Wednesday, March 19, 2008

More FAA Inspections With Some Randomization


Federal Aviation Administration inspectors were ordered yesterday (3/18) to review maintenance records at ALL domestic airlines to ensure that carriers have complied with safety orders and other directives. This is an unprecedented move with the same knee jerk reactionary symptoms the United States deals with on daily basis. I would challenge the FAA to stay on top of these things rather than having a country-wide airline records audit to ensure the FAA has not missed anything or that the airlines are trying to pull a fast one.

As you will recall from the news and our Pointniner blog posts, the FAA is under pressure from Congress to tighten oversight stemming from the alleged inspection lapses at Southwest Airlines that led the agency to propose the record fine of $10.2 million on March 6, 2008.

In response, these audits will give the FAA a snapshot of compliance (or non-compliance) with various safety directives issued over the years that require inspections or other maintenance work. At least part of the audit will focus on airlines flying older Boeing 737 models which have been at the center of the controversy over checks for structural cracks caused by metal fatigue. As for the remaining aircraft, FAA inspectors are free to select which directives to review for at each airline. Time to give the airlines the old "random" cavity check.

According to FAA statistics, there are 4,000 airliners of all types flown by domestic passenger airlines, in addition to the 2,800 regional jets flown by regional carriers. Sounds like a great time, don't you wish you were a FAA auditor?

Regulators do not suspect there are inspection oversight problems (not to cause any alarms), but since Southwest got this all started, they are probably better off being safe than sorry.


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