San Diego Union-Tribune

FAA • Review prompted by disorganiz­ed 2016 incident

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But in a memo responding to the report, the FAA said it has enacted increasing­ly rigorous cabin safety requiremen­ts over the years including tougher standards for exit pathways, emergency lighting, escape systems, flammabili­ty of materials and testing of seats.

“These system requiremen­ts have increased survivabil­ity and the amount of time available for successful evacuation­s, as demonstrat­ed in many accidents,” the FAA wrote.

The inspector general issued the report in response to a request from members of the House Transporta­tion Committee, which followed a confused evacuation in 2016 of an American Airlines jet in Chicago after an engine fire.

FAA regulation­s require jet manufactur­ers to demonstrat­e that all passengers and crew members be able to exit airplanes within 90 seconds. But in the 2016 case, it took 2 minutes and 11 seconds, according to the audit.

Flight attendants couldn’t contact pilots, an engine wasn’t shut off before passengers exited, and passengers took bags off the plane, the report said.

The FAA memo said the audit report overstated the 90-second evacuation standard because it doesn’t take into account other standards and requiremen­ts “that have produced significan­tly safer aircraft cabins,” the memo said.

An FAA spokesman had no additional comment.

The audit report caps a bad week for the agency, which on Wednesday was harshly criticized in a U.S. House committee report on two deadly crashes involving the Boeing 737 Max jetliner. The committee blamed the crashes on failed FAA oversight, design flaws and a lack of action at Boeing. It questioned whether the FAA and Boeing would be willing to make changes needed to fix problems that led to the crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia that killed 346 people.

In July of 2018, the FAA rejected the idea of setting minimum standards for airline seats and legroom as a safety measure. The FAA said it saw no immediate safety issue that requires new regulation­s, citing seven recent accidents in which passengers were able to evacuate. But last year the agency said it would begin tests to determine if jam-packed planes, smaller seats and tighter rows slow emergency evacuation­s.

A dramatic difference would presumably be reason for FAA to set more generous minimum standards for the airlines to follow. An FAA rulemaking panel will use that data to help set seating standards for airlines.

The average American adult is about 10 pounds heavier than just two decades ago, according to government figures, and airlines are squeezing more passengers into the economy cabin to make more room for highpaying customers in business class. That means tighter rows in the back of the plane.

Krisher writes for The Associated Press.

 ?? U-T FILE PHOTO ?? Among major San Diego Convention Center losses in 2020 due to the pandemic is Comic-con Internatio­nal, which brings tens of thousands to the city in July.
U-T FILE PHOTO Among major San Diego Convention Center losses in 2020 due to the pandemic is Comic-con Internatio­nal, which brings tens of thousands to the city in July.

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