Talk is cheap
http://www.faa.gov/apa/pr/pr.cfm?id=1877
Press Release
Contact: Fraser Jones
Phone: 202-267-3883
APA 32-04
Date Posted: August 31, 2004
U.S. Runway Incursions Continue Decline in 2003
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Runways at the nation’s airports are getting safer for the second year in a row. Runway incursions dropped 20 percent over a four-year period, according to an FAA report released today. U.S. airports recorded 324 incursions last year, of which just 32 were characterized as high risk. Those serious incidents have dropped 50 percent since 2000. For the second consecutive year, none of the most serious incursions involved two large commercial jets.
“The numbers tell the story. American runways are the safest the world has to offer,” said FAA Administrator Marion Blakey. “Pilot awareness programs and new technology continue to pay real safety dividends on the nation’s runways.”
The FAA continues leading an industry- wide effort to improve runway safety through increased education, training and awareness, along with new technology and improved airport runway markings and lighting. To prevent runway accidents, the FAA has delivered new technology called the Airport Movement Area Safety System (AMASS) to 34 airports, and is deploying the new Airport Surface Detection Equipment Model X (ASDE-X) to another 25 airports.
By definition, a runway incursion is when an aircraft, vehicle, person, or object on the ground creates a collision hazard, or is too close to an aircraft taking off, intending to take off, landing, or intending to land.
The 324 incursions last year were 15 less than in 2002. Under the FAA’s method of measuring incursions by severity categories from A to D, the higher-risk (A and B) incursions dropped to 32 last year, five less than in 2002. The incursion rate per million takeoffs and landings was 5.2, unchanged from 2002.
Reducing runway incursions is one critical safety objective of the FAA’s strategic “Flight Plan” through 2008. One of the “Flight Plan’s” performance targets is to reduce the number of category A and B runway incursions by a minimum of 48 percent, with no more than an average of 27 serious incursions per year by fiscal year 2008.
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