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Head in the sand sightings-Air Safety Week   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #15344 of 15363 |
Head in the sand sightings

Every year the Ostriches Anonymous Association (OAA) recognizes the
most obtuse statement coming out of the mouths of aviation industry
officials that "deny, discount or ignore" a significant aviation
risk. The intent of this effort is to improve air safety through
greater application of common sense. Members submit "sightings," of
which more than 60 were made in 2003. The member submitting the
winning sighting will be recognized at the association's annual ball
Feb. 27. Herewith, a sampling from the year just completed:

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) spokesperson: Who reported
that the agency had enough people to monitor maintenance at all
airlines because "the cyclical nature of the aviation business" has
conditioned the agency to deal with a number of troubled airlines at
once. "We've been here before so there's nothing particularly
extraordinary that would leave us unprepared." To put this in
context, in the previous week 1) United Airlines [OTC: UALAQ] filed
for Chapter 11 reorganization, and 2) an FAA inspectors union
spokesperson estimated the need for 500 more inspectors to do the
job right.

Airline security personnel: Who kept a pilot from his plane after a
security agent said he smelled alcohol and mint on the pilot's
breath. After passing a field sobriety test, he was taken away to
the county jail where he was given a BAC [blood alcohol content]
test, the results of which were 0.4 mg per 100 ml of blood, one-
tenth the FAA's limit. Medical experts reported that the presence of
0.4 mg alcohol would easily be within the "clutter" around zero, and
which could have been induced gargling with Listerine (13.5- proof).

Federal regulators: Whose decrees mandated that U.S. Marines flying
to the Middle East on chartered airliners (to take the U.S. war on
terrorism to the enemy) could not carry their knives in the cabin
but could keep the M-16 rifles and M-60 machine guns with them.

U.S. Forest Service spokesman: Who responded to reports that the
pilot of a crashed firefighting air tanker had expressed concerns
about being "pushed" to fly planes of questionable structural
integrity: "Whatever Steve was thinking about his equipment or
pressures in his company was Steve's thing, not something the Forest
Service was involved in."

FAA spokesperson: While agreeing with a Department of Transportation
Inspector General (DOT/IG) finding that 18 of 21 outside contractors
of commercial airliners were using incorrect parts, improperly
calibrated tools and outdated repair manuals, stressed that the
report did not say passengers were in any danger.

Freight forwarding company CEO: Whose company booked a crate
containing a man shipping himself as air freight: "The incident
highlights the effectiveness of the TSA [Transportation Security
Administration] known shipper program and how it is safeguarding
American skies. The shipment in question was consigned to [our
company], which rigidly complied with the known shipper program and
routed the shipment to an all-cargo transport. The end result is
that through our diligence, no passengers were placed at risk.
Strict adherence to TSA regulations establishes that the
government's procedures are effective." To this statement, the OAA
remarked, "Of course, the 'known shipper' didn't know what/who was
in the crate, either. Try explaining if he had popped out during
flight, shot the crew, and flown the plane into downtown Pittsburgh,
or Memphis."

Airline spokesperson: Who said, noting that all twin-engine
airplanes are certified by the FAA to fly on one engine if
necessary, "While it may be a little bit alarming for a passenger to
see the propeller stop, at no time did we compromise their safety."
This statement was made in reaction to one of the company's aircraft
returning to the same field twice because of engine problems.

FAA spokesperson: Who said, "Any time there's a fire, there's a
concern to us, but cracked windshields rarely affect the safety of
the aircraft," after an electrical short in the windshield heater on
a B777 caused it to crack violently at cruise altitude over the
North Atlantic, accompanied by a cockpit fire (extinguished by the
crew).






Sun Jan 25, 2004 2:41 pm

markfetherolf
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Head in the sand sightings Every year the Ostriches Anonymous Association (OAA) recognizes the most obtuse statement coming out of the mouths of aviation...
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markfetherolf
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Jan 25, 2004
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