Says Agency Holding Self, Airlines To Different Standards
Following up on an Associated Press report this week -- which
noted the FAA has shifted from precise monitoring of equipment used
for air traffic control purposes, to a trend-based methodology --
the National Air Traffic Controllers Association slammed the agency
for what the union terms its "hypocrisy."

As ANN reported Friday,
proponents of that shift note newer, more advanced equipment breaks
down less often... and evaluating overall performance give FAA
personnel additional time to focus on identified problems. But
NATCA notes the FAA's attitude is still suspect, especially at a
time when hundreds of thousands of air travelers have been
inconvenienced by mass flight cancellations due to the agency's
reaction --- many say overreaction -- to news of lapsed safety
inspection procedures at the nation's airlines.
NATCA states the FAA has relaxed its own requirements for
verifying the operation of equipment, such as radar and instrument
landing systems, by removing the time element. In the FAA’s
own words in its imposed policy notice, N 6000.216, dated 12/07/07:
"The event-based certification policy eliminates the periodic
requirement for systems. ... This notice exempts maintenance
personnel from performing system or subsystem certification as
required by the periodic certification interval published in each
of the maintenance technical handbooks … with Certification
Requirements, published in this notice."
If that sounds eerily similar to the justification critics say
FAA inspectors used in allowing Southwest Airlines to skip past
required fuselage inspections... you're not the only one.
"The engineers of the agency have continued to warn management
officials that removing the time element between checking the
equipment will compromise the safety of the National Airspace
System," said Larry Ihlen, a senior engineer, 30-year veteran FAA
employee and NATCA Alaska local engineers president. "It is amazing
that the agency has descended to the level of arrogance of ignoring
the professional opinions of its own subject matter experts while
telling the flying public that it is making the airlines adhere to
the timelines of air worthiness directives.
"The approach the FAA is taking with its own systems is like
saying that you will drive your car across the country without ever
checking the oil; it worked yesterday, so it will work tomorrow,
unless it quits," Ihlen added. "Unfortunately, when the
agency’s equipments quit, the loss of life is a very real
possibility!"
Ihlen has reason to take such attitudes personally. The FAA
currently has tentative plans to relocate 85 percent of all
engineers from Alaska to another part of the country, claiming
increased efficiency. Over the past two years, the FAA has allowed
the engineering workforce in Alaska to be cut in half, according to
NATCA, while it works to consolidate engineers to locations in
Atlanta, Dallas and Seattle.
"In the history of the FAA," Ihlen said, "either a change has
been made to the organization or a change has been made to the
operation of the NAS. This is the first time that both changes are
being attempted at the same time. If the American public truly
understood how the FAA is playing the game of find the pea under
the shell, they would be outraged.
"The only stop to this hemorrhage of expertise and compromising
of safety will be immediate and direct Congressional action."