FAA: Air ambulances must improve safety
Air ambulances must take more safety precautions before taking
off in bad weather and upgrade their flight equipment under improved safety
rules issued by the Federal Aviation Administration.
The federal agency
issued the rules in the wake of numerous air ambulance crashes in recent years,
including two in Tennessee and one in Kentucky. A Memphis-based air ambulance
crashed in March 2010, killing the pilot and two nurses, when the pilot tried to
outrun a storm. The cause of the crash of another Memphis-based air ambulance
that killed three people in October 2013 is still under investigation. The
Kentucky crash occurred in June 2013 during foggy weather in the parking lot of
an elementary school outside Manchester, killing three crew
members.
Within a year, all pilots will have to use enhanced safety
procedures for flying in bad weather, at night and when landing in remote areas.
Within three years, all air ambulances must upgrade their equipment.
The
bad weather rule was originally scheduled to take effect this month, but on
Thursday the FAA issued a notice that those safety procedures would be delayed
until April 22, 2015, according to the Association of Air Medical Services,
which had requested the extension.
"This is a landmark rule for
helicopter safety," U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said in a press
release. "These improvements will better prepare pilots and better equip
helicopters, ensuring a higher level of safety for passengers and
crew."
The federal agency said the new rules "could have mitigated" 62
accidents that killed 125 people between 1991 and 2010.
Officials with
Vanderbilt LifeFlight welcomed the rules. The air ambulance service has made
more than 40,000 flights over 30 years without an accident. It went on record in
support of the new rules.
"LifeFlight applauds the move toward stronger
federal regulatory oversight," said Jeanne Yeatman, administrative director of
emergency services for Vanderbilt. "We strongly support anything that will
enhance and promote safety."
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