FAA: Airport Firefighting Standards Inadequate | Aero-News Network
Aero-News Network
RSS icon RSS feed
podcast icon MP3 podcast
Subscribe Aero-News e-mail Newsletter Subscribe

** AIRBORNE 06.18.13 Aero-TV-- CLICK HERE! ** HD iPad-Friendly Version -- AIRBORNE 06.18.13 **

** AIRBORNE 06.14.13 Aero-TV-- CLICK HERE! ** HD iPad-Friendly Version -- AIRBORNE 06.14.13**

** AIRBORNE 04.01.13 SPECIAL EDITION of Aero-TV-- CLICK HERE! ** HD iPad-Friendly Version -- AIRBORNE 04.01.13 SPECIAL EDITION **

Thu, Oct 07, 2004

FAA: Airport Firefighting Standards Inadequate

Rules Poor Response In 1996 Fire Cost A Dozen Lives

Far from helping protect passengers and flight crews in the event of an emergency, the FAA's rules governing on-airport firefighters and their equipment are inadequate and, in at least one case, led to the deaths of 12 people aboard a flight that caught fire while on the ground.

That's the word in an email from the Airport Rescue and Firefighting Requirements Working Group, obtained by a reporter with USA Today. The panel was set to make its findings public on Wednesday. The group, created by the FAA and comprised of firefighters, airport executives and union leaders, was originally tasked with making recommendations for improving firefighting on the field. Their findings carry no legal weight, according to USA Today, but they do have the collective ear of the FAA.

Firefighting safety and effectiveness have long been scrutinized in NTSB accident reports. In 1996, the safety board cited poor fire response as a factor in a fire aboard a United Express aircraft in Quincy (IL) that killed 12 people. Three years later, the NTSB also found deficiencies in the firefighter response to an accident involving an American Airlines MD-82 that landed extremely hard in a thunderstorm.

Among the recommendations reportedly to be announced Wednesday by the Airport Rescue and Firefighting Requirements Working Group were:

Stricter regulations on the number of airport fire trucks and the amount of foam they carry

Amending firefighters' missions to include actually rescuing passengers from a burning aircraft. Right now, the rules say firefighters must merely clear a path for evacuating passengers.

Requiring airports to conduct studies on the number of firefighters actually needed on the field.

FMI: www.faa.gov

Advertisement

More News

Lufthansa Firms Up Order For 100 A320 Family Aircraft

German Airline The Largest Airbus Customer And Operator In Europe The Lufthansa Group has firmed up a previous Supervisory Board decision from March this year and signed for 100 A3>[...]

Airborne 06.18.13: Reno Race Shakeup, A350 XWB First Flight, Great Lakes Flies!

Also: Beechcraft Not Happy With GAO, More Damage to GA From FAA, Cessna 172 SAIB, An Inspirational Leap The inability to reach agreement over a number of unsettled restrictions, in>[...]

FAA Requires Operation Migration Pilots To Hold Private Licenses

New Aircraft To Be Purchased With Support From Donors New airplanes will lead endangered whooping cranes from their summer range to Florida for the winter in coming years, and the >[...]

ANN's Daily Aero-Linx (06.18.13)

International Federation of Air Traffic Controllers IFATCA is a worldwide organization representing more than fifty thousand air traffic controllers in 134 countries.>[...]

ANN's Daily Aero-Term (06.18.13): One-Hundred-Hour Inspection

A complete inspection that is required for all aircraft operated for hire every 100 hours.>[...]

blog comments powered by Disqus



Advertisement

Advertisement

Podcasts

Advertisement

© 2007 - 2013 Web Development & Design by Pauli Systems, LC