A student and examiner
were killed in an accident that occurred during a flight exam at the
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Florida, yesterday
morning. Structural failure might have played a part in the accident as one
wing of the Piper PA-28 Cherokee departed the airplane before it impacted the
ground.
“The wing fell off some
150 to 200 yards away from where the plane finally rests in this field behind
us,” Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood said while standing in front of the
accident site, according to a report from the local Channel 6 news station.
Chitwood also said there were no distress calls to air traffic control.
The accident occurred at 9:54 am, and by 12:40
Embry-Riddle’s president P. Barry Butler had issued a statement. “It is with
profound sadness that I must inform you of an aircraft accident today that
resulted in the loss of one of our student pilots as well as a passenger who
was a designated pilot examiner with the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration,”
Butler said.
Butler said the accident
happened near Tomoka Farms Road in Daytona Beach. It’s much too early to tell
whether the wing fell off due to overstress of the airplane, a mechanical
defect or for some other reason. The school is working with the authorities to
help determine the cause of the accident.
Embry-Riddle has an
exceptional safety record, which was recognized last year as the school, which
has been in operation since 1925, achieved Stage II International Standard
Business Aircraft Operations (IS-BAO) registration by the International
Business Council in Montreal, Canada. This safety audit goes way beyond the
rigorous requirements of the FAA and ERAU claims it is the first aviation
university to have achieved this level of safety standards.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
没有评论:
发表评论