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Southwest flew 'unsafe' airplanes?

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Airboss

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 19, 2004
Posts
472
Records: Southwest Airlines flew 'unsafe' planes

  • Documents show Southwest flew thousands of passengers on "unsafe" flights
  • Southwest declines comment for this report
  • House panel chair says it's "one of the worst safety violations" he's ever seen
  • Documents: 47 jets kept flying after missing inspections for cracks in fuselage
By Drew Griffin and Scott Bronstein
CNN Special Investigations Unit

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- -- Discount air carrier Southwest Airlines flew thousands of passengers on aircraft that federal inspectors said were "unsafe" as recently as last March, according to detailed congressional documents obtained by CNN.
Documents submitted by FAA inspectors to congressional investigators allege the airline flew at least 117 of its planes in violation of mandatory safety checks. In some cases, the documents say, the planes flew for 30 months after government inspection deadlines had passed and should have been grounded until the inspections could be completed.
The planes were "not airworthy," according to congressional air safety investigators.
Calling it "one of the worst safety violations" he has ever seen, Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minnesota, is expected to call a hearing as soon as possible to ask why the airline put its passengers in danger.
Southwest Airlines, which carried more passengers in the United States than any other airline last year, declined comment.
"We are not doing interviews. We are only preparing for the hearings at this time," said Southwest Airlines spokeswoman Brandy King.
The documents obtained by CNN also allege that some management officials at the Federal Aviation Administration, the agency responsible for commercial air safety, knew the planes were flying "unsafely" and did nothing about it.
"The result of inspection failures, and enforcement failure, has meant that aircraft have flown unsafe, unairworthy, and at risk of lives," Oberstar told CNN.
He said both FAA managers and the airline may also have broken the law as well as threatened the safety of Southwest passengers.
The documents were prepared by two FAA safety inspectors who have requested whistle-blower status from the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, which is headed by Oberstar. The two inspectors have been subpoenaed to testify before the committee.
The whistle-blowers say FAA managers knew about the lapse in safety at Southwest, but decided to allow the airline to conduct the safety checks on a slower schedule because taking "aircraft out of service would have disrupted Southwest Airlines' flight schedule."
According to statements made by one of the FAA inspectors seeking whistle-blower status, a manager at the FAA "permitted the operation of these unsafe aircraft in a matter that would provide relief" to the airline, even though customers were on board.
The safety inspections ignored or delayed by the airline were mandated after two fatal crashes and one fatal incident, all involving Boeing's 737, the only type of airplane Southwest flies.
In 1994, a U.S. Air Boeing 737 crashed in Pittsburgh killing 132. Three years earlier, a United Airlines Boeing 737 crashed in Colorado Springs, killing 25. Investigators blamed both crashes on problems in the planes' rudder control system, leading the FAA to demand regular checks of the 737's rudder system.
Documents provided to CNN show 70 Southwest jets were allowed to fly past the deadline for the mandatory rudder inspections.
The documents also show 47 more Southwest jets kept flying after missing deadlines for inspections for cracks in the planes' fuselage or "skin."
The long-term, mandatory checks for fuselage cracks were required after the cabin of an Aloha Airlines 737 tore apart in mid-air in 1988, killing a flight attendant. That incident, which opened much of the top of the plane during flight, was attributed to cracks in the plane's fuselage that grew wider as the plane underwent pressure changes during flight.
An FAA inspector at a Southwest Airlines maintenance facility spotted a fuselage crack on one of the airline's 737s last year, according to the congressional documents. He notified the airline and then began looking through safety records, discovering dozens of planes that had missed mandatory inspection deadlines.
According to the inspector's statement in congressional documents: "Southwest Airlines at the time of discovery did not take immediate, corrective action as required to address this unsafe condition and continued to fly the affected aircraft with paying passengers."
The documents show Southwest Airlines voluntarily disclosed some of the missed inspections last spring, and Southwest Airlines told the Wall Street Journal it did not expect any civil penalties to be imposed because of the self-disclosure.
But, even after the airline's disclosure, FAA inspectors assert that planes continued to fly, in some cases for more than a week, before inspections were complete. The airline "did not take immediate, corrective action," according to the congressional documents obtained by CNN.
"That is wrong," said Oberstar. "When an aircraft is flying out of compliance with airworthiness directives, it is to be shut down and brought in for maintenance inspection. That's the law."
Southwest Airlines has never had a catastrophic crash. Federal investigators determined a 2005 incident at Midway airport in Chicago that killed one person on the ground was the result of pilot error, as was a 2000 incident at Burbank airport in California that seriously injured 2 passengers.
 
Are you sure you want to work there. Pick your future employment carefully. Good times always must come to an end.
 
Shouldn't this be on the Majors board? :confused:
 
Southwest is supposedly saying that they reported themselves to the FAA last year sometime about this trend and they were surprised that it has come up again. But, really the flying public should know about crap like this.
 
You're right, the public should know what kind of buffoonery is going on in this industry. Where would you like to start? Foreigners unable to speak english piloting a small aircraft in their backyard only to be in an RJ 6 months later? How about 250-750 hr pilots requiring 50 plus hours of IOE? Wait, I got a good one, wasn't there a pilot at ASA that took the aircraft from an FO at <200' and then side-stepped runways before setting off the shaker and scraping a wingtip? Oh yeah, he lectured the FO all the way to the gate about how they were going to keep this little event to themselves. After all this, ALPA gets his job back; he doesn't take it, but he got back regardless. How about Comai.....nevermind, they know about that one. I got a long list of WTF's, and the public could give a $hit. $49.00 tickets helps them forget about every potential dip$hit with a license; pilot, airline, or otherwise.

Come on, man. This industry is full of mistakes and single digit percentages are airplanes killing people. Even the Aloha bird that turned itself into a convertible flew back to the house and the only victim was the FA. That's not bad. There's no doubt that we potentially screwed up, but every carrier makes mistakes........some accidental and some intentional.

Just remember the next time you screw up. You know, the next time you take an a/c with something broken to keep a schedule or don't write something up on your 3rd day of a 3 day trip so you can be in the parking lot at release time. The FEDS, the FAA, SWA, and Boeing were all in on this one, brother. The last time I checked we don't have a history of aircraft falling out of the sky, just falling off of runways.
 

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