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Finally some good press

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Freight Dog

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 26, 2001
Posts
2,232
2002 Was The Safest Year For Airlines

WASHINGTON (July 13) - Last year was the safest ever for the nation's major airlines, with no deaths and only nine serious injuries due to accidents on U.S. commercial flights.

According to the National Transportation Safety Board, there were 34 commercial airline accidents in 2002, but most were considered minor.

The only accident designated ''major'' was the July 26 crash of a Federal Express Corp. cargo plane at Tallahassee, Fla. The plane was destroyed, but the crew survived.

The NTSB classified one 2002 passenger aircraft accident as ''serious.'' That occurred Aug. 28 when an American West plane ran off the runway in Phoenix, injuring 10 people, one seriously.

Though 2002 was the first in 20 years with no fatal airline accidents on U.S. commercial flights, it continues the recent trend in which accident rates have declined to very low levels.

The increase in airline safety is due in part to advanced technology like the enhanced ground proximity warning system, which alerts pilots when they get too close to the ground. Aircraft training simulators also have become increasingly realistic, allowing for more intense and accurate training in a safe environment.

Private contractors, rather than airline employees, now account for nearly half of all airline maintenance. The Transportation Department's inspector general has found that contractors sometimes fail to follow through on the proper procedures, and will require stricter oversight by the Federal Aviation Administration.

The NTSB analysis of the airlines 2002 safety record was first reported by the Washington Post.
 
Hey Freight Dog; still awake after all that night cargo flying?

When I was working at Chautauqua, I remember doing a sim session around January 1999 in San Antonio, and seeing big stories plastered around about how 1998 was the first year ever with no fatalities in commercial aviation. Am I mistaken? or is this story a little off about 2002 being the first with no fatalities?

HAL
 
The only 121 fatality in 1998 was a ramp girl in Memphis who walked into a prop. 1998 was fatality free on commercial flights.
 

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