Promises $66 Million On More Firefighting Aircraft
A top official at the Department of Agriculture said Wednesday
"no prudent person" would have continued to fly aging firefighting
tankers after the government decided there was no way to guarantee
that they're airworthy.
Agriculture Undersecretary Mark Rey told the Missoulian
newspaper in Montana that the decision to ground 33 tankers, some
of them more than six decades old, came in the wake of the NTSB's
report on a pair of C130 crashes in 2002. And Rey hinted that the
US Forest Service could have gone much further.
"If we had decided to be even more risk aversive, we could have
stood down everything," he told reporters. "But there are
differences between these aircraft. The single-engine air tankers,
for example, have civil missions comparable to their firefighting
mission. When they're not fighting fire, most of them are crop
dusters.
"After the NTSB report was issued, we were faced with a
straightforward, albeit not very simple, question," Rey said.
"Would any prudent person continue to fly the large air tankers,
given the availability of alternative aircraft that are
demonstrably safer to operate?"
The answer, he said, was "no."
Still, Rey admitted that the blanket rule might not be fair to
all tanker operators, some of which are now up to their necks in
financial hot water as a result of the grounding decision. Many of
them deserve a chance "to show why their planes are different," he
said.
Wednesday, the FAA sent operators of the grounded aircraft a
laundry list of things aircraft owners can do to prove their planes
are still airworthy.
"We are motivated to review these planes and, if possible, to
bring them back," Rey said. "If we weren't so motivated, we
wouldn't be going through this exercise with the FAA." But Rey
warned that "being motivated and being realistic are different. It
is unlikely that all the air tankers will come back, and it may be
unlikely that the majority will come back."
In the meantime, hoping to quell the rising concerns of
lawmakers representing western states at the onset of what's
predicted to be a chaotic fire season, Rey promised more help is on
the way. The government is putting another 100 aircraft on the fire
lines -- including helicopters, single-engine retardant aircraft
and two Canadian CL215s -- to replace the grounded air tankers.
That will cost Washington an extra $66 million this year alone.