National Post (National Edition)

Pilots in near-disaster were overtired, report finds

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WASHINGTON • Investigat­ors probing a near-disaster last year when an Air Canada jetliner nearly landed on top of at least one other plane at San Francisco Airport have found that the pilots were overtired and failed to identify the runway, says a person who has been briefed on their findings.

The plane mistakenly tried to touch down on a taxi strip where four other jetliners were awaiting takeoff. It could have become one of the worst airline disasters in decades if the Air Canada plane had descended a few metres more.

Both pilots told investigat­ors they were tired as they neared the airport at almost midnight on July 7, 2017. Because they lived in Toronto, it was the equivalent of 3 a.m. on their body clocks.

Investigat­ors have also concluded the pilots hadn’t adequately reviewed preflight warnings about potentiall­y confusing constructi­on at the airport, according to the person familiar with the agency’s work, who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly.

Instead of aiming for a runway, the captain, who was at the controls, flew on a parallel path toward a taxiway, where the other jets were idling.

“Where is that guy going?” a pilot on a United Continenta­l jet radioed as the Air Canada plane approached.

“He’s on the taxiway,” the United pilot said three seconds later as the other plane passed just overhead.

The Air Canada pilots eventually aborted the landing and climbed, but it was so late that they were still descending when they passed above the United plane and flew just three to six metres over a Philippine Airlines jet, according to the NTSB’S review of flight data and surveillan­ce video.

The board is expected to recommend new automated safety warnings and better pilot-fatigue protection­s when it releases its report.

While the NTSB’S findings are subject to change at the meeting, the staff has proposed citing pilot actions as the cause of the incident, with the flight crew’s fatigue and other issues as factors, said the person. The NTSB is also preparing to ask Transport Canada to adopt stricter rules for pilots who fly in the U.S., according to the person.

Air Canada didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Canada’s rules governing how many hours a day a pilot can fly haven’t been changed since 1996, according to a 2014 advisory by Transport Canada.

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