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applegrove

(118,696 posts)
Wed Jul 10, 2013, 09:18 PM Jul 2013

"How Government Regulations Saved Lives On Asiana Airlines Flight 214"

How Government Regulations Saved Lives On Asiana Airlines Flight 214

By Igor Volsky at Think Progress

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2013/07/09/2270071/how-government-regulations-saved-lives-on-asiana-airline-flight-214/?mobile=nc

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In the past decade, the Federal Aviation Administration — the office responsible for overseeing all aspects of civil aviation — has instituted a series of aircraft safety standards that undoubtedly saved lives on Saturday, Peter Goelz, a former managing director of the National Transportation Safety Board, told ThinkProgress on Tuesday morning, pointing to new mandates for everything from seating to enhanced training of flight attendants. American regulations lead the world and are typically adopted by airlines in Europe and Japan, with only minor adjustments.

For instance, in 1988 airplanes began installing so-called 16 G passenger seats that stay in place “when subjected to stresses up to 16 times the force of gravity” after regulators discovered “that passengers might survive a crash were they not crushed to death when the seats tore loose from the floor.” Despite initial opposition from the airline industry, final regulations were implemented in June of 2009 and Goelz believes that the stronger chairs prevented passengers from being thrown throughout the cabin as the rear of the Flight 2014 slammed down on the ground, allowing individuals to evacuate in time.

“It’s hard for me to imagine that if the old 9 G standard would have been part of that airplane those seats would have behaved as well as they did,” Todd Curtis, an air safety analyst added.

A series of evolutionary changes to fire code requirements also protected passengers on the flight. FAA implemented reduced flammability and nontoxic gas emissions of interior components after an Air Canada accident in 1983 caused a fire in which the overwhelming majority of passengers died from toxic gas and smoke. It also instituted an enhanced burn-through rate standard to guarantee that the skin of the airplane and insulation resist fire for up to four minutes, allowing passengers more time to escape. Regulations require that airlines and flight attendants be able to evacuate a full passenger load with only half of the exits operating in under 90 seconds.


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"How Government Regulations Saved Lives On Asiana Airlines Flight 214" (Original Post) applegrove Jul 2013 OP
And another regulation almost killed some of them. WestStar Jul 2013 #1
The problem is not the seat belts, but the design. The FAA will certainly look into bluestate10 Jul 2013 #3
Safety measures WovenGems Jul 2013 #2
 

WestStar

(202 posts)
1. And another regulation almost killed some of them.
Wed Jul 10, 2013, 09:31 PM
Jul 2013

SAN FRANCISCO, July 7: Police officers threw utility knives up to crew members inside the burning wreckage of Asiana Airlines Flight 214 so they could cut away passengers’ seat belts.

bluestate10

(10,942 posts)
3. The problem is not the seat belts, but the design. The FAA will certainly look into
Wed Jul 10, 2013, 10:13 PM
Jul 2013

all aspects of the Asian crash and come up with impacting changes. I feel safe flying with the FAA at work.

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