Citing costs, panel advises rolling back post-3407 air safety measure
The requirement that all commercial pilots obtain a license based on 1,500 hours of flight experience "imposes costs that exceed benefits," the
The panel's recommendation poses a significant threat to one of the most important provisions of the aviation safety law that the Families of Continental Flight 3407 pushed toward passage seven years ago.
A handful of members of the advisory panel pushed hard against the change, including
"We feel this would introduce serious safety risks into the industry," Balentine said.
But the big airlines' representative on the panel,
"I think it's offensive to associate any changes proposed here with anything other than our support for full flight safety," said Ireland, managing director for engineering and maintenance at Airlines for America, an industry group.
The airlines -- especially the smaller carriers represented by the
They've tried -- to no avail, so far -- to get
This year, under an executive order by
The result: a 154-page report filled with dozens of uncontroversial recommendations on practically every element of commercial aviation -- and a few, vaguely worded provisions that appear to take aim at the 1,500-hour experience requirement for new pilots.
Those changes were the only ones to spark any debate at Thursday's meeting.
Most important is a proposal to eliminate the requirement that pilots have an air transport certificate, which in most cases requires them to have 1,500 hours of flight time. Another suggests modifications in a rule that prevents co-pilots from being promoted to pilots until they get 1,000 hours of flight time on a commercial airline. Another suggests pilots might be able to get alternative training, instead of the currently required flight hours.
She said the proposal asks the
"This doesn't weaken the pilot qualification rules, it expands the element of the rule producing the safest and most proficient pilots," said Black, who did not attend Thursday's meeting. "Far from rolling back safety, this is one of the most important things we can do right now to advance it."
At the meeting,
Dunham said the absence of recent crashes proves the law shouldn't be changed.
"It's the best aviation safety legislation in decades," said Dunham, who, unlike the Flight 3407 activists, serves on the advisory panel. "And everyone in
Lawmakers who represent
"Any rollback of the 1,500 hour rule in future
Sen.
Rep.
"I know that the rest of the delegation and I are ready to fight to make sure pilot training standards aren't watered down," Collins said.
That's just what Kuwik, the Flight 3407 families' representative, wanted to hear.
"We need to stay vocal" to make sure that the recommendation goes no further, said Kuwik, who did not attend Thursday's meeting. "Hopefully this will be seen as an industry-driven thing and not the
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