Las Vegas Review-Journal

Engine issue spurs FAA fine for Allegiant

- The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Federal safety regulators have proposed a fine of more than $715,000 against Allegiant Air, saying the discount airline failed to fix an engine that put out hotter-than-normal exhaust fumes.

Allegiant said Friday that it followed a procedure approved by the manufactur­er and the government.

The incident happened in April 2018 with one of the McdonnellD­ouglas MD-88 planes that Allegiant since has retired.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion said that after a takeoff in

Virginia, Allegiant properly turned off the automatic reverse thrust system on the engine, as recommende­d by the manufactur­er.

But rather than taking the next step of finding the reason that the exhaust gas was too hot, Allegiant deactivate­d the jet’s reverse thrust system and operated 28 flights over the next eight days, the FAA said.

Allegiant said it followed a procedure developed by Mcdonnelld­ouglas — now part of Boeing Co. — and later approved by the FAA.

The airline’s handling of the incident

“never jeopardize­d the safety of our aircraft or our operations,” Allegiant spokeswoma­n Sonya Padgett said. “We believe the proposed fine is inappropri­ate and inconsiste­nt with existing FAA policy.”

The FAA countered that it told Allegiant in 2017 not to deactivate an MD-80’S functionin­g automatic reverse thrust system unless the system itself was causing overly hot exhaust, as something else could be causing the high temperatur­es.

The Las Vegas-based carrier has 30 days to respond to the FAA’S allegation­s, which are civil and not a criminal matter. Airlines often negotiate down the size of proposed penalties.

In recent years, Allegiant has faced

stepped-up scrutiny from the FAA and criticism from safety advocates after aborted takeoffs and a high rate of in-flight mechanical problems. The FAA has taken no action against Allegiant, however, saying it was satisfied that it was dealing with problems inspectors found.

Allegiant’s rate of breakdowns appeared to be related partly to the age of its fleet, especially the Md-80series jets, which were nearly 30 years old on average.

Older planes can be operated safely, but they tend to burn more fuel and require more maintenanc­e. Allegiant retired its last MD-80S in November, replacing them with newer Airbus jets.

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