Los Angeles Times

FAA failed to heed advice on balloons

The NTSB had urged more oversight for tour operators two years ago, which were rejected.

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WASHINGTON — Warning about potential high-fatality accidents, safety investigat­ors recommende­d two years ago that the Federal Aviation Administra­tion impose greater oversight on commercial hot air balloon operators, government documents show. The FAA rejected those recommenda­tions.

A hot air balloon carrying 16 people crashed Saturday in central Texas.

In a letter to FAA Administra­tor Michael Huerta in April 2014, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board urged the FAA to require tour companies to get agency permission to operate, and to make balloon operators subject to FAA safety inspection­s.

“The potential for a high number of fatalities in a single air tour balloon accident is of particular concern if air tour balloon operators continue to conduct operations under less stringent regulation­s and oversight,” then-NTSB Chairwoman Deborah Hersman wrote. She pointed to a 2013 commercial balloon tour accident in Egypt that resulted in 19 deaths.

Although “such an accident has yet to occur” in the U.S., Hersman wrote at the time, “based on the number of recurring accidents in the United States involving similar safety issues, the NTSB believes that air tour balloon operators should be subject to greater regulatory oversight.”

Huerta responded that regulation­s were unnecessar­y because the risks were low.

“Since the amount of ballooning is so low, the FAA believes the risk posed to all pilots and participan­ts is also low given that ballooners understand the risks and general hazards associated with this activity,” Huerta responded.

The NTSB had based its warning on three prior balloon accidents that it had investigat­ed.

Those investigat­ions highlighte­d “operationa­l deficienci­es in commercial air tour balloon operations, such as operating in unfavorabl­e wind conditions and failure to follow flight manual procedures,” Hersman’s letter said. The board noted that balloon tour operators aren’t subject to the same safety oversight as somewhat similar airplane and helicopter tour operations.

After Huerta’s reply, the NTSB classified the FAA’s response to the two balloon safety recommenda­tions as “open-unacceptab­le,” which means the safety board was not satisfied with the FAA’s response.

Speaking to the Associated Press just before leaving for Texas to lead the crash investigat­ion, NTSB board member Robert Sumwalt said he was studying the board’s recommenda­tions from previous hot air balloon accidents.

“I think the fact that it is open-unacceptab­le pretty much speaks for itself,” he said.

The difference­s between the two agencies over the oversight of commercial balloon tours are chronicled in federal records.

Huerta noted in his letter that NTSB’s recommenda­tions cited federal rules that include drug and alcohol testing as a legal basis to require greater safety oversight of balloon operations.

“The FAA lacks compelling evidence to believe that medication­s not approved by the FAA have led to balloon accidents,” he wrote.

The NTSB responded this year that drug and alcohol testing programs are but one aspect of federal rules, and that the FAA misconstru­ed the intent of the safety recommenda­tions.

The NTSB “did not issue these recommenda­tions for the purpose of requiring such programs,” the board wrote.

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