The FAA is temporarily
grounding doors-off helicopter tour flights in which passengers are tethered to
the aircraft after the March 11 crash in New York City of a Liberty Helicopters
Airbus AS350 that killed five people.
“The FAA will order
operators and pilots to take immediate actions to control or mitigate this
risk,” the agency said in a statement. “Until then, the FAA will order no more
‘doors off’ operations that involve restraints that cannot be released quickly
in an emergency.” The agency is also conducting a “top to bottom review” of the
rules governing the operations.
The helicopter air tour
industry has begun offering people the chance to photograph landmarks in New
York City and Hawaii from helicopters with the doors removed. To keep people
from falling out, passengers are often tethered to the helicopter using
harnesses. The tether systems in the chartered Liberty Helicopters crash
required a knife to cut free from the harness.
The National Transportation
Safety Board on Monday issued an urgent safety recommendation calling on the
FAA to permanently prohibit commercial flights that use passenger harness
systems that do not allow for easy release during emergencies.
“While we applaud the
FAA’s intention to move forward on banning these types of doors-off flights,
the FAA has not outlined how or when they plan to take action,’’ said NTSB
Chairman Robert Sumwalt. “And definitive action needs to be taken.”
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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