote aviation safety and limit crew fatigue,
- crew bid requests, vacations,
- labor agreements
- aircraft maintenance schedules
- crew member qualification and licensing
- other constraints related to training
- pairing experienced crew members with more junior crew members
- returning crew to their base at the end of their trip (called deadheading)
All of these issues need to be addressed in order to create a satisfactory solution for personnel and management of the organization. For the Crew member in a seniority based system schedules are decided largely on workplace seniority. Those at the top of a seniority list are allowed some choices. As assignments are made and the remaining roster of personnel becomes fewer, managements' systems start to assign the remaining trips based on a weighting of the 4 previously mentioned variables, without any input from personnel.
This does not allow the personnel to have any choice or voice in the schedules they receive. This lack of scheduling awareness until the end of each scheduling period is a major workforce issue and an employee morale problem, often creating a tenuous situation especially where a collective bargaining agreement is in place, and particularly at negotiation time.
Disruptions
Additional unplanned disruptions in schedules due to weather and air traffic control delays can disrupt schedules, so crew scheduling software remains an area for ongoing research.[1]
Related topics (systems)
Related topics (algorithms and software)
References
- ^ http://www.engr.pitt.edu/~schaefer/Papers/UncertainCrewSched.pdf "Airline crew Scheduling under Uncertainty"