NTSB Chairman Calls Notams 'Garbage'
NTSB chairman Robert Sumwalt called the Notam system
in the U.S. "messed up" this week during a hearing on the July 7, 2017 incident
at San Francisco International Airport (SFO) in which an Air Canada Airbus A320
nearly landed on a crowded taxiway. The crew mistook the taxiway as their
cleared runway-28R-because Runway 28L was closed. The pilots failed to catch
that note on page eight of the 27-page list the SFO Notams.
After
acknowledging the "crew didn't comprehend the Notams," Sumwalt then read a
verbose and complicated entry that limited a portion of a taxiway to aircraft
with a wingspan of 214 feet or less. "Why is this even on there?" he asked.
"That's what Notams are: they're a bunch of garbage that no one pays any
attention to," adding that they're often written in a language that only
computer programmers would understand.
Sumwalt also relayed a recent
experience he had flying the jumpseat into North Carolina's Charlotte/Douglas
International Airport, saying, "There were pages and pages and pages of Notams,
including one for birds in the vicinity of the airport...when are there not
birds in the vicinity of an airport?"
Not surprisingly, one of the NTSB's
six safety recommendations stemming from this incident is a "more effective
presentation of flight operations information to optimize pilot review and
retention of relevant information."
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