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FAA to AA: Grounded! track this thread

Started by Imperator; Last updated by P Spain | View history

FAA to AA: Grounded!

"I run the company,so if there's any blame to be had, it is my fault, and I take full responsibility for this." -AA CEO Gerard Arpey

American Airlines has spent much of the last two weeks grounding, inspecting, grounding, inspecting and so on its predominantly MD-80 aircraft fleet. Is it a tug of war between a red-facedd FAA who was too lenient in the past and an Airline with an otherwise exemplary effort?. Or is it the FAA stepping into to do a job that the airline had failed to do right?

Stories

15 Stories

  • August 2008
    • Smell of Smoke Forces Emergency LA Landing

      Smell of Smoke Forces Emergency LA Landing

      (Newser) - An American Airlines flight made an emergency return to Los Angeles today after crew members smelled smoke in the cockpit, CNN reports. The 188 Honolulu-bound passengers used inflatable chutes to exit the plane, with no injuries reported among passengers or crew. A spokesman for the airline said the pilot requested the landing as a precaution. More »

  • May 2008
    • FAA Questions American's Lightning Safety

      FAA Questions American's Lightning Safety

      (Newser) - The FAA is questioning American Airlines' new policy on lightning inspections, and its opener is: Why doesn’t American do them anymore? American recently forbade its mechanics from doing extensive lightning damage checks unless pilots suspected a strike, a move designed to reduce delays and cancellations. Big airlines are typically allowed to tweak safety standards, reports the Wall Street Journal. More »

    • American Airlines Report Roasts FAA

      American Airlines Report Roasts FAA

      (Newser) - American Airlines blames the FAA for its recent grounding of thousands of flights, the Wall Street Journal reports. The airline is set to deliver a report today that says 3,300 flights were canceled because FAA headquarters reversed a "handshake deal" the airline had with regional aviation officials that was supposed to allow the company to comply with changes in FCC wiring standards on its MD-80 aircraft without cancellations. More »

  • April 2008
    • Airline Blames Feds for Grounded Planes

      Airline Blames Feds for Grounded Planes

      (Newser) - American Airlines is tired of taking the heat for 2,000 flight cancellations that travelers endured last week, the New York Times reports. The once-contrite company is now criticizing the FAA, saying its new safety guidelines are unclear and unfair. “We don’t know what the rules are,” said an American technical crew chief. The company says its safety issues were minor deviations from technical standards that had been considered acceptable for years, and could have been fixed gradually. More »

    • Washington Vows Better Airline Safety

      Washington Vows Better Airline Safety

      (Newser) - Today Washington vowed to beef up airplane inspections and demanded to know why American Airlines stranded 250,000 travelers last week, the AP reports. "No one at all was well served by what happened," US Transportation Secretary Mary Peters said. But she defended federal regulators, saying they did not overreact after learning of lax inspections on Southwest Airlines planes last month. More »

    • American Airlines Cleared to Fly Again

      American Airlines Cleared to Fly Again

      (Newser) - Federal officials cleared American Airlines today to resume flying all but three of its grounded MD-80 jets, the AP reports. American wanted to run a full schedule today, but "we still need to get the planes positioned for their next flights," a company spokesman said. The full fleet of aging planes will be on schedule by tomorrow morning, the AP reports. More »

    • American Gets Half of MD-80s Flying

      American Gets Half of MD-80s Flying

      (Newser) - American Airlines flew about half of its MD-80s on schedule today but will ground another 200 for inspections tomorrow morning, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reports. Execs said that all planes should be back on track by tomorrow night. CEO Gerard Arpey accepted blame for the groundings that have canceled 3,000 flights, saying, "We were not in technical compliance, and that is our failure.” More »

    • American Airlines Cancels 570 Flights for Tomorrow

      American Airlines Cancels 570 Flights for Tomorrow

      (Newser) - American Airlines plans to cancel another 570 flights tomorrow, providing little relief for passengers in a jam after three consecutive days of massive snarls, the AP reports. The airline, however, said it was making progress getting wiring up to snuff on its MD-80s and planned to have the entire fleet of 300 planes back in the sky by Saturday, the New York Times notes. More »

    • Key Inspector Says FAA Crackdown Long Overdue

      Key Inspector Says FAA Crackdown Long Overdue

      (Newser) - The Federal Aviation Administration is too lax, and its recent toughening-up long overdue, the Transportation Department’s inspector general Calvin Scovel told senators today. The agency should not rely, as it has until recently, on airlines to voluntarily disclose safety oversights, and shouldn’t provide loopholes for the appropriate penalties when they do, according to the Wall Street Journal . More »

    • Flight Chaos to Continue as FAA Gets Tough

      Flight Chaos to Continue as FAA Gets Tough

      (Newser) - Air travelers should brace themselves for several more months of chaos: the wave of FAA audits that began March 30, producing more than 2,000 canceled flights this week, will continue through June 30. In an effort to toughen enforcement of safety standards, the agency has moved to relying less on data provided by the airline themselves and more on on-site inspections, the Wall Street Journal reports. More »

    • American to Cancel 900 More Flights Today

      American to Cancel 900 More Flights Today

      (Newser) - American Airlines expects to cancel 900 more flights today as the airline works to bring its MD-80 aircraft up to FAA standards, the New York Times reports. Thousands more travelers will be stranded at airport hubs, and the problem could spill into tomorrow. American is just the latest airline to be hit with groundings under the more aggressive FAA audits, and more are expected industry-wide in the weeks ahead. More »

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