Do you remember the SAS MD80 accident at Gottøra in 1991? The aircraft broke into two parts with one seriously injured and only minor injuries to rthe est of the passengers and crew. When the rescue personell arrived to remove luggage, they found, to their amazement, empty overhead bins.
British Airways jet fire: Why did some risk lives to grab carry-ons
before fleeing?
In this photo taken from the view of a plane
window, smoke billows out from a plane that caught fire at McCarren
International Airport, Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2015, in Las Vegas. An engine on the
British Airways plane caught fire before takeoff, forcing passengers to escape
on emergency slides. (Eric Hays via AP)
LOS ANGELES - Passengers on
the British Airways jet whose engine caught fire just before takeoff in Las
Vegas escaped with their lives - and some with their carry-ons, as
well.
While flight crews tell people to leave belongings behind in an
evacuation, pilots say they seem increasingly inclined to grab whatever they
brought on board. And sometimes even a selfie or two.
"We're always
shaking our head," said Chris Manno, a veteran pilot with a major US airline who
took to social media Wednesday to slam those pictured on the Vegas tarmac with
bulky cabin bags. "It doesn't matter what you say, people are going to do what
they do."
The engine on the London-bound Boeing 777-200 caught fire
Tuesday as the plane was gathering speed. Though the evacuation was swift,
officials said Wednesday that 27 of the 170 passengers or crew on board required
hospital treatment for cuts, bruises or other minor injuries, mostly from the
evacuation slides.
"A deadly slalom" is how pilot Patrick Smith described
baggage on an emergency slide in a blog post. Bags also could tear the
inflatable slides, block exits on board and cause other injuries in the chaos of
an evacuation.
The chief of the Association of Flight Attendants union,
which does not represent the British Airways crew, said she expects federal
investigators will find that baggage slowed down the evacuation and caused some
of the injuries.
Manno noted that passengers also evacuated with belongings
when a Delta Air Lines jet nearly skidded off the runway at New York's LaGuardia
Airport in March and an Asiana Airlines jet caught fire after a hard landing in
San Francisco in 2013.
"We're seeing this more and more," said John
Goglia, an aviation safety expert and former member of the National
Transportation Safety Board.
Goglia believes that because air safety
advances have made accidents far more survivable and injuries often less severe,
more people can - and do - bring bags as they evacuate.
Passenger Karen
Bravo, 60, of Las Vegas, said she happened to have her purse and some other
passengers further back in coach had time to grab their carry-on luggage while
waiting to evacuate.
"It would be like if your whole house was on fire
and you had to go out the door," she said.
Guidance posted online by the Federal Aviation Administration advises
passengers to leave bags on board during an evacuation - but does not mandate
it. Airline crews may make that announcement during preflight safety
demonstrations, and during an emergency, would typically tell people to leave
bags behind. Passengers are required by law to follow all crew instructions, FAA
spokesman Ian Gregor said.
"Flight attendants are the first line of
defense in emergencies," he said, declining to address whether the agency
believed emergency-evacuations-with-bags were an increasing problem that merited
any regulatory action or public education campaign.
Airlines vary in
whether their preflight briefings tell passengers to abandon belongings in an
evacuation, according to Stephen Schembs, the flight attendant union's
government affairs director.
With the advent of checked bag fees, many
passengers opt to bring important items on board rather than check them. The
union said for years it has advocated fewer passenger items in the cabin and for
full-scale evacuation demonstrations when an aircraft is redesigned, especially
if passenger capacity is increased. The latter is to ensure that the plane can
still evacuate safely within 90 seconds, as required by the FAA.
Within
five short minutes, the passengers on the British Airways flight were evacuated
and the flames were out.
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