Los Angeles Times

Pilot told tower no fuel dump needed

Delta jet showered schoolchil­dren near LAX despite a radio call saying the action wouldn’t be necessary.

- By Hannah Fry, Colleen Shalby and Matt Stiles

A Delta Air Lines pilot was roughly five minutes into a flight from Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport to Shanghai on Tuesday when he radioed the control tower that he was having problems with the right engine on the jetliner.

A controller asks whether he needs to return to the airport immediatel­y or to “hold to burn fuel.” The pilot responds that they’ve “got it back under control,” will slow down, stay out of terrain and turn back to the airport.

“OK, so you don’t need to hold to dump fuel or anything like that?” he asks the pilot. The pilot responds: “Negative.”

Yet less than 20 minutes later, the jet, flying at about 2,300 feet, dumped fuel over Park Avenue Elementary School in Cudahy, dousing children on the playground and sparking outrage in a community that’s been at the center of environmen­tal injustices for decades in Los Angeles County.

Dozens of people — many of them children — were treated by paramedics, but no one was seriously injured.

The Times analyzed more than 300 flight paths of Delta flight 89 over the last year provided by Flightrada­r24, a firm that specialize­s in maintainin­g and publishing detailed industry

data worldwide.

According to the flight mapping data, the pilot had been on one of two typical routes that Delta flies to Shanghai when he turned back toward L.A.

One path takes jets farther west over the Pacific Ocean, while the other turns north over Malibu and the Santa Monica Mountains before veering west.

In Tuesday’s flight, the pilot appeared to be taking the latter route and was already over land when he seemed to divert from the expected course above Hidden Hills.

The radio transmissi­ons between the pilot and air traffic controller­s raise new questions about why the plane showered fuel over such a large swath of populated neighborho­ods. Federal regulators have said fuel dumping should occur over remote areas. And although the plane was within Federal Aviation Administra­tion guidelines when it dropped the fuel, experts have said the best practice is to discharge at a higher elevation so that fuel dissipates before it hits the ground.

During emergency situations, air crews will typically notify air traffic control and indicate they need to dump fuel. The controller­s will then direct a plane to an appropriat­e fuel-dumping area. This did not happen during Tuesday’s brief flight, according to officials with the FAA, which is investigat­ing the incident.

When pilots dump fuel, they typically try to do so above 10,000 feet and over a body of water, such as an ocean, where the fuel will turn to mist and dissipate, away from populated areas, experts say.

Aircraft maker Boeing says if fuel is dumped at an altitude of higher than 5,000 feet, it should turn to vapor before reaching the ground.

“In this emergency situation, the fuel-dumping procedure did not occur at an optimal altitude that would have allowed the fuel to atomize properly,” the FAA said in a statement.

However, FAA regulation­s do allow dumps at lower altitudes — at least 2,000 feet higher than anything on the ground within five miles, the agency said.

Delta spokespers­on Adrian Gee said Tuesday that the pilot was forced to dump fuel in the urban area to reduce the plane’s weight before the return landing. It was not immediatel­y clear how much fuel was dropped or what happened between the pilot’s last public communicat­ions with air traffic control and the time he landed at the airport at 11:56 a.m.

Delta did not respond Wednesday to a request from The Times for further informatio­n.

Ross Aimer, CEO of Aero Consulting Experts, said fuel dumping is very rare and is used only in case of emergencie­s or if pilots have to reach a safe landing weight.

“Most pilots choose not to dump fuel unless the emergency really dictates it,” Aimer said.

In Tuesday’s incident, the plane was experienci­ng a compressor stall, according to transmissi­ons between the pilot and the airport tower as well as a radio call the Los Angeles Fire Department received at 11:47 a.m.

“We have a Boeing triple 7, call sign Delta 89, reporting a compressor stall, 181 souls on board, 12 hours of fuel, ETA less than five minutes,” an LAFD firefighte­r said.

When the compressor of a plane’s engine stalls, it can cause a loss of airflow through an engine, which can cause the engine to fail. However, compressor stalls are relatively common and aren’t typically considered a dire emergency that would necessitat­e an immediate landing, according to safety expert and aviation consultant Robert Ditchey.

The Boeing 777 is ETOPS-certified, an acronym used in aviation signifying “extended operations,” which means the two-engine aircraft can fly an extended duration on one engine, Ditchey said. That would suggest there was no immediate urgency to land, he said, per Boeing and FAA standards.

Still, the decision to return to LAX prompted the question from the control tower about dumping fuel. Whether the instructio­n to release the fuel came from air traffic control or Delta, the ultimate decision-maker would be the pilot, who would have been aware he was flying over a residentia­l area rather than the ocean or other unpopulate­d area, Ditchey said.

“Dumping is literally a toggle switch. How much fuel you dump is a decision that the captain or Delta Airlines Operations Control would discuss,” he said.

According to Seat Guru, a site that tracks the layout of planes, the 181 people aboard would have meant the flight was about twothirds full.

If that was the case, Ditchey said, it would suggest that a decrease in weight would not have been a major issue because the plane was not at maximum capacity.

The fuel dump has raised concerns about environmen­tal safety in the flight path over Cudahy and other cities.

“Sadly, our entire community has been adversely impacted by this incident, including dozens of children. I am calling for a full federal investigat­ion into the matter, and expect full accountabi­lity from responsibl­e parties,” Cudahy City Council Member Jack Guerrero said.

‘Most pilots choose not to dump fuel unless the emergency really dictates it.’ — Ross Aimer, CEO, Aero Consulting Experts

 ?? Matt Hartman Associated Press ?? IN AN IMAGE from video, Delta Air Lines Flight 89 to Shanghai dumps fuel over Cudahy on Tuesday.
Matt Hartman Associated Press IN AN IMAGE from video, Delta Air Lines Flight 89 to Shanghai dumps fuel over Cudahy on Tuesday.
 ?? Damian Dovarganes Associated Press ?? MARIANNA TORRES, 11, center, cries as she evacuates Park Avenue Elementary in Cudahy after the jet fuel fell Tuesday. “Our entire community has been adversely impacted,” said City Council Member Jack Guerrero.
Damian Dovarganes Associated Press MARIANNA TORRES, 11, center, cries as she evacuates Park Avenue Elementary in Cudahy after the jet fuel fell Tuesday. “Our entire community has been adversely impacted,” said City Council Member Jack Guerrero.

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