NTSB Report on 2013 UPS Cargo Plane Crash to Focus on Pilot
Errors
National Transportation Safety Board Likely
to Stop Short of Citing Crew Fatigue as Contributing
Factor
By ANDY PASZTOR
An investigator looks through the debris
of a UPS cargo plane in August 2013 after it crashed in Alabama. Hal
Yeager/Associated Press
Federal investigators on Tuesday
are expected to officially conclude that pilot mistakes and deviations from
company safety rules caused the crash of a United Parcel Service Inc. UPS -0.45%
cargo plane in Alabama last year, according to people familiar with the
probe.
But the National Transportation Safety Board's final report, these
people said, likely will stop short of citing crew fatigue as a contributing
factor in the accident that killed both pilots. The safety board previously
disclosed the sequence of events as the widebody Airbus A300 jet plowed into a
hill in August 2013 during its final approach to Birmingham.
At a hearing
in February, investigators disclosed that the cockpit crew exceeded the maximum
vertical descent rate for an appropriate approach, failed to verbalize critical
altitude changes and violated basic safeguards by continuing the final phase of
a descent using limited navigation aids even though the runway lights weren't
visible.
The accident has been a flash point for debates over cargo pilot
fatigue. According to reports, interview transcripts and other data previously
released by the board, the plane's crew had complained about chronic fatigue in
the days and hours leading up to the fiery accident. The captain told one fellow
pilot that the string of late-night and early-morning shifts was "killing" him,
according to investigators.
During an early portion of the accident
flight, the cockpit voice recorder captured the co-pilot telling the captain
that "when my alarm went off" following a rest break during the duty period, she
was upset. "I mean, I'm thinking, 'I'm so tired,'" she recalled according to the
transcript.
A safety board spokeswoman declined to comment.
The
board still could change course at the last minute. But as of late Monday,
according to one person familiar with the probe, only one of the NTSB's four
members was inclined to support fatigue as a contributing factor.
The
safety board hasn't been able to definitively determine how long each of the
pilots slept during a predawn layover before the flight. Nevertheless, pilot
union leaders and outside safety experts have urged the board to emphasize
fatigue as part of its formal findings.
UPS has said that the flight-time
and rest schedules of the crew complied with Federal Aviation Administration
rest rules that apply to pilots flying for passenger carriers. The agency
mandates less-stringent fatigue prevention rules for cargo pilots.
The
February hearing also underscored lax discipline and apparent confusion in the
cockpit during roughly the final two minutes of the early-morning approach.
Safety experts from UPS and the plane's manufacturer testified that the crew
improperly used the flight-management computer to try to set up a safe approach
path. When that didn't work, they said, the captain violated UPS rules by
abruptly switching to a different type of approach and then commanding the
autopilot to maintain an excessively steep descent.
UPS officials
testified that both of those events should have prompted pilots to initiate an
immediate climb away from the airport. Instead, the crew continued the approach
below the safe altitude for making such a decision.
Christopher Hart, the
safety board's acting chairman, in August took the unusual step of expelling
both company and pilot union representatives from the investigation, citing
unauthorized public comments about fatigue-related aspects of the probe.
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