Chilling Account of
Near-Miss
Close Call of Military Plane,
American Airlines Jet Highlights Air Traffic Lapses
By ANDY PASZTOR
(WSJ) Federal investigators
released alarming details about controller errors that nearly caused a midair
collision last year between a heavily loaded American Airlines jet and a
military cargo plane off the East Coast, highlighting problems at New York's
premier traffic-control facility.
A report by the National
Transportation Safety Board disclosed mistakes and miscommunications by
air-traffic controllers, ending with the two big planes speeding on converging
courses in the dark off the coast of New York. The jets, both at 22,000 feet,
barreled directly toward each other for at least a minute without pilots seeing
the other aircraft or realizing the extent of the danger.
At one point, controllers watched helplessly as alarms sounded in the cockpit of the Boeing 777, which had more than 250 people aboard, after a distracted controller lost track of the passenger plane while giving directions to another jet, according to the NTSB report, released last week.
The cargo plane's wing tip passed
about 2,000 feet to the left of the passenger jet-a distance of just 10 times
the width of the Boeing 777. The planes normally should have been spaced at
least 1,000 feet apart vertically and several miles laterally.
A catastrophe was averted,
according to the report, when onboard collision-avoidance systems prompted the
American Airlines crew to make three separate evasive maneuvers in a matter of
seconds.
Safety experts consider the
January 2011 incident significantly more serious than many other midair close
calls that recently received public attention, including an incident last week
that put three commuter planes too close to each other near Washington's Ronald
Reagan National Airport.
The incident is particularly
worrisome, said government and industry experts, because the lapses occurred at
what is regarded as one of the Federal Aviation Administration's premier traffic
control facilities, staffed by some of the most experienced controllers. The New
York-area center guides planes through arguably the country's most complex and
busiest airspace.
The incident follows about a dozen scary midair close calls investigated by the safety board over the past two years. They included a US Airways jet with 138 people aboard that missed a Boeing 747 cargo jet by 100 feet vertically and one-third of a mile horizontally over Anchorage; and a packed United Airlines 777 taking off from San Francisco International Airport whose safety zone suddenly was penetrated by a single-engine propeller plane.
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