Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Dallas air show crash may lead to more safety rules

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DALLAS — While the cause of a deadly collision between two vintage military aircraft at a Dallas air show to commemorat­e Veterans Day remains unknown, experts said Monday that the accident will likely renew discussion over whether additional safety rules are needed for such events.

Safety recommenda­tions made following aircraft accidents at similar events have focused on protecting spectators, pilot medical fitness and aircraft maintenanc­e.

“The (Federal Aviation Administra­tion) has tightened airshow requiremen­ts. This will certainly raise the debate again,” said Steven Wallace, former director of the FAA’s office of accident investigat­ions.

On Monday, officials identified the six men killed Saturday when a World War II-era bomber and a fighter plane collided and crashed in a ball of flames at the Commemorat­ive Air Force Wings Over Dallas show. All six were experience­d aviators with years of flight training, including as current and retired airline pilots and retired military pilots.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board is leading the investigat­ion into why the aircraft were flying at the same altitude and in the same air space, NTSB member Michael Graham said.

The Commemorat­ive Air Force, which put on the show, identified the victims as: Terry Barker, Craig Hutain, Kevin “K5” Michels, Dan Ragan, Leonard “Len” Root, and Curt Rowe.

All of the men were volunteers, but each had gone through a strict process of logging hours and training flights and were vetted carefully, Hank Coates, the CEO of Commemorat­ive Air Force said at a weekend news conference.

Officials have not publicly identified which of them were piloting the aircrafts.

Mr. Hutain, of Montgomery, Texas, had been a commercial airline pilot since 1985. He started flying at the age of 10 and had logged more than 34,500 flight hours, according to his LinkedIn page.

In a recent interview with Vintage Aviation News posted on YouTube, Mr. Hutain described aviation as a “lifelong obsession” passed down from his father, a bomber pilot in World War II.

Mr. Barker was a retired pilot who had worked for American Airlines and lived in Keller, Texas. He was an Army veteran who flew helicopter­s during his military service.

Mr. Rowe, a member of the Ohio Wing Civil Air Patrol, was a crew chief on the B-17, his brother-in-law Andy Keller told The Associated Press on Sunday. Mr. Rowe, of Hilliard, Ohio, participat­ed in air shows several times a year because he loved WWII aircraft, Mr. Keller said.

Mr. Root, also from Keller, was a pilot and manager for the Gulf Coast Wing of the Commemorat­ive Air Force who worked as a contract commercial pilot, according to his LinkedIn page.

There were no reports of injuries on the ground and that can probably be attributed to a “very careful evaluation over the decades” by the NTSB and FAA to protect spectators, said former NTSB investigat­or and safety author Alan Diehl.

Jeff Guzzetti, a pilot who spent more than 30 years investigat­ing aircraft accidents for the NTSB and FAA, said while much of the regulatory focus over the decades has been on protecting spectators, other recommenda­tions have led to incrementa­l, cumulative safety improvemen­ts in emergency response, pilot medical fitness and aircraft maintenanc­e at air shows.

John Cudahy, president of the Internatio­nal Council of Air Shows, a trade group that sets air show standards, said his group and others don’t typically get many recommenda­tions from the FAA or the NTSB following such accidents because they don’t tend to result from systemic or procedural problems, or gross negligence.

“When they do make a recommenda­tion, we listen very attentivel­y. We are very collaborat­ive,” Mr. Cudahy said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress and a Bell P-63 Kingcobra collide in midair Saturday during an airshow at Dallas Executive Airport in Dallas.
Associated Press A Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress and a Bell P-63 Kingcobra collide in midair Saturday during an airshow at Dallas Executive Airport in Dallas.

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