FAA to Seek Major Changes in Pilot Training

Original Wall Street Journal Article

By ANDY PASZTOR

Federal regulators on Wednesday are slated to propose enhanced pilot-training rules to ensure cockpit crews can maintain control of airliners in the event of stalls, cockpit-automation failures and other flight emergencies.

The Federal Aviation Administration’s latest proposal, coming more than two years after an earlier version sparked sharp opposition from airlines based on projected costs, also seeks to more effectively track pilots who repeatedly perform poorly on mandatory proficiency tests, according to people familiar with the details.

If adopted, the package would usher in the most sweeping changes in nearly three decades to make pilot training more stringent and realistic. Like the earlier proposals, the FAA also wants to update safety-awareness training for flight attendants and airline dispatchers.

The proposed changes are partly aimed at complying with stepped-up requirements ordered by Congress after a fatal 2009 turboprop crash near Buffalo, N.Y., exposed major shortcomings in pilot training. But the proposal, these people said, also reflects the agency’s efforts to temper its tough new safety agenda by reducing projected compliance costs for the nation’s financially hard-pressed airline industry.

Wednesday’s proposal will be the first of three far-reaching regulatory updates the FAA is poised to release in coming months. The other two deal with reducing pilot fatigue and establishing higher minimum qualifications for new first officers.

Wednesday’s proposals—intended to refocus the techniques, timing and goals of pilot-training across the industry—could set the pattern for how the FAA will maneuver between calls for stepped-up safety and airline officials increasingly balking at costs and looking to House Republican leaders to deflect some of the most expensive pending rule changes.

The latest proposal, among other things, is expected to satisfy some earlier industry complaints by allowing airlines to tailor their pilot-training programs based on routes, equipment, crew experience and other specific operational factors.

Some of the proposed changes first surfaced in 2004, when the FAA created a government-industry committee to look at training requirements and related issues. Other elements of the proposal are intended, in part, to respond to longstanding safety recommendations from the National Transportation Safety Board targeting inadequate or misguided training practices.

The FAA, for example, wants to update stall-recovery training by getting pilots to focus more on regaining control of their aircraft while paying less attention to traditional goals of strictly maintaining altitude during the recovery.

The FAA’s original proposal also envisioned carriers emphasizing the dangers of runway collisions and other ground hazards. In 2009, the agency also called for giving co-pilots more frequent recurrent training than they typically receive, and the proposal stressed training to help captains and co-pilots work more closely together as a team by sharing flying and monitoring duties. Many airlines already follow such practices and principles.

But the revised proposal is expected to break new ground partly by mandating some techniques all airlines need to use to track pilots who perform poorly or demonstrate a lack of skills during certain types of simulator sessions.

Initially, the agency also proposed requiring flight attendants to complete “hands on” performance drills using emergency equipment and procedures annually, versus the current two-year training period. Some of that language is expected to remain part of the package

According to the FAA’s earlier assessment of the likely benefits of the proposed changes, agency officials projected industry savings of about $530 million as a result of avoiding accidents and incidents over a 10-year span.

But in a sharply worded August 2009 response, the Air Transport Association, an industry group representing the nation’s largest airlines, complained that the initial proposal contained “numerous unworkable specifics, internal conflicts…[and] inaccurate assessments of current industry standard practices.”

The ATA’s response also said that the FAA’s analysis of historical accident data was faulty, and that the likely projected benefits of the initial proposal amounted to roughly $25 million, far less than the agency’s estimate.

Update the next day below …

FAA Seeks Dramatic Revamp of Pilot Training

By Jerry Zremski
NEWS WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEF
Original Article

Updated: May 12, 2011, 1:13 PM

WASHINGTON — The Federal Aviation Administration on Wednesday proposed a dramatic revamping of airline pilot and crew training, a move that would turn many of the lessons learned from the February 2009 plane crash in Clarence Center into law.

Under the FAA proposal, for the first time, pilots would have to be trained to recover from the kind of stall that sent Continental Connection Flight 3407 plummeting into a house, killing 50 people.

They would have to be familiar with the stall-recovery equipment in the planes they fly, which the crew of Flight 3407 was not.

Unlike Capt. Marvin D. Renslow, pilot of the doomed plane, pilots could no longer fail flight tests and then receive no remedial training to make up for their deficiencies.

In addition, the rule would address many of the training problems pointed out in an award-winning Buffalo News series in December 2009, “Who’s Flying Your Airplane?”

For example, pilots would have to be trained to fly in the weather conditions they are likely to experience in their jobs and would get simulator training on sudden emergency “upsets” and be required to recover from them.

“The FAA is proposing the most significant changes to air carrier training in 20 years. This is a major effort to strengthen the performance of pilots,” said FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt.

Members of the Families of Continental Flight 3407, who pushed passage of a law that requires many of the changes in training, said the FAA proposal looks good to them, at least so far.

“While we are not in a position to give our wholehearted endorsement as of yet, at first glance, we are very pleased to see many of the deficiencies that contributed to Flight 3407 addressed,” said Scott Maurer, of Moore, S.C., whose daughter, Lorin, was killed in the crash.

In general, the rule spells out a much more comprehensive training regimen that will better reflect real-world situations.

“Rather than just have a pilot execute a skill in isolation, the new training will require a more realistic and coordinated effort by the crew, as if they were on a real flight,” Babbitt said. “It will be a lot more lifelike.”

For one thing, crews will have to work together in their training regimens, just as they would in a flight.

And they will have to have additional experiences in the simulator that echo what could, in the worst-case scenario, happen in the cockpit of an airplane.

The FAA had long questioned the notion of training pilots in recovering from aerodynamic stalls, where a plane loses so much speed that its wings can no longer keep it aloft.

That’s because pilots are supposed to never allow a plane to reach a stall in the first place, and because earlier-generation simulators were not able to mimic a full stall.

But thanks to new simulator technology, “now you can put someone in a stall scenario and let them recover,” Babbitt said.

The National Transportation Safety Board blamed pilot error for the Clarence Center crash, and the biggest pilot error of all involved stall recovery.

Investigators found that Renslow pulled back on the plane’s yoke when he should have pushed forward — which could have been related to the fact that he had never received simulator training in the plane’s stall-recovery system.

Such training would be required, though, under the FAA proposal, and Rep. Brian Higgins, D-Buffalo, said that only makes sense.

Practical training encompassing potential emergency scenarios will help to better prepare skilled pilots entrusted with the lives of hundreds of people at 35,000 feet in the air,” Higgins said.

Babbitt also stressed that the proposal requires remedial training for pilots such as Renslow, who show during test flights that their skills are lacking.

In addition, airlines will have to tailor their training to their flight routes. For example, airlines that fly in the Midwest would have to put a greater emphasis on flying in thunderstorms, while airlines flying in Alaska would have to pay more attention to training in flying in wintry conditions.

And throughout the new training regimen, there would be a new element of surprise. Sudden upsets will be included at unexpected times.

Crew members “are going to train as a team,” Babbitt said. “They will have had real-life exposure.”

The new rules are a rewrite of a proposal the FAA put forth a month before the Clarence Center crash.

The agency has spent more than two years rewriting the proposal to incorporate industry feedback, react to the lessons of Flight 3407 and respond to the new congressional mandates.

While generally lauding the proposal, the Flight 3407 families warned that it is by no means set in stone.

The airline industry will still have a chance to press regulators for changes that could weaken the proposal.

“This rule-making has been in progress for nearly a decade, which shows what a strong grip that the airlines and the industry already have on this process,” said Susan Bourque of East Aurora, whose sister Beverly Eckert, a 9/11 activist, was killed in the crash.

The proposal also faces a potential threat from Congress in the form of an amendment by Rep. Bill Shuster, R-Pa. The amendment, which would place new burdens on the FAA rule-making process, passed the House on April 1.

While the amendment’s prospects in the Senate appear to be dim, Bourque warned that if passed, the Shuster amendment could stand in the way of several FAA regulatory efforts stemming from the crash of Flight 3407.

The FAA is still working on a separate rule that would boost the number of flight hours that pilots must have to get a commercial license, and on a proposal aimed at curbing pilot fatigue.

Asked about the timing of the proposed rules, Margaret “Peggy” Gilligan, associate administrator for aviation safety, said: “We are pushing as fast as we can for as much as we can.”

With so many new safety rules being drawn up at once, both the families and their congressional advocates stressed that they will have to continue to press for their completion.

“These new training proposals are an important step forward toward fixing the flaws in pilot training that contributed to the crash,” said Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., “but our work is far from over.”

About UPRTA Administrator

The Upset Prevention & Recovery Training Association is an international aviation organization devoted to flight training quality assurance and instructor pilot standardization.
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One Response to FAA to Seek Major Changes in Pilot Training

  1. JB Pilot says:

    Making pilot training more stringent and realistic should really be a concern of the state. So I definitely agree with this proposal. Recovery training methodologies are worth paying serious attention to.

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