Peters Announces National Team To Review Air Carrier
Policies
Faced
with mounting criticism of FAA inspection policies, on Friday US
Secretary of Transportation Mary E. Peters announced a series of
measures intended to improve the agency's safety inspection
program, and minimize travel disruptions caused when airlines
abruptly ground aircraft. Peters also tasked a newly created
independent review team with crafting recommendations to improve
the current aviation safety system.
"The mark of an effective safety system is the ability to
constantly improve and adapt," said Peters. "These steps will help
make inspectors and managers more accountable, keep airlines
focused on safety and minimize disruptions for travelers."
Peters said the FAA would begin implementing a new program to
track the inspections being conducted by field offices that will
alert key personnel whenever a safety inspection is overdue. She
added that the agency would begin requiring senior level officials
within the agency’s field offices to be accountable for
accepting voluntary safety disclosures from airlines and to revise
ethics rules to require a cooling-off period before FAA inspectors
can work for an airline they used to oversee or interact while at
the agency.
In addition, she announced that the FAA is establishing a new
National Safety Inspection Review team. This new team will be
deployed to air carriers to conduct focused and comprehensive
safety reviews. She added that the team’s deployments would
be based on where the safety data indicates problems are most
likely to occur.
The Secretary said she was asking both the FAA and American
Airlines for assessments, within 14 days, of what happened, why it
happened and what could have been done differently. She added that
"their reports will go a long way in explaining why so many
aircraft had to be grounded and so many travelers had to be
inconvenienced."
Peters also announced she has tasked the Department’s
Office of Aviation Safety Enforcement in the Office of General
Counsel to gauge whether airlines have adequate plans in place to
accommodate passengers should a carrier have to abruptly ground its
aircraft.
Saying that "we must do more, though, than respond to the
lessons of the past few weeks," the Secretary announced that she
has created an outside team of aviation and safety experts to
evaluate and craft recommendations to improve the FAA’s
implementation of the aviation safety system and its culture of
safety.
The Secretary said the FAA’s current approach to safety
oversight was both sound and delivering decisive results. She added
though that the last few weeks had made it clear that "a good
system can always be made better." So she has tasked the team with
developing recommendations within 120 days on how the agency can do
an even better job safeguarding the skies.
The members of the outside team are:
- J. Randolph Babbitt served as the President and CEO of the Air
Line Pilots Association and has been active with the organization
since 1981. He is currently a partner with Oliver Wyman, a
consulting firm providing specialized aviation and labor consulting
services.
- William O. McCabe served as former Director of Aviation DuPont
and Member of Board of Governors at the Flight Safety Foundation.
He has chaired the Aerospace Industries Association of
America’s Civil Aviation Council and is a member of the AIA
Board of Governors. He also is on the Safety Committee of the
National Business Aviation Association and serves on the Board of
Directors of the Delaware Aerospace Education Foundation.
- Malcolm K. Sparrow is Professor of the Practice of Public
Management at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and Faculty
Chair of the Executive Program on Strategic Management of
Regulatory and Enforcement Agencies. He served 10 years with the
British Police Service, rising to the rank of Detective Chief
Inspector.
- Ambassador Edward W. Stimpson was appointed by President
Clinton in July 1999 as the Representative of the United States of
America on the Council of the International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO). For 25 years, Mr. Stimpson was President of
the General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA), representing
more than 50 companies involved in the manufacture of aircraft and
component parts.
- Hon. Carl W. Vogt was appointed by President Bush in 1992 as a
Member and as Chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.
In 1996, FAA Administrator David Hinson appointed Mr. Vogt as a
member of the FAA Ninety Day Safety Review Committee. Also in 1996,
Mr. Vogt was appointed by President Clinton as a member of the
White House Commission on Aviation Safety and Security.

"Taken together, these new measures will improve aviation
safety, answer tough questions and put travelers at ease," said
Peters. "They will build on the historic accomplishments of this
agency and the record commitment to safety that everyone involved
in commercial aviation in this country shares."