Danger: Airplane Crossing
Controlling airplanes on the ground is a thornier problem than controlling them in the air.
- By Michael Milstein
- Air & Space magazine, August 2007
Who's at fault when airplanes cross paths where they're not supposed to? Controllers, pilots, and even the Federal Aviation Administration share the blame.
Paul Dimare
Runway 35 Left at Denver International Airport looked clear to the pilots of a Frontier Airlines Airbus A319 as they dropped from a 600-foot ceiling of clouds one morning in early January 2007. Blowing snow cut visibility to about a half-mile, so they were flying an instrument approach.
Then they saw the airplane sitting on the runway, dead ahead. The pilot of the Key Lime Air cargo turboprop had inadvertently followed blue taxiway lights (the centerline lights were obscured by the snow), turning onto a 12,000-foot active runway at the nation’s sixth busiest airport. A puzzled ground controller asked him where he was, just as the Frontier pilots spotted his airplane and yanked the nose of the Airbus up to abort the landing.
A collision alarm sounded in the tower. The two airplanes missed each other by about 50 feet.
Nearly once a day, on average, an airplane or airport vehicle ends up on a U.S. airport runway where it is not supposed to be. Such potentially hazardous incidents are called “runway incursions.” Not all are as dangerous as the close call in Denver—one of at least five instances there since 2000. But according to the Federal Aviation Administration, almost every 10 days an incursion poses the serious chance of a collision. Only last-second reactions by pilots have averted several disasters.
The good news is that there are ways to prevent incursions. More than a decade of research by NASA, the Department of Transportation, and aviation companies shows that cockpit displays, like the moving maps now widely available in automobiles, plus bolder runway striping and lighting at airports, can prevent the most common pilot errors that cause incursions. Basic improvements are now becoming available. But growth in air traffic is making incursion rates rise (incursions more than doubled nationally as air traffic grew between 1994 and 2000), so safety leaders want to pick up the pace.
“We’ve got the technologies; it’s now a question of deciding which of those technologies to use,” says Mark Rosenker, chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, which began pressing the FAA in the 1970s to step up prevention of runway incursions. “Too many incursions are occurring annually,” Rosenker says. “We’ve been running on luck, and luck is no way to run a national air system.”
The reality is that, until recently, runway incursions were eclipsed by more serious dangers, such as airplanes colliding in the air or flying off course and into the ground (known as “controlled flight into terrain”), says Basil Barimo, vice president of operations and safety for the Air Transport Association, which represents the airline industry. Now that cockpit warning systems have greatly reduced those risks, runway incursions have risen to the top of the safety to-do list.
“You get the biggest risk first and then you work your way down,” Barimo says. “While runway safety is getting a lot of attention now, it’s only because we’ve eliminated, quite frankly, the more significant risks.”
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Comments (3)
good
Posted by tarekaw123 on April 16,2008 | 07:08 AM
thanks for this article
Posted by mike on September 9,2008 | 03:34 PM
Here is a link to YouTube video of a man driving a pickup on a runway and taxiway at the airport in Ballinger, Texas (E30). This is an everyday occurrence because drivers are too lazy and wish to avoid a stop sign leading into the airport on the road where VEHICLES are supposed to drive on.
These offenders are employees of the Texas Boll Weevil Eradication Foundation (under the direct authority of the Texas Department of Agriculture) and at least 3 times per day (many times much more) they drive their personal and employer-owned vehicles on and across the runway and taxiways at Bruce Field in Ballinger, Texas.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NqRJOUG_SKY
Sadly, small rural airports are pretty much "out-of-sight, out-of-mind" and city and state leadership are not effectively addressing this issue.
We have seen in the news several situations where commercial pilots are on final-approach as an incursion happens. If this can happen to an ATP pilot and his/her co-pilot (not seeing something as large as another Boeing 737) imagine a pilot in a small Cessna flying ALONE trying to see a small pickup driving or crossing a runway.
Posted by Roy on April 19,2009 | 07:05 AM