|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
American Airlines cancels hundreds more flights
By Naomi Spencer
12 April 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
On Friday American Airlines, the largest commercial air carrier
in the US, canceled some 600 flights as wiring inspections continue
on the companys fleet of decades-old MD-80 planes. So far
this week over 3,000 flights have been canceled, stranding well
over a quarter of a million people at airports. The inspections
are expected to continue through at least Saturday night.
The chaos is the result of a hastily issued directive by the
Federal Aviation Administration to enforce compliance with long-standing
airworthiness standards. The directive came in the midst of a
scandal over collusion between the FAA and Southwest Airlines
to evade vital safety inspections.
American Airlines grounded its fleet of 300 MD-80s last month
to conduct overdue inspections of wiring. However, a subsequent
FAA review of the company-inspected planes turned up problems
with wiring and shielding in 15 of 19 crafts.
On April 9, American Airlines vice president Dan Garton told
reporters during a press conference that the planes had failed
FAA review because the companys mechanics took what
I would call certain latitudes in accomplishing [the directive].
The airline has also strenuously sought to portray the wiring
matter as one of technical compliance rather than safety. Yet
FAA spokesperson Les Dorr explained to reporters Thursday, The
safety issue is that if the wires in the bundle were to rub against
each other, or against the aircraft, they could be worn to the
point where a spark could occur, Dorr said. That could
cause a fire, and in a worst-case scenario, it could cause a fuel
explosion.
The wiring concern was first raised by Boeing, the manufacturer
of the MD-80s, in 2003, and the relevant airworthiness directive
was issued shortly afterward. Companies were expected to comply
within 18 months of the directives issuance.
The re-inspections and repairsundertaken by American
on an emergency, last-minute basis, a full five years after the
directive was issuedunderscore the breakdown of federal
oversight. In particular, even while striking a more stringent
pose toward airline safety, the FAA continues to rely on company
inspections. Moreover, no penalties have been proposed against
American Airlines for its violation of airworthiness directives.
On April 10, the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation
Committee heard testimony from officials at the FAA and the Department
of Transportation on the relations between the regulatory agency
and the airline industry. The Senate hearing follows last weeks
House investigative hearings into the safety lapses at Southwest
that allowed dozens of uninspected planes, many with dangerous
structural damage, to fly for years.
DOT Inspector General Calvin Scovel delivered some of the more
critical testimony Thursday, stating that the FAA relies
too heavily on self-disclosures and promotes a pattern of excessive
leniency at the expense of effective oversight and appropriate
enforcement.
Scovel said that the FAAs Irving, Texas field office,
which oversees Southwest, had an overly collaborative relationship
with the air carrier that allowed repeated self-disclosures of
AD [airworthiness directives] violations through FAAs partnership
program. This arrangement allowed the airline to repeatedly
self-disclose AD violations without ensuring that SWA had developed
a comprehensive solution for reported safety problems, while
at the same time avoiding any penalties whatsoever.
Scovel also noted that Southwest had been allowed to evade
FAA planned inspections for several years, but an industry-wide
review of inspection lapses was not undertaken until after agency
whistle-blower complaints were made public. The FAA had not reviewed
Southwests compliance record since 1999, Scovel testified.
In March 2007, Scovel said, 21 key inspections had not
been completed in at least five years. As of March 25, 2008, FAA
still had not completed five of these required inspections; in
some cases inspections had not been completed in nearly eight
years. In 2005, the inspector generals office found
that FAA inspectors did not complete 26 percent of planned inspections.
His criticisms notwithstanding, the inspector general made
no recommendations that would substantially strengthen the authority
of the FAA, let alone alter the present collaborative
relationship of the agency to airlines, which the FAA refers to
as its customers.
Instead, Scovel essentially recommended programs the FAA has
already pledged to implement. Above all, he stressed implementing
a process for second level supervisory review of self-disclosures
before they are accepted and closedacceptance should not
rest solely with one inspector.
Scovel also recommended periodically rotating supervisory
inspectors, requiring a cooling-off period between
working for the FAA and accepting a position with an air carrier,
and establishing a review team to track field office inspections.
As with testimony from agency officials in previous congressional
appearances, the FAAs associate administrator for safety,
Nicholas Sabatini, maintained that the problems at Southwest were
a fluke, and pointed to the recent string of audits including
those affecting American Airlines as proof that the airline industry
was safer than ever. Sabatini insisted to the Senate that the
FAAs recent directives found 99 percent compliance
in the industry. He added, but its the other 1 percent
that keeps me up at night.
See Also:
US airline chaos: thousands of flights
canceled for inspections
[10 April 2008]
US: Hundreds of aging American
Airlines planes grounded for inspection
[27 March 2008]
The JetBlue fiasco:
Private profit vs. the public interest
[2 March 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |