Houston Chronicle

FAA to Southwest: Fix baggage weight math

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Federal officials have told Southwest Airlines to fix the way it calculates the weight of luggage loaded on flights after finding frequent mistakes during a yearlong investigat­ion.

Southwest said Tuesday that it has made improvemen­ts in its methods for calculatin­g the weight and balance of loads, and that it isn’t facing enforcemen­t action.

The airline said that it voluntaril­y reported the issue to the Federal Aviation Administra­tion last year.

The FAA investigat­ion was first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

The newspaper said internal FAA documents showed that the airline made frequent mistakes in calculatio­ns and luggage-loading practices that could cause errors when pilots compute their plane’s takeoff weight.

Southwest crews count bags they load and use an average weight to calculate the load. The FAA found cases in which the bag load was more than 1,000 pounds heavier than paperwork indicated, the newspaper reported. FAA inspectors believed pilots might respond incorrectl­y to an engine emergency if they had inaccurate informatio­n about the distributi­on of weight between front and rear cargo bays.

An FAA spokesman told the Associated Press that the agency opened an investigat­ion in February 2018. Since then, he said, the FAA directed the airline to develop a comprehens­ive fix to the methods and processes it uses to determine baggage weight.

Southwest, based in Dallas, asked the agency to close the investigat­ion. The FAA said the agency won’t do so until regulators are satisfied that Southwest’s correction­s are being applied consistent­ly.

Southwest sought to downplay the investigat­ion, saying that a so-called open letter of investigat­ion is a common way for the FAA to discuss safety issues with an airline.

Since the investigat­ion started, the airline’s publicity department said in a statement, “Southwest has implemente­d controls and enhanced procedures to address our weight and balance program concerns, and we’ve shared those measures with the FAA.”

Southwest believes that changes it made throughout last year “have enhanced our weight and balance program and resolved the issues that we originally reported to the FAA.”

Southwest, which carries more passengers within the United States than any airline, disputed an estimate that one-third of its flights took off after faulty calculatio­ns of the weight of checked bags, but it declined to give a figure.

No passenger had died in an accident on Southwest until last April when a piece from a broken engine smashed into a window on the plane and a passenger was partially pulled through it. The accident led to stepped-up inspection of fan blades on certain engines used by Southwest and other carriers.

The airline, however, has been fined for safety violations. Notably, Southwest agreed in 2009 to pay $7.5 million to settle FAA allegation­s that it operated 46 planes without performing required inspection­s for possible cracks in the planes’ aluminum skin.

 ?? Ted S. Warren / Associated Press ?? Southwest crews count bags they load and use an average weight to calculate the load, a method with which the FAA takes issue.
Ted S. Warren / Associated Press Southwest crews count bags they load and use an average weight to calculate the load, a method with which the FAA takes issue.

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