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Aviation Conspiracy: More Airline Bankruptcies Coming!!!

by "Bill Mulcahy" <wmulcahy@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jun 4, 2008 at 07:02 PM

The graphic (website) version of this newsletter can be accessed at:
http://pages.prodigy.net/rockaway/newsletter483.htm

Aviation Conspiracy Newsletter 
#483........................................................................June

1,  2008 Past newsletters can be accessed at: 
http://pages.prodigy.net/rockaway/ACNewsmenu.htm
 If you want to get the 
newsletter sent to you every week, sign up to AviationWatch. Bill Mulcahy 
rockaway@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 of the Week:  "I kept bringing up these problems, and they kept
saying 
we didn't have any problems," comment in a story this week from FAA air 
traffic controller who filed a whistle-blower complaint because his bosses

did not take his safety concerns seriously

---------------------------------------------------------------------
More Airline Bankruptcies Coming!!!

---------------------------------------------------------------------
As Bill Sees It (Editorial): It Couldn't Happen To Nicer People!!!  News 
stories this week tell of soaring (pardon the pun) bankruptcies in the 
airline industry. While the case can be made that it is the 
s***-of-the-earth FAA who is responsible for doing things like sending
jumbo 
jets over residential communities 24 hours a day, seven days a week, I
think 
the airlines share equal responsibility for these crimes. If you're
feeling 
sympathetic towards the airlines (I do care about the employees) just 
remember how they pack people in their planes like sardines and then leave

them sitting on the runways for several hours.  I would like to see them
all 
go under, but that will not a happen. What will happen will be that 
financially weak airlines will be absorbed by larger airlines with deeper 
pockets.

FAA Is Having Their Own Problems!!! While all this is going on the
airlines 
partner-in-crime, the FAA, is having their own trouble as congress has
been 
putting off reauthorization, possibly until after the November elections. 
After November, we'll see the other part of the Aviation Cabal, the 
politicians, make their deals to continue to protect their favored 
communities and it will be aviation expansion business as usual. Now 
however, sleazy politicians, like New Jersey's senator Lautenberg, will be

fighting for communities threatened by new flight routes in the northeast 
U.S. Airspace Redesign scheme.

 No Environmental Impact Study On New Stewart Air****t Helicopter
Service!!! 
News stories this week tell of a new helicopter service to be started at
New 
York's Stewart Air****t. Of course no mention was made of any Environmental

Impact Study (EIS) being done on noise and air pollution impacts on this 
major change in air****t use as required by law.

---------------------------------------------------------------------

More Whistleblowers Step Up To Complain About The FAA: Kim Farrington says

she was only doing her job as a Federal Aviation Administration inspector 
when she raised concerns about problems involving an airline's training 
program. But her bosses, who she thought were too cozy with the carrier, 
punished her for her warnings, she said. Her workplace became unbearable, 
and Farrington said she was essentially fired in 2004. Last month, 
Farrington came forward as a whistle-blower, filing a complaint about her 
treatment with the U.S. Office of Special Counsel after she read news 
re****ts about how FAA inspectors blew the whistle last year on lax
oversight 
of Southwest Airlines. She was not alone. Like Farrington, other former
and 
current FAA employees have filed complaints about how the agency treated 
them and responded to their safety concerns. The special counsel has 
received complaints from at least six other FAA whistle-blowers in the
weeks 
since Congress held hearings into the Southwest debacle, according to some

of the whistle-blowers and sources familiar with the investigations. Those

complaints and several others received in the past year formed the basis
of 
a letter sent to top FAA officials several weeks ago, asking the agency to

retain a massive number of do***ents, e-mails and other records at its 
offices across the country to aid the investigations. 
http://www.wa****ngtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/30/AR2008053002914.html?hpid=moreheadlines

Editor's Note: Picture on the left is a FAA air traffic controller, Mike 
Cole, who whose warnings about plane safety were called "paranoia" by his 
bosses.

Skepticism Surrounds FAA 'Customer' Initiative For Airlines!!! Over the
past 
two months, hundreds of thousands of airline passengers were stranded in 
air****ts nationwide as more than 3,500 flights were canceled because 
carriers failed to perform required maintenance. The mass groundings -
more 
extensive than any previous airline safety grounding in history - cost 
airlines tens of millions of dollars and the goodwill of thousands of
people 
whose plans were disrupted. An investigation into maintenance at Southwest

Airlines has also resulted in a $10.2 million proposed fine. Critics in 
Congress and leaders of the FAA's inspector force say blame for the 
breakdown in airline maintenance rests at least in part on what they call 
the agency's misguided "Customer Service Initiative" and the way it
undercut 
enforcement of critical safety rules. FAA officials say the customer
program 
was designed to make the agency more responsive to legitimate complaints 
from airlines that the agency had enforced rules inconsistently. It was
not 
designed, officials say, to soften regulation or stifle inspectors. "These

are principles that I would think every taxpayer would want a government 
agency to abide by," said FAA acting Administrator Robert Sturgell. 
http://www.usatoday.com/travel/flights/2008-05-29-faa-customers_N.htm

Editor's Note: Why is Sturgell (pictured above right with President
Moronic 
Polluter) still in an executive position in the FAA?





                              
@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
                                                    Im****tant Aviation
News 
Stories This Week

More Step Up To Complain About FAA

Whistle-Blowers Say Agency Ignored Safety Concerns

By Del Quentin Wilber Wa****ngton Post Staff Writer
 Saturday, May 31, 2008; Page D01

http://www.wa****ngtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/30/AR2008053002914.html?hpid=moreheadlines

Kim Farrington says she was only doing her job as a Federal Aviation 
Administration inspector when she raised concerns about problems involving

an airline's training program. But her bosses, who she thought were too
cozy 
with the carrier, punished her for her warnings, she said.

Her workplace became unbearable, and Farrington said she was essentially 
fired in 2004.

Last month, Farrington came forward as a whistle-blower, filing a
complaint 
about her treatment with the U.S. Office of Special Counsel after she read

news re****ts about how FAA inspectors blew the whistle last year on lax 
oversight of Southwest Airlines. She was not alone. Like Farrington, other

former and current FAA employees have filed complaints about how the
agency 
treated them and responded to their safety concerns.

The special counsel has received complaints from at least six other FAA 
whistle-blowers in the weeks since Congress held hearings into the
Southwest 
debacle, according to some of the whistle-blowers and sources familiar
with 
the investigations.

Those complaints and several others received in the past year formed the 
basis of a letter sent to top FAA officials several weeks ago, asking the 
agency to retain a massive number of do***ents, e-mails and other records
at 
its offices across the country to aid the investigations.

Congressional staff members have received hundreds of other tips from 
whistle-blowers about the FAA, according to Jim Berard, a spokesman for
the 
House Trans****tation Committee, which held a high-profile hearing in early

April into the Southwest and FAA lapses. A few of those complaints have
been 
referred to the Trans****tation Department's inspector general. Others are 
being examined by investigators on the Trans****tation Committee, Berard 
said.

The complaints suggest that the FAA will continue to face tough questions
in 
coming months.

Investigators acknowledge that the cases may not be as clear-cut as those 
raised by FAA inspectors who re****ted lapses in how the agency oversaw 
Southwest Airlines. The FAA last year improperly allowed Southwest to keep

flying jets in need of key safety checks, a decision that top FAA
officials 
have acknowledged was a big mistake.

"Whistle-blower disclosures and retaliation can be very difficult to bring

home," said Jim Mitchell, a spokesman for the special counsel's office. 
"It's vital that we get hold of evidence beyond what we are getting from
the 
whistle-blower."

Mitchell declined to comment on the cases the special counsel's office is 
pursuing. However, sources familiar with the probes and interviews with
FAA 
employees reveal a wide range of complaints and allegations of potential 
safety lapses and unfair treatment in recent years.

Peter Nesbitt, an air traffic controller at Memphis International Air****t,

said he filed a whistle-blower complaint over the way he was treated after

he made repeated disclosures last year about safety problems tied to what
he 
thought was a dangerous approach pattern for planes. He sent letters 
expressing his concerns to his congressman, the National Trans****tation 
Safety Board (NTSB) and top FAA safety officials, he said.

Some of the issues were corrected, Nesbitt said. But the controller, who
has 
made disclosures of other alleged safety issues, said he soon found
himself 
under intense scrutiny at work and was punished for reasons he still does 
not understand. He is no longer allowed to control air traffic, he said.

"At my facility, a culture of fear exists because of what they have done
to 
me," said Nesbitt, whose complaint was filed in October but helped form
the 
basis of the investigators' request to the FAA to retain records. "It has 
made my life a wreck."

FAA spokeswoman Lynn Tierney said she could not address the individual 
allegations by whistle-blowers that have not been made public, yet. But
she 
added that workplace retaliation is an "impediment to a safety culture."

"We strive to create a professional, mission critical atmosphere where 
people work together and resolve issues," Tierney wrote in an e-mail,
adding 
that the allegations by whistle-blowers "are troubling."

Another FAA employee, Mike Cole, said he filed a whistle-blower complaint 
because his bosses did not take his safety concerns seriously and then 
punished him when he re****ted his worries over an FAA safety hot line.

Cole was worried, he said, about a procedure in which controllers in the 
tower at an air****t in Juneau, Alaska, cleared pilots to take off and then

closed their facility for the night. Cole worked in a flight service
station 
that issues weather briefings and files flight plans for pilots, and he
was 
concerned that planes might take off later than scheduled, and their
pilots 
would not know whether other aircraft were heading to the air****t. Such an

error could result in a collision, he said.

"Juneau Air Traffic Control Tower is playing dodge ball" with the
airlines, 
Cole said.

Several times, Cole said, he stopped pilots from taking off because he 
learned another plane was about to land. He re****ted the problems to his 
bosses but did not get anywhere with it, he said. In December, he filed a 
complaint with the FAA's safety hot line service.

Shortly after, his boss yelled at him, Cole said, and he was decertified
for 
alleged mental health reasons. In a re****t explaining his decision to 
rescind Cole's medical clearance to work, his boss complained that the 
flight service worker "has become paralyzed by overwhelming paranoia and 
delusion in which he sees nothing but aviation disaster."

His doctors, however, found no evidence of serious mental disorders and 
recommended that Cole return to duty. "From a psychiatric point of view, I

see no reason why Mr. Cole is not able to resume work," one doctor wrote
in 
a re****t submitted to the FAA in March.

"I kept bringing up these problems, and they kept saying we didn't have
any 
problems," said Cole, who went back to work the same month.

Farrington, a former FAA inspector in Orlando who oversaw cabin safety at 
AirTran Airways, said she waited four years to make her allegations of 
misconduct and retaliation because she thought no one would care.

The former inspector alleges that she raised issues with her bosses about 
poor training of flight attendants at AirTran and problems related to 
replica fuselages used to teach flight crews how to exit the back of a 
Boeing 717 in an emergency. AirTran was using a mock-up of the tail
section 
of a DC-9, not a Boeing 717 replica, to teach flight attendants how to 
deploy an emergency slide to exit the plane. The two planes are similar,
but 
the tail sections are slightly different. In 2003, the carrier had far
more 
717s than DC-9s, company records show, and the carrier was aggressively 
moving to retire its remaining gas-guzzling DC-9s.
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Aviation Conspiracy: More Airline Bankruptcies Coming!!!
"Bill Mulcahy"   2008-06-04 19:02:14 

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