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American Airlines Receives U.S. Department of Transportation Approval to Fly Between Los Angeles and Shanghai, China

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    Spain: Boeing Completes Chinook

    Boeing Completes Chinook Industrial Cooperation Program in Spain

    MADRID, April 13, 2010 — The Boeing Company [NYSE: BA] today announced that it has successfully completed its industrial cooperation program for the third phase of the CH-47D Chinook rotorcraft upgrades performed for the Spanish Army’s Airmobile Force, FAMET. Boeing finished the industrial cooperation program on schedule while exceeding the $80 million requirement, demonstrating the company’s continued success in meeting its commitments.

    Over the 10-year program, Boeing completed 75 projects with 20 Spanish companies and institutions. All projects were coordinated through Isdefe, the company that negotiates and manages industrial cooperation agreements on behalf of the Spanish Ministry of Defense’s Armament and Material General Directorate.

    “In cooperation with Isdefe, Boeing is bringing high-value opportunities to Spanish industry,” said Gwen Kopsie, director of International Industrial Participation for Boeing Defense, Space & Security. “Spanish companies of all sizes were an integral part of the global supply base that brought state-of-the-art upgrades to the Spanish Army’s Chinook fleet. Many more Spanish companies also benefited from Boeing’s advanced technology transfer and training programs.”

    Boeing also supports Isdefe’s efforts to develop Spanish industry through a $13 million industrial cooperation program for the Harpoon advanced weapon control system. That program is on track for completion in 2012.
    “Boeing has been a partner to Spain for more than 75 years, serving the needs of both its commercial airplane customers and Spain’s military,” said Pedro Argüelles, president of Boeing Spain. “Today, Boeing’s presence in Spain remains strong thanks to our collaboration with airlines, government, academic institutions and industry. Through our Research & Technology Center in Madrid, we work with our partners in Spain to develop solutions for the environmental, safety and reliability, and air-traffic-control needs of today and tomorrow.”

    Boeing has successfully implemented industrial participation programs totaling more than US$41 billion in nearly 40 countries over the past 30 years.

    The Chinook is a true multi-role, vertical-lift platform. The primary Chinook mission is transport of artillery, troops, ammunition, fuel and supplies within military theaters of operation. CH-47s also have performed humanitarian-support, disaster-relief, rescue, firefighting and nation-building missions on six continents in all climates and conditions. The Chinook is currently in service with more than 18 countries worldwide.

    A unit of The Boeing Company, Boeing Defense, Space & Security is one of the world’s largest defense, space and security businesses specializing in innovative and capabilities-driven customer solutions, and the world’s largest and most versatile manufacturer of military aircraft. Headquartered in St. Louis, Boeing Defense, Space & Security is a $34 billion business with 68,000 employees worldwide.

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    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Yemenia Air Under Scrutiny by Investigative Team

    Yemenia Air Airbus 310 flight 626 en route from Yemen’s capital Sanaa to the Comoros Islands crashed on the second pass to land at the ill-equipped airport during heavy weather.

    Westlake Village, California (Press Release) July 8, 2009 — A lawyer has contacted George Hatcher to dispatch a team of his consultant staff to work on the Yemenia Air crash. The latest development in this recent aviation disaster is that the thirteen bodies found by fishermen 500 miles away from the Comoros Islands may be victims who have drifted from the Yemenia Airbus crash. On its second pass at attempting a landing at the airport during a fearsome storm off the Comoros, the Yemenia Airlines Airbus flew into the ocean, killing 141 passengers and 11 crew members. This is the second Airbus lost at sea in a single month, and the crash points to an ominous trend toward a lessening of safety in aviation. Bahia’s survival and thirteen hour ordeal clutching at floating debris while suffering a broken collarbone, and too weak to climb into the rescue boat is one that clutches at our heartstrings, especially when we find out that her mother died in the crash. Bahia was flown back to her family in Marseilles. But that is not the end of the story.

    Almost half of the dead were French citizens; and French citizens are up in arms over Yemenia Air. Having failed required criteria, the Airbus involved in the incident was under scrutiny, and not allowed to fly in French airspace; but the plane was allowed to regularly fly to Comoros, a poor island society with an ill-equipped airport. There is culpability to be assigned here, though it is all speculation until the black boxes are found. A 40 year veteran of litigation investigation and evaluation (including aviation,) George Hatcher explains that he was contacted by a lawyer working, “on behalf of some families, and we have dispatched a team there to assist.”

    The thirteen bodies that were just found washed ashore on “Mafia Island,” some 500 miles from the site of the crash. A wing with “Airbus” scribed on it, and a plane seat were found in close proximity to the bodies. However, the black boxes have NOT been found yet; and the vast distance that the wreckage traveled bodes ill for the prospects of finding them.

    There is already a group organized to protest the substandard plane accommodations. Spokesperson Farid Solihi of the protest group “SOS voyage aux Comores” has been an outspoken detractor of intolerable conditions aboard flights to and from Comoros. Hopefully the Hatcher team will be able to make contact with Solihi or some other “SOS voyage aux Comores” member.

    About George Hatcher
    George Hatcher is an independent generalist, a consultant dedicated to the support of the victims of aviation incidents or accidents. Known internationally, Hatcher works with well known lawyers, and develops crack teams to help support litigation, communication, and safety initiatives. To read further about the company, visit http://aircrashconsultants.com

    Contact: george@georgehatcher.com
    Aviation Consultants

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  • NTSB SAYS NORTHWEST PILOTS’ DISTRACTION LED TO OVERFLIGHT OF MINNEAPOLIS,

    National Transportation Safety Board
    Washington, DC 20594

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 18, 2010
    SB-10-08

    NTSB SAYS NORTHWEST PILOTS’ DISTRACTION LED TO
    OVERFLIGHT OF MINNEAPOLIS, NOTES ATC SHORTCOMINGS; ISSUES
    RECOMMENDATIONS ON ATC PROCEDURES

    The National Transportation Safety Board has determined that
    Northwest Airlines flight 188 overflew its destination
    airport of Minneapolis by more than 100 miles and failed to
    maintain radio communications because the pilots became
    distracted by a conversation unrelated to the operation of
    the aircraft. The NTSB’s accident brief, released today,
    also note air traffic control shortcomings during the event,
    and the Board issued two safety recommendations to address
    those shortcomings.

    On October 21, 2009, Northwest Airlines flight 188, an
    Airbus A320 (N374NW) operating as a scheduled flight between
    San Diego and Minneapolis, did not communicate with air
    traffic control for approximately one hour 17 minutes.
    While in this NORDO (no radio communications) state, it flew
    past its intended destination at a cruise altitude of 37,000
    feet. The crew subsequently re-established radio
    communications and landed without further incident. There
    were no injuries.

    The NTSB said that the pilots continued to fly through
    several air traffic control sectors without replying to any
    radio commands. The investigation found that the pilots had
    become engaged in a conversation dealing with the process by
    which pilots request flight schedules and during the
    conversation each was using his personal laptop computer,
    contrary to company policy. The pilots were not aware of
    the repeated attempts by air traffic controllers’ and the
    airline to contact them until a flight attendant used the
    intercom to inquire about the progress of the flight.

    The NTSB also found that the lack of national requirements
    for recording ATC instructions when using automated flight
    tracking systems, such as directing an aircraft to switch
    frequencies or to indicate that an aircraft has checked in
    on an assigned frequency, was a factor in the controllers
    delay in performing necessary actions and notifications
    required by lost communications procedures. In addition,
    because NORDO events of a short duration are not uncommon,
    the Safety Board found that controllers and managers may
    have become complacent in completing necessary NORDO actions
    and required notifications in a timely manner.

    As a result of deficiencies in ATC communications procedures
    revealed in this investigation and an accident involving a
    Pilatus PC-12/45 that crashed in Butte, Montana on March 22,
    2009, the Safety Board is making recommendations to the FAA
    to address the following issues:
    · The lack of standard procedures for identifying flight
    crew-ATC communications in ATC facilities that use
    automated flight tracking systems.
    · The lack of standard phraseology for identifying the
    emergency nature of emergency ATC radio
    transmissions.

    The Safety Board’s probable cause finding, with factual
    narrative, can be accessed at the following link on the
    Board’s website: http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?ev_id=20091022X00120&key=1

    The Safety Recommendation letter can also be found on the
    Board’s website at: http://www.ntsb.gov/Recs/letters/2010/A10_42_43.pdf

    Previously, the Safety Board has addressed the potential
    hazards created by the use of personal electronic devices by
    transportation operators. Last month, following the Board’s
    investigation of the Colgan Air 3407 accident near Buffalo,
    NY, the Board issued a safety recommendation to the FAA to
    require all Part 121, 135, and 91K operators to incorporate
    explicit guidance to pilots, including checklist reminders
    as appropriate, prohibiting the use of personal portable
    electronic devices on the flight deck. Details of Safety
    Recommendation A-10-30 can be accessed at:
    http://www.ntsb.gov/Recs/letters/2010/A10_10_34.pdf.

    Recent accidents and incidents such as the midair collision
    over the Hudson River last August, Colgan Air flight 3407,
    and the Northwest pilot’s overflight of the Minnesota
    airport have demonstrated the clear hazards to aviation
    safety when pilots and air traffic controllers depart from
    standard operating procedures and established best
    practices.

    The Safety Board will convene a 3-day public forum on
    professionalism in aviation to address methods for ensuring
    excellence in pilot and air traffic controller performance.
    The forum is intended to raise awareness by promoting an
    open discussion between the Safety Board and invited
    panelists drawn from industry, labor, academia, and
    government on the importance of developing and reinforcing
    professionalism in the aviation industry. The forum is
    scheduled for May 18-20, 2010. More information regarding
    the forum will be announced in the coming weeks.

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    AvStar Aviation Group

    Announces Closing Date for Aircraft Charters, LLC Acquisition; Subsidiary, Twin Air Calypso Limited, Inc., Moving to New Facility

    HOUSTON, Jan. 28, 2011 / / — AvStar Aviation Group, Inc. (AvStar) today announced that February 15, 2011 has been set as the tentative closing date for the acquisition of a 35% interest in Aircraft Charters, LLC. The Letter of Intent for this acquisition was first announced in late December 2010

    AvStar also announced today that its wholly owned subsidiary, Twin Air Calypso Limited, Inc. (Twin Air Calypso) will be moving their passenger and freight operations to new facilities. February 15, 2011 is the projected date for the passenger operations of Twin Air Calypso to move into the newly constructed complex of Sheltair Northside. Sheltair Northside is located at the Ft. Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL) and Twin Air Calypso will occupy approximately 2400 sq. ft. of the complex for passenger operations. Freight operations will be conducted from an adjoining building of the same complex. In addition to rental savings over the current facility, the relocation agreement includes a tenant preferred fuel rate, which will save the company more than $75.000.00 per year based upon current operations. These savings will increase the company’s profitability and shareholder value.

    “Twin Air Calypso’s move to the new facility will give the company a new image and allow us to better accommodate our clients. By separating the passenger and freight operations the passengers will enjoy an airline terminal atmosphere while the freight operations will be able to expand with the additional space. The fuel cost reduction contributes directly to the bottom-line and will increase as our operations expand. This move along with the appointment of Art Stevenson as Chief Pilot provides us the infrastructure for our move to commuter status. With the improvement we already see in this year’s revenues, and the anticipated opening of West Palm Beach, 2011 will be a watershed year for Twin Air Calypso Limited, Inc. All of our associates are excited about this move and look forward to welcoming our clients to our new surroundings,” said Clayton Gamber, CEO of AvStar Aviation Group, Inc.

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    AFA-CWA Holds Holiday Food Drive for Flight Attendants In Need

    NEEDED: Non-perishable food items, everyday essentials, gift certificates and children’s items
    Please bring donations to the airport and drop them off at the food drive

    PHOENIX, Ariz., Nov. 22, 2010 — America West flight attendants, represented by the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA (AFA-CWA), are holding a holiday food drive to assist flight attendants in need during the holiday season.
    When: Wednesday, November 24, 2010
    Time: 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. MST
    Where: Terminal 4, curbside departures, north side
    Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport (PHX)
    Phoenix, AZ

    “The last few years have been difficult for all workers across all industries, but our flight attendants are more in need now than ever before. Our food bank is a response to requests for help from our members who are struggling. America West flight attendants have not had a wage increase since 2002 and are having a hard time eking out a living on wages eroded by time and the poor economy,” said Lisa LeCarre, AFA-CWA America West President.

    The Pantry of Love was a brainstorm of AFA-CWA Council 66 activists. It was formed in 2008 and is managed by Council Representative Erin McLoughlin. Approximately 15 flight attendants visit the food bank each month and during the holidays, those numbers increase.

    “After furloughs and foreclosures, some of our members could not afford to feed themselves or their families. AFA-CWA responded to their needs by organizing the Pantry of Love Food Bank, which relies entirely on donations and volunteers,” said McLoughlin. “It is heart-wrenching to see such need from people who work so hard for such a huge company with all the resources that they have available. Our flight attendants didn’t ask for this merger and didn’t ask for frozen wages. At least when they ask for help, we are here to do what we can.”

    America West Airlines merged with US Airways in 2005, yet flight attendants are still without a contract that merges their two employee groups.

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  • FAA Awards Contracts to Accelerate Environmentally Friendly Technology

    For Immediate Release
    June 24, 2010

    WASHINGTON – The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) today announced $125 million in contracts to develop and demonstrate technologies that will reduce commercial jet fuel consumption, emissions and noise. The contracts are part of the FAA’s Continuous Lower Energy, Emissions and Noise (CLEEN) program — to speed the introduction of “green” technology into aviation.

    “The FAA is working with the aviation community to aggressively meet critical environmental and energy goals,” said FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt. “The CLEEN program is a central piece of the Next Generation air traffic modernization environmental strategy.”

    The FAA is contracting with Boeing, General Electric, Honeywell, Pratt & Whitney, and Rolls-Royce-North America.

    The five companies will research and demonstrate a variety of technologies, including: sustainable alternative aviation fuels; lighter and more efficient gas turbine engine components; noise-reducing engine nozzles; advanced wing trailing edges; optimized flight trajectories using onboard flight management systems; and open rotor and geared turbofan engines.

    The five contracts are expected to total $125 million over the five-year span of the program. Under this “cost sharing” arrangement the companies will match or exceed the FAA’s contribution, bringing the overall value of the program to more than $250 million.

    The CLEEN program helps develop environmentally friendly and energy efficient aircraft and engine technology that could be introduced into the commercial aircraft fleet beginning in 2015.

    The goals of these research and demonstration efforts include: a reduction in fuel burn by 33 percent; a reduction of nitrogen oxide emissions by 60 percent; and a reduction in cumulative aircraft noise levels by 32 decibels.

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