Air traffic controllers_20110419081716_JPG

Air traffic controllers. (MyFox Boston)

  • Sidebar
Obama Battles To Win Military Voters
Obama Battles To Win Military Voters

As Memorial Day weekend nears, veterans and the military vote …

Romney: Politics 'Sport For Old Guys'
Romney: Politics 'Sport For Old Guys'

Mitt Romney has revealed that his campaign gaffes "haunt" him …

IRS: Number of High-Income Households Falls
IRS: Fewer High-Income Households

The number of high-income households in the US fell in 2009 but…

Brick-and-Mortar Stores Push Anew for Online Sales Tax Collection
Retailers Push for Online Sales Tax

Brick-and-mortar retailers, facing tough competition from …

US Consumer Confidence Highest in 4 1/2 years
Consumer Confidence Hits 4.5-Year High

A better hiring outlook and lower gas prices pushed a measure …

UBS, Citigroup Lost $50 Million Due to Nasdaq's Facebook Glitches, Sources Say
Facebook Glitches May Have Cost $50M

The market-making arms of UBS and Citigroup suffered combined …

Fate Of BlackBerry's Messaging Tool In Doubt
BlackBerry's Messaging Fate Unknown

Research In Motion (RIM) Ltd. may have lost its dominance in …

BlackBerry's Longtime Head of Sales Resigns
Longtime BlackBerry Exec Leaves Firm

Longtime Research In Motion (RIM) executive Patrick Spence is …

Report: NYSE Reaches Out to Facebook
Report: NYSE Reaches Out to Facebook

NYSE Euronext has reached out to Facebook Inc., inviting the …

Facebook Stock Climbs, but Company Faces Lawsuits
Facebook Stock Climbs Amid Lawsuits

Facebook's fourth day of trading as public company brought …

Air-Traffic Errors Stay Flat in 2011 After Recent Surge

Updated: Wednesday, 22 Feb 2012, 8:33 AM EST
Published : Wednesday, 22 Feb 2012, 8:33 AM EST

(The Wall Street Journal) - After nearly doubling over the previous three years, errors by the nation's air-traffic controllers remained flat at roughly 1,900 in 2011, according to people familiar with the details of a report to be released soon.

The latest Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) figures will include about 50 of the most serious category of incidents in the fiscal year ended last September, compared with 43 in 2010 and 37 the year before, according to industry officials and others who reviewed the numbers.

The most serious incidents are those that put aircraft closest to each other or that have the greatest chance of causing collisions, in the judgment of the FAA.

Less dangerous errors would allow aircraft, for example, to violate a standard three-mile (five-kilometer) separation zone but still remain relatively far apart.

For 2012, safety experts anticipate a spike in overall error rates, as newly-installed FAA computerized systems track and document relatively minor slipups by controllers that often were not identified previously.

The error trend is being watched closely by lawmakers, industry officials, outside experts and the Department of Transportation's inspector general, amid congressional concern over safety.

Last year, the FAA took action against more than half a dozen controllers for fatigue-related mistakes, while high-profile errors prompted congressional hearings and led to the resignation of the FAA's top air-traffic control official.

Mistakes by air-traffic controllers can lead to sometimes harrowing events. In one 2010 near-miss, a heavily-loaded United Airlines jumbo jet taking off from San Francisco passed within a few hundred feet of a single-engine propeller plane. In another, a controller error placed two regional jets on a collision course at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport last May before a supervisor noticed the conflict.

A commercial-airplane accident caused by controller errors has not occurred since at least the early 1990s.

Read more: The Wall Street Journal

Advertisement
  • Redefining Detroit

Tell us Something Great About Detroit

Fox 2 is looking for some good ideas on how to redefine Detroit.  Have one?

  • Today's Popular Stories

Become Our Facebook Fan

Can't get enough FOX 2 News? Become our fan on Facebook right here.

Follow FOX 2 on Twitter

Get the latest headlines from FOX 2 when you follow our Twitter account.

  • Suggested Search
  • Marketplace Ads
User Tools - July 2011 Update