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Boeing Reports Third-Quarter Deliveries

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    NTSB TO HOLD BOARD MEETING ON MID-AIR COLLISION OVER HUDSON RIVER NEAR HOBOKEN, NEW JERSEY

    The National Transportation Safety Board will hold a public
    Board meeting on Tuesday, September 14, at 9:30 a.m., in its
    Board Room and Conference Center, 429 L’Enfant Plaza, S.W.,
    Washington, DC.

    On August 8, 2009, a Piper PA-32R-300 airplane, N71MC, and a
    Eurocopter AS350BA helicopter, N401LH, operated by Liberty
    Helicopters, collided over the Hudson River near Hoboken,
    New Jersey. All 9 people aboard the two aircraft died in the
    accident. The airplane flight was operating under the
    provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 91,
    and the helicopter flight was operating under the provisions
    of 14 CFR Parts 135 and 136. No flight plans were filed or
    were required for either flight, and visual meteorological
    conditions prevailed at the time of the accident.

    A live and archived webcast of the proceedings will be
    available on the Board’s website at
    www.ntsb.gov/Events/Boardmeeting.htm. Technical support
    details are available under “Board Meetings.” To report any
    problems, please call 703-993-3100 and ask for Webcast
    Technical Support.

    A summary of the Board’s final report, which will include
    findings, probable cause and safety recommendations, will
    appear on the website shortly after the conclusion of the
    meeting. The entire report will appear on the website
    several weeks later.

    Directions to Board Room: Front door located on Lower 10th
    Street, directly below L’Enfant Plaza. From Metro, exit
    L’Enfant Plaza station at 9th and D Streets escalator, walk
    through shopping mall, at CVS store take escalator down one
    level. Board room will be to your left.

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    Emirates Flight Makes Emergency Landing in Budapest

    EmiratesEmirates flight EK-112 had to return and make an emergency landing in Budapest, Hungary, on March 5th.

    The Boeing 777-300 aircraft was heading to Dubai, United Arab Emirates, when the crew reported a problem with gear retraction and requested to return.

    The plane landed back uneventfully. Everyone aboard remained safe.

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    NTSB Meets

    NTSB TO MEET ON BUSINESS JET RUNWAY EXCURSION ACCIDENT THAT KILLED FOUR AND INJURED TWO IN SOUTH CAROLINA

    The National Transportation Safety Board will hold a public Board meeting on its investigation into an accident in which a chartered business jet crashed during a rejected takeoff in Columbia, South Carolina, 18 months ago.

    The purpose of the meeting will be to determine the probable cause of the accident and to consider proposed safety recommendations to reduce the likelihood of future such mishaps.

    On September 19, 2008, at 11:53 p.m. EDT, a Bombardier Learjet Model 60 (N999LJ) operated by Global Exec Aviation and destined for Van Nuys, California, overran runway 11 during a rejected takeoff at Columbia Metropolitan Airport. The captain, the first officer, and two passengers were killed; two other passengers were seriously injured.

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    Fatigue Understanding between NATCA and FAA

    The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the National Air Traffic Controllers Association (NATCA) announced agreement on important fatigue recommendations that were developed by a joint FAA-NATCA working group which was established under the 2009 collective bargaining agreement.

    “The American public must have confidence that our nation’s air traffic controllers are rested and ready to work,” said Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood. “We have the safest air transportation system in the world but we needed to make changes and we are doing that.”

    The agreement reinforces existing FAA policy that prohibits air traffic controllers from sleeping while they are performing assigned duties. The FAA will continue to provide air traffic controllers breaks on the midnight shift based on staffing and workload. While on break, air traffic controllers are expected to conduct themselves professionally and be available for recall at all times.

    The FAA and NATCA also agreed that all air traffic controllers must report for work well-rested and mentally alert. It is the employee’s responsibility to notify their supervisor if they are too fatigued to perform their air traffic control duties. As a result of this agreement, air traffic controllers can now request to take leave if they are too fatigued to work air traffic.

    This agreement marks the completion of the tasks required by this joint FAA-NATCA fatigue working group. The FAA and NATCA will continue to collaborate to reduce the risk of fatigue in the workplace.

    “Air traffic controllers have the responsibility to report rested and ready to work so they can safely perform their operational duties,” said FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt. “But we also need to make sure we have the right policies in place to reduce the possibility of fatigue in the workplace.”

    “We are pleased that the efforts of the joint NATCA-FAA fatigue workgroup that produced these science-based recommendations have resulted in an agreement and their implementation into the schedules and work environments of our nation’s dedicated and highly professional air traffic controller workforce,” said NATCA President Paul Rinaldi.

    “We supported the FAA’s action to enhance aviation safety by eliminating single staffing on the midnight shift and we fully support these recommendations that address fatigue. They are common sense solutions to a safety problem that NATCA and fatigue experts have consistently raised for many years.”
    Air traffic controllers will also now be allowed to listen to the radio and read appropriate printed material while on duty during the hours of 10PM and 6AM as traffic permits.

    The FAA had previously adjusted work schedules to give air traffic controllers a minimum of nine hours off between shifts. The FAA and NATCA will develop new watch schedule principles that incorporate fatigue science for schedules beginning no later than September 1, 2012. The FAA and NATCA are already beginning to work with local facilities on watch schedules that reduce the possibility of fatigue in the transition from the day shift to the midnight shift.

    The FAA has also agreed to develop policies that will encourage air traffic controllers to seek medical help for sleep apnea. Currently, air traffic controllers lose their medical qualification if they are diagnosed with sleep apnea. The FAA will work to develop a process for most air traffic controllers with sleep apnea to regain their medical qualification once they receive proper medical treatment. The FAA’s Office of Aerospace Medicine will also develop educational material to raise awareness of the symptoms and the physical effects of sleep apnea.

    As a result of this agreement, the FAA will develop a Fatigue Risk Management System for air traffic operations by January of next year. This management system will be designed to collect and analyze data associated with work schedules, including work intensity, to ensure that the schedules are not increasing the possibility of fatigue. Systems like these are commonly used in other areas of aviation to evaluate levels of risk. The FAA is also designing a comprehensive fatigue awareness and education training program for employees.

    Read the agreement pdf here.

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    Avianca Flight Diverts to Portugal due to Electrical Problems

    Avianca flight AV-47 had to divert and make an emergency landing in Santa Maria Island, Portugal, on June 23rd.

    The Boeing 787-800 plane heading from Madrid, Spain, to Bogota, Colombia, was diverted due to electrical problems.

    The plane landed safely. All two hundred and fifty people aboard remained unharmed.

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    British Airways Flight Returns to Heathrow Airport due to Electrical Odor

    British Airways flight BA-123 had to return and make an emergency landing at Heathrow Airport, United Kingdom, on February 12th.

    The Boeing 777-200 plane took off for Doha, Qatar, but had to turn back after the crew reported an electrical odor onboard.

    The plane landed uneventfully. Everyone aboard remained safe.

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