break
Jul 18

From Folha Online today: The Governor of São Paulo, José Serra, has already ordered a criminal investigation of the accident, by the State Prosecutors’ Office and the Civil Police, he says he expects the aviation sector authorities to investigate the case as well.
From a statement by the International Federation of Air Line Pilots Associations (IALPA) criticizing the criminalization of the Sept. 29 accident as “fundamentally flawed:”
“IFALPA believes that in any accident it is vital that an independent technical investigation carried out by experts in air accident investigation must be completed before any criminal or civil action is pursued. To pre-empt the results of a expert technical investigation with a judicial investigation which may not be technically competent is counter productive to improvement of air safety.”
Also see this 2002 report for the National Transportation Safety Bar Association on the dangers of criminalizing an aviation accident unless clear criminal intent is evident from the start.
(For clarity, I’m posting this on this blog as well as on my separate Brazil blog because I’m having nothing but trouble with the Blogger typography on the Brazil blog, which won’t let me do paragraph separations.)
–end
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Jul 17

From AP reports:

SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) - A plane carrying at least 150 people crashed after landing at Sao Paulo’s Congonhas Airport Tuesday, Brazil’s airport authority said.
The TAM Airline Airbus-320 apparently skidded off the runway and crashed into buildings outside the airport, said Jose Leonardi Mota, a spokesman with airport authority Infraero.

–end

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Jul 17

As the scapegoating of the American pilots grinds on, the Brazilian congress is releasing its own voluminous report on the Sept. 29 crash. One small nugget of what to expect: One of the American pilots says to his co-pilot, “No, go ahead.” And it’s translated in Brazil as “Don’t proceed.”

See today’s post on my Brazil blog.

–end

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Jul 16

Michael Chertoff, the Homeland Security boss, told us he had a “gut feeling” that something was going to happen, and it did. I am presuming ABCNews.com’s hyper-vigilant “Blotter” was on the, er, case.

Concourse F at Miami International Airport was shut down for 90 minutes this morning when alert authorities found that a checked bag contained a cardboard box holding the ashes of a passenger’s loved one.

”Our officers are highly trained to look for what we call IEDs, or improvised explosive devices,” Sari Koshetz, a TSA spokeswoman, told the Miami Herald.

She told the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, “In an abundance of caution, we went through our proper security protocol, which we cordoned off a safe zone around the bag, called the bomb squad and made sure the public remained safe.”

The ashes, or what we call remains, were not charged.

By the way, the T.S.A., after being lobbied by the funeral industry, firmly addressed the issue of carrying cremated remains on an airplane in 2004. You don’t even have to put them in checked bags. You’re supposed to be able to even carry them on with you, without Our Security Guardians getting the heebie-jeebies and shutting the airport down in a panic and calling out the bomb squad.

From the operative 2004 T.S.A. press release:

“WASHINGTON, D.C – The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) today announced a partnership with the nation’s funeral homes to ensure that cremated remains are safely and securely transported through airport security checkpoints.

‘Americans have recognized the need for measures that have dramatically increased aviation security since the events of September 11th,’ said Ron Sokolov, Executive Director for Customer Service and Education. ‘As more Americans transport cremated remains, TSA and the nation’s funeral homes are striving to educate the public on the best method to move cremated remains through checkpoints in a manner that is both respectful to loved ones and secure.’

To maintain the highest level of security, TSA determined that documentation from a funeral home about the contents of a crematory container was no longer sufficient to allow the container through a security checkpoint and onto a plane.

Since February of this year [2004], all crematory containers must pass through an X-ray machine. If a container is made of a material that prevents screeners from clearly seeing what is inside, the container will not be allowed through the checkpoint. Out of respect for the deceased, screeners will not open a container, even if requested by the passenger.

TSA recommends that passengers transport remains in temporary or permanent ’security friendly’ containers constructed of light-weight materials such as plastic or wood. Temporary containers are typically available from funeral homes and offer a security friendly means to travel by air with a crematory container.

Once the passengers complete their travel, they can visit their local TSA’s Funeral Home Partner who will transfer the remains from the temporary container to the permanent container free of charge. The complimentary ‘Remains Transfer Service’ has been embraced by the funeral industry and already many funeral homes have requested to become partners in this important customer service effort.”

–End

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Jul 13

A congressional draft report calls for more serious charges to be filed against the two American pilots already charged in the Sept. 29 crash over the Amazon. See my Brazil blog.

–end

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Jul 12

Kate Hanni

In the past, I’ve been pretty careful about not using the word “tarmac” to describe the ramps and around airport gates and the taxiways beyond.

The only time I have used it is in a quote, and even then, I get angry e-mails from scolds who tell me (I know, I kn0w) that tarmac is a paving material (I would assume one of those unfortunate products that’s lost its trademark through generic overuse).

But every pilot I talk to, and I’ve been talking to a lot lately, uses the word “tarmac.”

And so the headline stands. Tarmac. Yes, I know it’s a paving material.

Kate Hanni uses it, as in “We were stuck on the tarmac for over eight hours” and “They were stuck on the tarmac for 10 hours.”

In her case, it was in Austin in late December, when weather diverted scores of American Airlines planes from Dallas and sent them to alternate airports in the region, where many of them sat for five hours and more with no access to a departure gate. Food ran out, toilets overflowed, people got sick.

Yada yada. By now, you know the story because it’s been repeated so often in airports all over the country in the last six months: Passengers stranded for 4,6,8 10 and even 12 hours on planes that just sit there, unable to find a gate or return to one, while the airline does nothing.

The airlines say they can’t do much, because there is no slack in the system, especially when weather (or anything that can be remotely blamed on weather) causes planes to pile up on departure, or diverts them from a hub to an outlying airport, or causes the airline to cancel a flight outright. Flight cancellations have been running at record levels recently, and overall delays are worse by far than ever.

With “no slack” in the system (and most airplanes are now flying with every seat full) the airlines say, if we let you off the plane waiting in Austin we lose our place in line for takeoff — and you might end up spending a night or two in the airport, in a Red Cross cot if you’re lucky, till another seat becomes available. Plus it costs us money, and we’re barely profitable, the airlines say.

As an economic argument, that has some validity, given the stripped-down, short-circuited air-traffic system the airlines have rendered unto us.

But with the sheer volume of stranded passengers and their colorful experiences being held hostage to an airline’s operational convenience, the economic is becoming the political. There is growing clamor for federal legislation to address the problem because the airlines, on their own, have no desire, or incentive, to.

After all, they’re already sold out. What do they care.

“The airlines have no intention of making a firm commitment of when they need to let people off a plane. Period,” says Ms. Hanni, whose husband, Tim Hanni, is a world known wine and food expert.

After being stranded so long in December, Kate basically quit her Napa, Calif., real estate business and began rounding up a posse. She has worked full time, unpaid, as a grassroots organizer pushing for a federal passenger bill of rights.

There is some momentum. Watered-down versions of a passengers bill of rights are lumbering along in both the House and the Senate, with supporters trying to navigate around the legislative IEDs the airline lobbyists are energetically planting along the way.

Gone missing from those bills is the key provision in the draft legislation that Ms. Hanni and her fellow-travelers want: A requirement that says an airline must let passengers off after they’ve been stuck on a parked plane for more than three hours.

Too expensive to even consider adding enough ground and operational capacity to accommodate that onerous requirement, the airlines and their friends in Congress say. That would mean adding costs to the system — higher fares! It’s common wisdom that higher fares is a non-starter.

“None of us have said we wouldn’t mind paying a little more for a ticket,” Ms. Hanni says. “All we’re saying is let us off the damned plane.”

The most recent time I spoke to her was the other day, when she was in Washington again, working the halls of Congress. Since January, Ms. Hanni has made 13 trips from San Francisco to Washington. Suppporters sometimes chip in for her fare and a cheap hotel that now knows her well and looks after her.

Throught sheer dint of personality, Ms. Hanni has got herself frequetly on national television, on cable news, on radio and in many newspapers since I first spoke to her in January.

This much exposure comes with a risk, I know. Editors become wary of the amateur with a cause who appears to crave the the spotlight a wee bit, though God knows they don’t seem to be wary of the profesional media gas-bags who keep showing up bloviating on this or that, ad infinitum. I mean, Jayzus, would someone please explain George Will to me?

And let someone like Kate Hanni laboriously hack her way into the congressional jungle on a populist hot-button issue like stranded passengers, and sure enough a safari of dissipated Naderites will be following along in their harrumphing, baggage-ladden band-wagon, hopelessly confusing everyone as to what’s up. And the next thing you know, the legislation has a provision demanding the immediate release from prison of the Philadelphia cop-killer and crackpot chronic cause celebre Mumia Abu Jamal.

So let’s give Ms. Hanni an opportunity for some clarity.

If you’re interested in the issue, she and her compatriots pushing for a passengers bill of rights have two online sites. One is strandedpassengers.blogspot.com and the other is Flyersrights.com There’s more information on the Blogspot one.

Here is the text of the proposed (and now battered-in-Congress) legislation:

“All American air carriers shall abide by the following standards to ensure the safety, security and comfort of their passengers:

–Establish procedures to respond to all passenger complaints within 24 hours and with appropriate resolution within 2 weeks.

–Notify passengers within ten minutes of a delay of known diversions, delays and cancellations via airport overhead announcement, on aircraft announcement, and posting on airport television monitors.

–Establish procedures for returning passengers to terminal gate when delays occur so that no plane sits on the tarmac for longer than three hours without connecting to a gate.

–Provide for the essential needs of passengers during air- or ground-based delays of longer than 3 hours, including food, water, sanitary facilities, and access to medical attention.

–Provide for the needs of disabled, elderly and special needs passengers by establishing procedures for assisting with the moving and retrieving of baggage, and the moving of passengers from one area of airport to another at all times by airline personnel.

–Publish and update monthly on the company’s public web site a list of chronically delayed flights, meaning those flight delayed thirty minutes or more, at least forty percent of the time, during a single month.

–Compensate “bumped” passengers or passengers delayed due to flight cancellations or postponements of over 12 hours by refund of 150% of ticket price.

–The formal implementation of a Passenger Review Committee, made up of non-airline executives and employees but rather passengers and consumers – that would have the formal ability to review and investigate complaints.

–Make lowest fare information, schedules and itineraries, cancellation policies and frequent flyer program requirements available in an easily accessed location and updated in real-time.

–Ensure that baggage is handled without delay or injury; if baggage is lost or misplaced, the airline shall notify customer of baggage status within 12 hours and provide compensation equal to current market value of baggage and its contents.

–Require that these rights apply equally to all airline code-share partners including international partners.”

Meanwhile, a bill to address in-cabin health and safety on stranded planes was introduced in the New York State legislature by Assemblyman Michael Gianaris and moved quickly through passage in both houses. It is now headed to the Governor, who is expected to sign it.

A state can’t legislate certain things, like when an airline must let people go. It’s limited in scope to clear health and safety issues, in this case in-cabin conditions. Here is a link to a summary of the New York State bill.

–ends

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Jul 11

Be Very Afraid ….

It’s one damn thing after another, evidently forever and ever.

The airports are starting to look like Red Cross emergency camps as delays and cancelations pile up in the peak travel season.

And here comes Michael Chertoff (right), the Homeland Security secretary, telling the editorial board of the Chicago Tribune that he has a “gut feeling” there’s terror ahead.

That’s a bet you won’t lose money on, I guess.

Cue the Abcnews.com “Blotter” report. (A couple of days ago, I made note of the Blotter’s last exclusive-that-shall-ever-remain-exclusive).

They got another candidate today. The Bad Guys are headed this way! (According to those all-seeing “senior intelligence officials”)

Well, as I always remind myself, a stopped clock is exactly accurate twice a day.

[This morning, the chairman of the House Homeland Security Subcommittee, Rep. Bernie G. Thompson, fired off a letter urging Chertoff to "clarify" that gut feeling. It said in part: "With all the resouces you have at your disposal and all the progress you assure us that you are making, I cannot understand why you are quoted in the Chicago Tribune as saying you have a 'gut feeling' that we are entering a period of heightened risk this summer."

The letter went on: "What sectors should be on alert as a result of your 'gut feeling?' What cities should be asking their law enforcement to work double shifts because of your 'gut feeling?' Are the American people supposed to purchase duct tape and plastic sheeting because of your 'gut feeling'?"]

I mean, Jayzus, how long does this stuff really go on?

So it was with great comic relief today that I turned to the National page of the Times and read (in a deft article by Adam Nossiter) some real insight into Senator David Vitter, the Republican Senator from Louisiana whose phone number turns up on the client list of the so-called “D.C. Madam,” Deborah Jeane Palfrey, who has been accused of running a big and very exclusive prostitution ring in Washington, D.C.

Confronted with the goods, Senator Vitter, who has staked out a couple of acres of prime holy land in the “family values” campground, admitted to a “serious sin” and, naturally, dragged poor God Almighty into the mess. Caught red-handed, the senator said he’d begged God for forgiveness and gotten it.

Since God Almighty was not available to confirm his support of the Senator (I believe He summers in Nantucket and nobody gets that cell-phone number), I was pleased to see the besieged senator firmly defended — this time by a New Orleans madam whose whorehouse was shut down by federal authorities in 2002.

The New Orleans madam, Jeanette Maier, called the senator “one of the nicest and most honorable men I have ever met,” according to the Times, quoting an interview with the madam on a New Orleans television station, WDSU. Their acquaintanship evidently was strictly professional — in that he was, she said, a client in the 1990s.

You can take a tribute like that to the bank, I guess.

Oh, by the way, Senator Vittner is the Southern campaign manager for Rudy Giulianni. Man, this is going to be one fun year. If the Bogeyman don’t git us, that us.

–ends

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Jul 9


Carefully considering his options before deciding whether to fly over Brazil …

Some hokey online poll has come up with a new list of the Seven Wonders of the World, and the usual kitsch postcard images, including the Christ statue overlooking Rio, are on it. Well, the nuns already assured me I was going to hell …

–end

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Jul 8

I’ve heard from people unable to find my current posts on Brazil after I set them aside in a separate blog. Here’s the link, including today’s post. (I haven’t yet been able to figure out how to move the Brazil archives on this blog over to the new one).
Thanks.
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Jul 7

Just Asking (and apologizing for stealing the formula from Jimmy Cannon’s “Nobody Asked Me, But ..” as channeled by Joe Brancatelli) …

Now that summer holiday travel season is lurching along despite every effort of the airlines to make it as difficult as possible, isn’t it about time for some new speculative news hysteria about terrorism? I mean, look at the Matt (”All Links All the Time”) Drudge site today. It’s just sad. That poor nervous boy is reduced to breathlessly linking to items like “Hundreds of goats die in truck crash.”

Where’s the usual holiday hysteria?

Come on, ABCNews.com: what are you, on vacation?

Last holiday time, just before Christmas, as you probably don’t remember (who can keep track of this stuff?), Brian Ross & The Investigative Team on the oft excitable “Blotter” were man-the-battle-stations-full-speed-ahead on one of those Exclusives That Shall Ever Remain Exclusive:

“London Braces for Attack; ‘Miracle’ If There Isn’t One” said the Dec. 21 headline.

Reported The Blotter on Dec. 21, with a slightly softened follow-up the day after:

“‘It will be a miracle is there isn’t a terror attack over the holidays in London,’ a senior American law-enforcement official tells ABCNews.com … ‘It is not a matter of if there will be an attack, but how bad the attack will be,’ an intelligence official tells ABCNews.com.”

And then the exclusive disappeared without a trace. Online hyperventilating means never having to say you’re sorry.

Well, maybe it was a Christmas miracle.

Yeah, I know, seven months later a bunch of psychotic Islamic doctors tried and failed to set off bombs in London (evidently without the assistance of skilled technicians), and a couple of these foiled criminal masterminds then raced up to Glasgow where they drove their bomb-laden car into the wall of an airport terminal. And of course there will be more criminal/terrorist attacks, somewhere, anytime.

But hey, where’s the hype? It’s barely July and I’m already worn out by languid stories on fishing holes and nostalgic essays on families in the firecracker business for many generations, though I am keeping an eye on those creeping, low-key sourced strories about how Iran needs to be taught a lesson next.

But it’s the middle of the summer. Isn’t it time to juice up the hysteria machine?

Trust me, any day now. ABCNews.com is over-due and poor Drudge is sucking wind for links. Depend on it.

Just Asking … Why don’t they report the record highs and lows anymore in the paper? I’m reading lots of stories about heat waves in the West. Oooooo. It’s 112 in Vegas. Hey, it’s summer. It’s a desert.

But when did we start forgetting about about good old Death Valley? According to Weather.com, it was already 106 degrees there at 8 a.m. (”feels like 100,” Weather.com said reassuringly), and the forecast for today’s high is 126 degrees. The 10-day forecast is for daily high temperatures well into the 120s.

Now, I myself love 100-degree heat, and so does my wife. This makes us odd, if not certifiable. We’re perfectly happy in southern Arizona in the summer.

Heat actually makes me want to go clear brush, which is what I often do at our getaway in the Sonoran desert.

It’s the only odd trait I appear to share with our Cowboy President, though I hasten to add that I can actually ride a horse and, unlike Cowboy George, am not the least bit afraid of them. Well, of most of them. I mean, I’m not afraid of horses, even spirited ones, that have been previously trained by somebody else much braver and willing to risk broken bones than I.

Trust me, horses don’t come that way out of the box.

Some horses, “if you ain’t shit-scared afeard of them, there’s something real wrong with your head,” as a wrangler who limped off the rodeo circuit once told me.

But I digress.

Incidentally, did you know that Death Valley-area motels actually do a robust business in the summer, thanks to “heat tourists?” Lots of Brits and Germans come over in July to experience real summertime heat. It’s great fun to watch the Brits glare at the Germans who always get up earlier to stake out the poolside chairs with their towels. Sort of helps you understand World War I better.

Death Valley shares with various other claimants records for the hottest temperatures officially recorded on earth — 134 degrees F. in Death Valley. The supposed world record is 135.9 degreees F. in Al ‘Aziziyah, Libya, in 1922, but you have to wonder who was doing the recording and in what condition.

A guy who works at the Furnace Creek Ranch in Death Valley told me two Julys ago that routine 116-degree days are easy enough to handle, given the extremely low humidity. But once you get into the mid 120s and higher, he said, “it actually scorches your nasal passages” — dry heat or not.

That’s a deal-killer for me. Still, I’m looking at least for the North American record this summer.

And lastly:

Just asking … How come the Funny Pages ain’t the least bit?

–ends

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