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Colgan Lands at Wrong Airport

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troll565

King of the Sea People
Joined
Oct 10, 2002
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Flight Crew Relieved From Duty Following Landing at Wrong Airport
By Joshua Rhett Miller

Published September 15, 2011 | FoxNews.com

A regional airline has relieved a flight crew involved in a landing at the wrong airport earlier this month in Louisiana, leading one lawmaker to demand answers.

Continental Connection Flight 3222, which originated from Houston, was bound for Lake Charles, La., with 23 passengers and three crew members aboard on Sept. 7. The aircraft, however, landed some eight miles away at Southland Field, a private airport to the west in Carlyss, La.

"Even though Colgan Flight 3222 from Houston to Lake Charles, La., landed safely at Southland Field, we are taking this incident very seriously," read a statement from Colgan spokeswoman Amy Howell. "Safety is a top priority for Colgan, and when the investigation is complete, we will file a report with the FAA and take any actions that are warranted."

Per standard procedure, the crew has been relieved of duty while an investigation is conducted, Howell's statement continued. At no time was passenger safety in question, she said.

While the exact cause of the incident remains under investigation, Howell said an air traffic controller in Houston had cleared the pilot for a visual approach after crewmembers advised that they had the field in sight.

The incident has prompted Rep. Kathleen Hochul, D-N.Y., to pen a letter to be sent to Colgan Air, parent company Pinnacle Airlines and Continental Airlines on the Memphis-based airlines "repeated flight safety failures," according to a spokesman for Hochul.

Among other questions, Hochul is seeking information on how Colgan has updated its safety standards since Continental Flight 3407 -- operated by Colgan Air -- crashed near Buffalo, N.Y., in February 2009, killing 50 people.

The latest incident has "undoubtedly raised serious concerns" about the regional airline, according to a draft of the letter to be sent on Thursday.

Rory Kay, an aviation safety consultant and captain for a major international airline, told the Buffalo News that landing at the wrong airport has "got to be one of the most embarrassing things that can happen to a pilot."

Pilots who work for regional airlines like Colgan earned as little as $12.50 per hour in 2009, or less than the average hourly wage of a New York City taxi driver. In May 2009, just months after the crash near Buffalo, N.Y., hourly wages for regional pilots started at $12.50, according to Avjobs.com. In comparison, a cabbie in New York averaged $17 an hour, the city's Taxi & Limousine Commission officials told FOXNews.com.

Regional pilots, who carried 160 million American passengers across America in 2008, receive the same FAA-approved training as their counterparts at larger airlines, but must endure low pay and longer hours, among other hardships, if they hope to reach the "major leagues," according to Al Yurman, an aviation expert and former National Transportation Safety Board official.

Rebecca Shaw, who co-piloted Continental Flight 3407, earned an annual salary of just $16,200 at Colgan Air, according to 2009 testimony by Mary Finnigan, Colgan's vice president for administration.

NTSB officials also noted that Shaw once moonlighted in a coffee shop while working for the Virginia-based airline. Captains at Colgan — like Shaw's partner, Marvin Renslow — typically earned between $50,000 and $53,000 in 2009, according to the board.

"It's quite a bit different," Yurman said in 2009 when asked to compare regional pilots and their counterparts at major airlines. "They're landing and taking off, landing and taking off ... They may put in an eight-hour day the same way a major airline pilot has, but the regional pilot may perform up to eight takeoffs and landings per day, the most stressful parts of the flight."
 
This might put off Alaska's plan to unload the Horizon Q400s to Colgan by a week or so...
 
Really, guys? I lost 3 fellow crewmembers who were also friends on 3407.
Have a little sensitivity!
 
Whenever one of us makes a mistake or does something that affects the way he or she is percieved by the travelling public, we all become suspect. Not only do we have to remain constantly vigilant about our own professionalism, but we need to have each others backs also. The unknowing public only see a uniform, not the person wearing it...
 
Did you read that in Plane and Pilot?? I truly hope you are not part of this profession.

Lighten up, Francis. Who do you fly for? Bet they've done it, too. Hell, some have landed in the wrong country even.

Here's a partial list. Delta, Northwest, Continental, United, American, USAirways, TWA, Air France, and just about every regional commuter are on this list:



  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]June 19, 2004 - Northwest Airlines A319, bound for Rapid City, South Dakota (RAP), mistakenly landing at Ellsworth Air Force Base.[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]January 9, 2004 - A Shuttle America Saab 340, bound for State College, Pennsylvania (SCE), mistakenly lands at Mid-State Regional Airport in Philipsburg (PSB). [/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]January 22, 2003 - A Chatauqua Airlines Embraer 145, chartered by the University of Notre Dame basketball team and bound for South Bend, Indiana (SBN), mistakenly lands at Elkhart Municipal Airport (EKI).[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]March 14, 2001 - A TWA MD-80, bound for Yampa Valley Airport (HDN), in Steamboat Springs, Colorado mistakenly lands at Craig-Moffat Airport (CIG). [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]
  • July 16, 1997 - A Continental Express Embraer 120, bound for Lake Charles, Louisiana (LCH), mistakenly lands at Southland Field (L75) in Carlyss. See T.J. Milling, "A familiar landmark? Another Continental plane sets down at same, wrong airport," Houston Chronicle, July 19, 1997.
  • May 11, 1997 - A Continental Airlines 737, bound for Corpus Christi, Texas (CRP), mistakenly lands at Cabaniss Field, an abandoned Navy airfield. Link.
  • December 24, 1996 - An Atlas Air 747 bound for Pinal Airpark (MZJ) in Marana, Arizona, mistakenly lands at Avra Valley Airport (AVW). Link.
  • October 15, 1996 - A Nations Air 737, bound for Orlando, Florida (MCO), mistakenly lands at Sanford Airport (SFB). Link. See also "Airline's inaugural flight lands at wrong airport in Orlando," Tampa Tribune, October 16, 1996.
  • October 3, 1996 - A Continental Express aircraft, bound for Lake Charles, Louisiana (LCH), mistakenly lands at Southland Field (L75) in Carlyss. Link.
  • September 5, 1995 - A Northwest Airlines DC-10, bound for Frankfurt, Germany (FRA), mistakenly lands in Brussels, Belgium (BRU), approximately 200 miles off course.
  • December 21, 1994 - A United Airlines 757, bound for San Juan, Puerto Rico (SJU), mistakenly lands at Fernando Ribas Dominicci Airport (a/k/a Isla Grande Airport; SIG). Link. See also "FAA Investigating Landing of United 757 at Wrong Airport," Aviation Daily, December 24, 1994.
  • March 28, 1991 - An Emerald Airlines 727, bound for Central Wisconsin Airport (CWA) in Mosinee, mistakenly lands at Wausau Municipal Airport (AUW).
  • November 8, 1990 - A Continental Express ATR-42, bound for Jackson, Mississippi (JAN), mistakenly lands at Hawkins Field (HKS). Link. See also "National Digest," St. Petersburg Times, November 10, 1990.
  • May 7, 1990 - A Continental Express aircraft bound for Farmington, New Mexico (FMN), mistakenly lands at Aztec Municipal Airport (N19). See “Runway of Choice Was at Wrong Airport,” Rocky Mountain News, May 11, 1990.
[/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][FONT=arial,helvetica,sans-serif][/FONT]
  • January 21, 1988 - A Piedmont Airlines F-28, bound for Wilmington, North Carolina (ILM), mistakenly lands at Albert J. Ellis Airport (OAJ) in Jacksonville. Link. See also "Piedmont Jet Lands at Jacksonville Instead of Wilmington," Associated Press, January 23, 1988.

  • July 7, 1987 - A Delta Air Lines 737, bound for Lexington, Kentucky (LEX), mistakenly lands at Capital City Airport (FFT) in Frankfort. Link.
  • November 3, 1986 - An Air France 727, bound for Eliat, Israel (ETH), mistakenly lands at Aqaba Airport (AQJ) in Jordan. Link. See also "Sorry, Wrong Airport," Associated Press, November 3, 1986.
  • February 3, 1986 - A Piedmont Airlines 737, bound for Bush Field in Augusta, Georgia (AGS), mistakenly lands at Daniel Field (DNL). Link. See also "Piedmont Airlines Flight Lands at Wrong Airport in Augusta," Associated Press, February 4, 1986.
  • March 18, 1982 - A Frontier Convair 580 bound for Farmington, New Mexico (FMN), mistakenly lands at Aztec Municipal Airport (N19). Link.
  • 1982 - An Aero Airways DC-8, bound for Stewart International Airport (SWF) in Newburgh, New York, mistakenly lands at Dutchess County Airport (POU).

  • July 14, 1980 - A Delta Air Lines 727, bound for Miami (MIA), mistakenly lands at Fort Lauderdale (FLL). [In this case, air traffic control has been blamed for providing incorrect flight plan data to the pilots.] Link. See also "Controller Reprimanded in Wrong Airport Landing," Associated Press, July 25, 1980.
  • June 20, 1980 - A Delta Air Lines 727, bound for Tampa, Florida (TPA), mistakenly lands at MacDill Air Force Base.
  • March 1, 1980 - A Republic Airlines DC-9 bound for Golden Triangle Municipal Airport (GTR) in Columbus, Mississippi, mistakenly lands at Starkville Municipal Airport (STF).
[/FONT]
 
When I was a student pilot I was just crossing the numbers when I realized this was no the right airport and went around and finally found the right one. The one I almost landed on was an Air Force base and I never heard anything about it!
 
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