Bangkok Post

Probe into glitch after airline chaos

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US airlines said they expect operations to return to normal yesterday as the Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) scrambles to pinpoint the cause of a computer outage that grounded flights nationally and to prevent it from happening again.

More than 11,300 US flights were delayed or cancelled on Wednesday, according to FlightAwar­e, in the first national grounding of domestic traffic in about two decades.

Major carriers such as Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and Southwest Airlines said they expected normal operations yesterday.

The FAA computer failure prevented airports from filing updated safety notices that warn pilots of potential hazards such as runway closures, equipment outages and constructi­on, bringing flights to a temporary halt.

FAA officials said a preliminar­y review traced the problem to a damaged database file but added there was no evidence of a cyberattac­k and the investigat­ion was continuing.

The same file corrupted both the main system and its backup, said people familiar with the review, who asked not to be identified.

US Senate Commerce Committee Chair Maria Cantwell, a Democrat, said the panel would investigat­e. Republican Senator Ted Cruz called the failure “completely unacceptab­le.”

Arjun Garg, former FAA chief counsel and acting deputy administra­tor, said that it was premature to draw any conclusion­s about the event, but that the agency was right to ground flights if a safety system was not operationa­l.

The FAA has been without a permanent administra­tor since March. The Senate has not held a hearing on President Joe Biden’s pick to head the agency, Denver Internatio­nal Airport Chief Executive Phil Washington, who was only renominate­d last week.

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