Army orders aviation stand down in wake of latest
deadly helicopter crash
By
WYATT OLSON
STARS AND STRIPES • April
28, 2023
U.S. Army AH-64 Apache attack
helicopters assigned to the 1st Battalion, 25th Aviation Regiment fly over an
Alaskan mountain range near Fort Wainwright, June 3, 2019. (Cameron
Roxberry/U.S. Army)
The Army’s
highest-ranking officer on Friday ordered a service-wide aviation stand down
following a pair of helicopter crashes over the past month that took the lives
of 12 soldiers.
The order by Army
Chief of Staff James McConville grounds all Army aviators until they complete
required training, the service said in a news release Friday.
Aviators
participating in “critical missions,” however, will continue flying during the
stand down, the Army said.
Active-duty units
are required to complete the 24-hour stand down between Monday and Friday,
according to the release.
Army National
Guard and Reserve will have until May 31 to coincide with their training schedules,
the Army said.
The stand down was
ordered in the aftermath of a crash Thursday near the town of Healy, Alaska.
Three soldiers were killed and another injured when two AH-64 Apache helicopters collided
in midair and crashed while returning from a training mission.
The victims of the
crash were Chief Warrant Officer 3 Christopher Robert Eramo, 39, of Oneonta,
N.Y.; Chief Warrant Officer 2 Kyle McKenna, 28, of Colorado Springs, Colo.; and
Warrant Officer 1 Stewart Duane Wayment, 32, of North Logan, Utah. The crash’s
cause is being investigated.
On March 29,
two Army Black Hawk helicopters crashed during
a training flight near Fort Campbell, Ky., that took the lives of nine
soldiers.
The 101st Airborne
Division aircraft collided in midair during a nighttime flight and went down in
a field in Kentucky, Army investigators said in a preliminary report.
“The safety of our
aviators is our top priority, and this stand down is an important step to make
certain we are doing everything possible to prevent accidents and protect our
personnel,” McConville said in the news release.
McConville is a
senior Army aviator and is qualified to pilot numerous aircraft.
“During this stand
down, we will focus on safety and training protocols to ensure our pilots and
crews have the knowledge, training and awareness to safely complete their
assigned mission,” he said.
The Army will
review its risk approval and risk management processes as part of the stand
down. It will also reevaluate the Army’s aviation maintenance training program,
aircrew training standards and management and supervisory responsibilities, the
Army said.
“Army aviation
units will resume normal operations following the stand down, after any
corrective actions are taken on issues identified in safety or training,” the
release said.
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