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- <text id=94TT1281>
- <title>
- Sep. 19, 1994: Disasters:Ripped from the Sky
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 19, 1994 So Young to Kill, So Young to Die
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DISASTERS, Page 38
- Ripped from the Sky
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Despite Flight 427's crash, air travel safety has been steadily
- improving
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Jerry Hannifin/Washington and John Moody/New York
- </p>
- <p> It was ideal flying weather. The twilight skies were clear,
- with only a few small clouds, and winds were a negligible 7
- m.p.h. USAir Flight 427 was nearing Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
- after an uneventful flight from O'Hare Airport in Chicago. Right
- around 7 p.m. the pilot radioed approach control at Pittsburgh
- International Airport, set in heavily wooded, lightly populated
- hills 12 miles northwest of the Golden Triangle, that he was
- "in range," about to ask for landing clearance.
- </p>
- <p> What happened next came so swiftly that people watching from
- the ground disagreed on the exact sequence. But as best their
- stories could be pieced together, the Boeing 737-300's two jet
- engines spooled down, and smoke trailed from the one on the
- left wing. The plane rolled belly-up, banked and fell nose first,
- almost vertically, through 6,000 ft. of sky. Witnesses could
- not agree whether it exploded before it plowed into a hillside
- or on impact.
- </p>
- <p> But explode it did, with such hellish force as to eliminate
- almost immediately all hope that any of the 132 people aboard--five crew, 127 passengers--could have lived. Except for
- the tail, USAir 427 shattered into so many pieces that the twisted
- and burned shards of metal were unrecognizable as airplane wreckage.
- </p>
- <p> The human remains horrified and sickened even experienced rescue
- workers. For the most part they found not bodies, just pieces
- of bodies. Lew Napolitan, who lives close by and ran to the
- scene, could not forget the sight of a thighbone covered with
- burned flesh. Monty Winchester, a member of the fire department
- in nearby South Heights, "came in this ((Friday)) morning after
- picking up parts of bodies all night, and he was pretty sick,"
- said his friend Daniel Godich. "He had to take one guy out of
- a tree in pieces, and that was bad enough, but when he came
- across the lifeless body of a baby, he came home for a while
- to rest."
- </p>
- <p> Such ghastly scenes raise again questions the U.S. had almost
- forgotten: Can air travel maintain its recent glowing safety
- record? Or are financially troubled airlines--USAir in particular--skimping dangerously on maintenance and crew training to
- cut losses? It is difficult to answer without some idea of what
- caused the crash of USAir 427, and there were few early clues.
- Though the black box of voice recordings from the crew was recovered,
- it revealed only uninformative cries of "Oh, God" and "Oh, s***"
- and the words "traffic emergency" followed by a scream. "We're
- all very much at a loss to explain this accident," said U.S.
- Transportation Secretary Federico Pena, who hurried to the scene.
- </p>
- <p> On the broader safety question, the figures are reassuring.
- Airline fatalities in the U.S., in proportion to miles flown,
- have been dropping for decades and lately have stabilized at
- levels so low that they are difficult even to express as a statistical
- risk. The National Transportation Safety Board counts 31 fatalities
- suffered by passengers aboard major U.S. carriers during 1992,
- which works out to 0.0006 deaths per million aircraft miles
- flown. Last year that number fell close to an irreducible minimum.
- As far as major U.S. airlines were concerned, there were no
- fatalities at all in the air, only one in a ground accident.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the generally excellent U.S. safety record, some critics
- have long been worried about the effects of the heavy losses
- suffered by many major carriers in the era of chaotic price
- wars, mergers and bankruptcies that opened with fare and route
- deregulation in 1978. Their fear is that more carriers will
- cut corners on safety in order to save money, for which the
- now defunct Eastern Airlines was indicted in 1990. USAir is
- an obvious target for suspicion. It has lost money every year
- since 1989--$393 million last year, $183 million in the first
- half of 1994. And it has now suffered two fatal crashes in three
- months and five in just under five years. Total killed: 232.
- </p>
- <p> USAir executives strongly deny that they are scanting safety.
- Though the line has announced a huge cost-cutting program and
- laid off 600 cargo handlers, most of its 8,300 maintenance people
- and 5,200 pilots have no-cut contracts and have to be kept.
- So why the crashes? A run of bad luck, says David Shipley, assistant
- vice president for public relations. "I hate like hell to say
- it's just chance, because that doesn't sell with the public,
- but that's what it is." In fact, there does not seem to be much
- of a common thread to the USAir disasters, and in at least one
- the line was absolved of responsibility; a 1991 collision between
- a USAir jet and a commuter plane on a Los Angeles runway that
- killed 34 people was blamed on air-traffic control. The International
- Airline Passengers Association classes USAir as one of five
- lines deserving a B, or "very good," rating for safety. (Five
- other lines get an honor roll A.)
- </p>
- <p> Outsiders do raise one question about USAir that leads into
- a more general complaint about federal safety regulation. A
- safety expert for one of the biggest aircraft makers says that
- pilot training at USAir is not consistent, because the airline
- has grown by mergers that "sucked up these feeder airlines,
- like Piedmont and Pacific Southwest and others, each with a
- lot of pilots and systems that are different." More broadly,
- pilots themselves complain that the Federal Aviation Administration
- lets commuter airlines and air-taxi services get away with lower
- safety standards. In February testimony to Congress, Randall
- Babbitt, president of the International Air Line Pilots Association,
- declared that "the American public would be outraged if we prescribed
- two different sets of operating rules and safety equipment for
- automobiles, with the highest standards being reserved for big
- luxury sedans and a lesser standard imposed on compact cars,
- but that is exactly what we have in the airline industry."
- </p>
- <p> Critics suggest other ways in which the safety record, good
- as it is, could be made better. The FAA, they say, should shift
- its focus from investigating what caused past crashes to identifying
- problems that could contribute to preventing future accidents.
- Crashes, they say, are the result of many factors in combination,
- some of which begin to show up well before they help cause a
- fatal accident. One possibility is that electronic pulses from
- laptop computers, compact-disc players and the like used by
- passengers can interfere with an aircraft's electronic devices.
- There is no conclusive evidence that they do, but American Airlines
- and all other major carriers impose restrictions during takeoffs
- and landings, when 70% or more of accidents occur, just to be
- safe.
- </p>
- <p> Geraldine Frankoski, director of the Aviation Consumer Action
- Program, points out what she considers to be a built-in conflict
- of interest at the FAA that works to the detriment of safety.
- By law, she notes, the FAA is responsible for fostering and
- promoting civil aviation, a mandate that includes safeguarding
- the financial health of airlines, "while also administering
- and regulating safety. They can't honestly do both."
- </p>
- <p> Maybe not; perhaps the law should be changed to make the FAA
- stress safety above everything else. Doubtless the airline-safety
- record, good as it is, could be improved in other ways. But
- all such discussions keep coming back to a point conceded by
- some of the sharpest critics: a passenger runs a far greater
- risk of injury or death getting into a car to drive to an airport
- than he or she does boarding a plane once there.
- </p>
- <p>TEN MOST RECENT MAJOR CRASHES
- </p>
- <table>
- <tblhdr><c><c>Airline<c>Circumstances<c>Deaths
- <row><c type=a>9/8/94<c type=a>USAir Boeing 737<c type=a>Crashed on approach to Pittsburgh<c type=i>132
- <row><c>7/2/94<c>USAir DC-9<c>Crashed in thunderstorm near Charlotte-Douglas Int'l in North Carolina<c>37
- <row><c>3/22/93<c>USAir Fokker F-28<c>Crashed on takeoff in snowstorm at LaGuardia in New York<c>27
- <row><c>3/3/91<c>United Boeing 737<c>Crashed near Colorado Springs airport<c>25
- <row><c>2/1/91<c>USAir Boeing 737<c>Collided with commuter plane on runway in Los Angeles<c>34
- <row><c>1/25/90<c>Avianca Boeing 707<c>Crashed on approach to JFK on Long Island after running out of fuel<c>73
- <row><c>9/20/89<c>USAir Boeing 737<c>Skidded off LaGuardia runway into East River<c>2
- <row><c>7/19/89<c>United DC-10<c>Crashed attempting emergency landing at Sioux City, Iowa<c>112
- <row><c>8/31/88<c>Delta Boeing 727<c>Crashed and burned on takeoff at Dallas-Ft. Worth<c>14
- <row><c>12/7/87<c>Pacific Southwest BAe 146 jet<c>Crashed 175 miles northwest of Los Angeles, apparently after former employee invaded cockpit<c>43
- </table>
- <p> Source: National Transportation Safety Board
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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