Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Kobe Bryant’s death highlights crash-warning system

- By Bernard Condon and Justin Pritchard

LOS ANGELES » A cockpit warning system to help helicopter­s avoid crashes would not necessaril­y have saved Kobe Bryant’s life, and regulators and pilots alike have expressed concern that the instrument can trigger too many false alarms that can prove distractin­g.

“Another warning system screaming at you isn’t going to help,” said Brian Alexander, a helicopter pilot and aviation lawyer. “You don’t want to inundate the pilot.”

National Transporta­tion Safety Board officials say it is too early to tell whether a warning system missing on Bryant’s Sikorsky helicopter could have prevented the crash. But they think it should have been installed on the aircraft, and they criticized federal regulators for not carrying out the NTSB’s recommenda­tions years ago to require the equipment on helicopter­s.

At issue is what’s known as a Terrain Awareness and Warning System, or TAWS, which would have sounded a cockpit alarm if the aircraft was in danger. It is required in medical helicopter­s but not in commercial helicopter­s like the one used by Bryant.

The crash Sunday that killed the basketball superstar and eight others has highlighte­d the debate over the merits of the system, which some pilots believe is unnecessar­y and refer to its warnings as “nuisance alarms.”

Peter Goelz, a former managing director of the NTSB, said there is “no reasonable excuse” for the system not to be installed on all choppers.

“From a safety perspectiv­e, you want all the safety enhancemen­ts that are available,” he said. “The trade-off is worth it.”

The NTSB recommende­d that the Federal Aviation Administra­tion require the system after a Sikorsky S-76A carrying workers to an offshore drilling ship, crashed in the Gulf of Mexico near Galveston, Texas, killing all 10 people aboard in 2004. Ten years later, the FAA mandated such systems on air ambulances only.

FAA officials had questioned the value of such technology on helicopter­s, which tend to fly close to buildings and the ground and could trigger too many alarms that might distract the pilot.

The pilot in Sunday’s crash, Ara Zobayan, had been climbing out of the clouds when the chartered aircraft went into a sudden and terrifying 1,200foot (366-meter) descent that lasted nearly a minute, investigat­ors said Tuesday. It slammed into a fogshroude­d hillside, scattering debris more than 500 feet (150 meters).

Bill English, investigat­or in charge of the NTSB’s Major Investigat­ions Division, said it was not clear yet whether “TAWS and this scenario are related to each other.”

Pilot Bernard Raysor said the systems have improved over the years so they don’t always go off all the time, and one of them may have prevented him from crashing as he and another pilot were trying to land on a hospital helipad in Little Rock, Arkansas, over a decade ago.

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