The FAA and the National Air Traffic Controllers Association (Natca) earlier this week signed an agreement to create an Air Traffic Safety Action Program (ATSAP), which is designed to “foster a voluntary, cooperative, non-punitive environment for the open reporting of safety-of-flight concerns by employees of the FAA.” Under the ATSAP, all parties will have access to valuable safety information, which will be analyzed to develop skill enhancement or system corrective action to help solve safety issues. The agreement is for 18 months and will begin at several targeted facilities. Both sides intend the program to continue, if a comprehensive review and evaluation determines that it is successful. FAA Air Traffic Organization COO Hank Krakowski, speaking yesterday at Natca’s “Communicating for Safety” conference in Chicago, promised that the FAA would carry through on the letter and spirit of the agreement, saying that it is “one area where I’ll absolutely not be reluctant to pull rank.”
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NTSB Investigates Learjet, ERJ 145 Near Midair
Thursday 24. of July 2008 A near midair collision on Monday at Chicago O’Hare International Airport that involved an American Eagle Embraer ERJ 145 regional jet and a... |
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FAA Medical Durations Extended for Younger Pilots
Thursday 24. of July 2008 The FAA today issued an InFO (information for operators) that specifies the extended duration of first- and third-class medicals for pilots... |
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NTSB Didn’t Test Other Aircraft for Mistrim Problem
Thursday 24. of July 2008 In a safety recommendation issued last Thursday (A-08-48 and A-08-49), the NTSB raised concerns about mistrim rotation characteristics in the... |
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NTSB: Challenger Mistrim Is ‘Unsafe Characteristic’
Tuesday 22. of July 2008 The NTSB issued a safety recommendation letter on Thursday warning that pilots may decide to abort takeoffs in Bombardier Challengers if the... |
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NTSB Probing Recent Runway Incursions at TEB
Thursday 17. of July 2008 The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating two runway incursions that occurred at Teterboro (N.J.) Airport (TEB) over the past... |
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