Aero-News Network: The aviation and aerospace world's daily/real-time news and information service
Aero-News Network
RSS icon RSS feed
podcast icon MP3 podcast
Subscribe Aero-News e-mail Newsletter Subscribe

Hide/Show Archive Navigation.

All News

August 30, 2004

Two 'Eagles' Down at ERAU Prescott

ERAU Prescott Suffers Tremendous Loss

Mike Corradi and Bob Sweginnis were best friends. They worked together at the Prescott, Arizona campus of Embry Riddle Aeronautical University. They played together in the sky. On Saturday, August 28, 2004, they died together just before eight-thirty in the morning, when an aerobatic routine they were preparing for the upcoming Prescott Air Show went wrong.

Read More

Florida Helo School Called Danger To Neighbors

Local Officials Cite Two Accidents Within One Month

Bruce Pelly thinks Palm Beach Helicopter is a danger to people who live near the Lantana (FL) airport and he's said so in a letter to the FAA. Pelly, the Director of Airports in Palm Beach County, wants the school moved to a less populated area.

Read More

Joy Ride Turns To Disaster

Passenger Lost On Charity Fundraiser Flight

It started out as a fundraiser for the Chidren's Miracle Network. It ended in tragedy. A 39-year old Michigan woman was killed when the Stearman PT-13 in which she was a passenger went down in the Wisconsin River.

Read More

Drive, Park, Fly. All In The Same Vehicle

After 45 Years, Witness Another Push For The Venerable Flying Car

Critics have said pigs would fly before cars. Not long ago, at the Flugtag Festival in Portland (OR), an aircraft (sort of) called a flying pig merrily crashed into the Willamette River. Does that mean it's time to resurrect the idea of cars that can fly?

Read More

It Was An Accident

Wisconsin Sheriff Rules Death Of Minnesota Mayor Wasn't Suicide

When the mayor of St. Anthony Village (MN) went down in his Cessna 172 earlier this month, Burnett County (WI) Sheriff Dean Roland wondered if it was suicide. Roland says, on the day of the fatal crash, he had charged Mayor Randy Hodson of faking the theft of an expensive sports car in order to collect the insurance.

Read More

Action On FAA Labor Shortage

FAA Ordered To Immediately Correct Staffing Shortage In Safety-Related Positions

The Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA) last week unanimously upheld an arbitrator's decision ordering the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to immediately bring systems specialist staffing to a minimum of 6,100 nationwide. The arbitrator's decision upheld by the FLRA was the result of a grievance filed by Professional Airways Systems Specialists (PASS), the union that represents FAA systems specialists.

Read More

Advertisement

FAA Says No To Illinois Landfill

It's Too Close To Williamson County Regional Airport

The FAA and proponents of a new landfill near Williamson County Regional Airport (IL) are talking trash these days. Literally.

Read More

FAA, NATCA Duke It Out Over RNC Flight Restrictions

Union Says Staff Shortages Could Cause Flight Delays

If this week's Republican National Convention in New York causes flight delays at the three major airports serving the Big Apple, don't blame NATCA controllers. The ATC union says it's the FAA's fault. The reason? Staffing shortages.

Read More

Aero-Views: Save FSS

by NAATS President Wally Pike In this month's issue of AOPA Pilot, AOPA President Phil Boyer addresses the modernization of flight service (FSS). This is in response to that article and is written from the perspective of the union that represents the air traffic controllers in the flight service stations. I won’t go into our inherently governmental arguments on why this workforce should remain federal as I believe the AOPA membership already understands that issue. Instead I’ll confine my comments to the points made in the article.

Read More

Oil Cap Missing From Down C-210

Accident Killed Couple, Granddaughter

The NTSB has a good indication of why Richard Dunham's Cessna T-210 went down. Now the question is, how did it happen?

Read More

FAA Grants $10 Million To Overhaul New Orleans Runway

Renovations To Begin Week After Mardis Gras 2005

Officials at Louis Armstrong International Airport in New Orleans (LA) plan to shut down their longest runway just after Mardis Gras next year. The reason? A $50 million construction project to rebuild the east-west runway -- the first major renovation on that runway in more than 20 years -- shore up the runway near a traffic tunnel and install a new floodgate in the hurricane levee.

Read More

Utah TFR: Until Further Notice

NOTAM: 4/9120 Issued: 08/29/2004 00:00 Effective: Immediately - Until Further Notice State: UT Facility: ZLC - SALT LAKE CITY (ARTCC),UT. Type: HAZARDS Description: CEDAR CITY, UT.

Read More

Advertisement




Advertisement

Advertisement

Podcasts

AeroTwitter

© 2007 - 2024 Web Development & Design by Pauli Systems, LC