SFGate: Air Travel Scary in South America

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



=20
----------------------------------------------------------------------
This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/n/a/2007/06/23/internatio=
nal/i144200D11.DTL
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
Saturday, June 23, 2007 (AP)
Air Travel Scary in South America
By BILL CORMIER, Associated Press Writer


   (06-23) 14:42 PDT BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) --

   Flying through South America's busiest airports has become frightening a=
nd
time-consuming for passengers and pilots alike as a surge in travelers
overwhelms underfunded air traffic control systems.

   The Argentine capital's main airport radar hasn't worked properly since
being struck by lightning in March, meaning jets must fly under manual
control, causing delays and at least two near-collisions, according to air
traffic controllers. A September crash that was Brazil's deadliest air
disaster exposed other gaps, from inadequate equipment to poor training.

   Angry stranded travelers have stormed airline check-in counters and
runways and fistfights have broken out in waiting areas. Controllers
— concerned about being made scapegoats — have engaged in
strikes and work slowdowns to raise safety concerns.

   The problems in Buenos Aires and Sao Paulo ripple through Latin America
and beyond as travelers make connecting flights. On Friday, all flights
from Sao Paulo to Europe and the United States were temporarily suspended
due to equipment failure and another slowdown by controllers.

   Brazil and Argentina acknowledge failing to make needed investments in
radar for decades, even as South America's booming economies fueled growth
in air travel. Foreign travelers to Buenos Aires' main international
airport have more than doubled in five years to 2.1 million in 2006, while
the number of domestic flights in Brazil has risen by 49 percent, the
governments say.

   The world's pilots have lobbied to solve the problems since a Boeing 737
wound up on a collision course with a small executive jet over the Amazon
on Sept. 29, killing all 154 people on the passenger jet.

   A Brazilian judge indicted four flight controllers and the smaller jet's
two American pilots on the equivalent of manslaughter charges, but the
defendants point to other problems, from holes in radar coverage to the
inability of some Brazilian controllers to clearly speak English, the
language of international aviation.

   Passengers are getting jittery, too.

   Meghan Bolden, a 26-year-old American studying in Buenos Aires, sweated
through takeoff on her United Airlines flight home to Washington.

   "The pilot, who was American, got on and said we were going to be taking
off manually because there was no radar. But it was pitch black and we
couldn't see anything on the tarmac," Bolden said. "It's like we were back
in the Wright brothers era."

   Manual takeoffs, spaced several minutes apart, are widely accepted under
commercial aviation rules, and Argentine Defense Minister Nilda Garre has
insisted her country's system is safe. "There is no such thing as air
insecurity" in Argentina, she told an Argentine Senate committee on May
22.

   She denied a claim by air controllers of at least two near-collisions due
to faulty radar. According to transcripts, a U.S. business jet and an
Aerosur flight came close enough for the Aerosur pilot to see the other
captain's uniform. Another recording indicates that one jet circling over
Buenos Aires crossed just 300 yards over another. But Garre acknowledged
that the Argentine government has long deferred costly investments in new
radars.

   Bill Voss, president of the independent Flight Safety Foundation in
Alexandria, Va., said Argentine authorities were not "exactly forthcoming"
with the public about the lightning damage.

   "Under any circumstances, having a radar down for three months indicates
some significant problems in terms of funding and logistics," Voss said.
"It should not be that hard to get radar service restored at a major
airport."

   The International Federation of Air Line Pilots' Associations,
representing more than 100,000 pilots worldwide, issued a June 1 bulletin
saying it was "surprised to learn that three months after it was damaged
by a lightning strike, the radar station covering Buenos Aires still has
not been repaired."

   And Marc Baumgartner, president of International Federation of Air Traff=
ic
Controllers' Associations, wondered if Argentine controllers have enough
training in manual controls.

   "The problem is with air traffic controllers who are used to working with
a radar environment, who are then asked to work in a blind air traffic
control environment," Baumgartner said. "These controllers have to be more
sufficiently trained."

   ___

   Associated Press writers Michael Astor and Peter Muello in Rio de Janeir=
o,
Brazil, contributed to this report. ---------------------------------------=
-------------------------------
Copyright 2007 AP

<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

If you wish to unsubscribe from the AIRLINE List, please send an E-mail to:
"listserv@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx".  Within the body of the text, only write the following:"SIGNOFF AIRLINE".

[Index of Archives]         [NTSB]     [NASA KSC]     [Yosemite]     [Steve's Art]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [NTSB]     [STB]     [Share Photos]     [Yosemite Campsites]