Sky-High Scare: Flight Forced to Turn Around After Pilot Reveals He's Not Qualified to Fly乘客从伦敦在英国维珍大西洋航空公司的航班to New York were in for a shock on Monday.

ByEmily Rella

Steve Parsons | PA Images | Getty Images

Whether you're prone to being anervous flyeror not, it's normal to have fears on an airplane when you hit a bit of turbulence or discomfort during yourvoyage.

But at the end of the day, once you board a plane, you're putting your faith and trust in the pilot operating the vehicle that they will get you to yourdestinationas safe and as quickly as possible.

But for passengers flying onVirgin AtlanticFlight VS3 from London to New York on Monday, a new fear was unlocked as the plane had to be turned when it was found that the two pilots operating the vehicledid not have the proper internal requirementsto be operating the plane.

Translation: The person flying the plane was not technically qualified to be doing so.

Related:Major U.S. Airline Announces New Ticket Type With Added Perks

Here's what happened.

About 40 minutes after the aircraft had left London's Heathrow airport, it was found (though not clarified precisely how) that the first officer had not completed Virgin's internal "final assessment" flight.

Since the captain was not licensed to be a trainer for the final flight, he did not pass the requirements that would have allowed the trip to be the first pilot's final assessment.

It's of note, however, that both pilots passed all of the UK flight regulation requirements, just not all of those for Virgin Airlines specifically.

The plane was hovering above Dublin at the time before the crew was made aware of the "rostering error."

Related:Passengers Furious After Southwest Airlines Leaves Thousands Stranded

Virgin apologized to passengers after the flight landed back in London and took off with a properly trained first pilot, arriving in New York nearly three hours after the originally scheduled time.

"The qualified first officer, who was flying alongside an experienced captain, was replaced with a new pilot to ensure full compliance with Virgin Atlantic's training protocols, which exceed industry standards," Virgin Atlanticsaid in a statement.

The incident comes at a time when airlines are facingstaffing shortagesand other troubles as a result of the pandemic, with a January survey fromReuters showingthat nearly one-third of pilots globally are still not flying.

Emily Rella

Entrepreneur Staff

Senior News Writer

Emily Rella is a Senior News Writer at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was an editor at Verizon Media. Her coverage spans features, business, lifestyle, tech, entertainment, and lifestyle. She is a 2015 graduate of Boston College and a Ridgefield, CT native. Find her on Twitter at @EmilyKRella.

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