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#21
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It's my understanding that the second controller would be staffing the radar
position and not a tower position. Not defending only one controller on duty but if two were on duty what their assigned duties would accomplish. Al "Ron Lee" wrote in message ... "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote: "FUBAR" wrote in message ... If the controller staffing had been according to FAA orders(2 controllers), maybe the second controller would have been keeping an eye on the active field(That's what controllers do) and the other is filling out some worthless Government paperwork? Controller screams abort on departure frequency and maybe an aborted and embarrassed takeoff is the only result. Maybe. Maybe a second controller wouldn't have noticed anything amiss. After, two well-qualified, experienced professional pilots didn't catch the error. I read a report that the FAA also questioned the utility of two controllers in preventing this accident. Of course that could be driven by legal issues but ultimately the pilots were responsible (hence pilot in command). Ron Lee |
#22
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Two-Controller Policy
The FAA in November 2005 clarified that at least two controllers are required in towers that use radar to direct planes at and near airports. Planes that violated separation standards in the Raleigh-Durham area of North Carolina prompted the FAA staffing change, said Laura Brown, an agency spokeswoman. FAA officials learned after the accident that the policy hadn't been followed in Lexington and ``directed the facility manager to ensure that a minimum of two controllers are on duty at all times,'' Brown said in an interview. Lexington has a radar room in the same tower from which controllers can look out windows to direct traffic on the ground. FAA workers there can monitor the radar from the radar room or from the top of the tower. The controller on the overnight shift the morning of the Comair crash was doing both of those functions. Weekend traffic levels at Lexington average about six aircraft per night between midnight and 6 a.m., Brown said. " |
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