题名: |
Aviation Safety: FAA's New Inspection System Offers Promise, but Problems Need to Be Addressed. |
关键词: |
INSPECTION, AVIATION ACCIDENTS, AVIATION SAFETY, AIRCRAFT INDUSTRY, MANAGEMENT, REPORTS, COMMERCIAL AVIATION, AERONAUTICS, TARGETING, AIR TRANSPORTATION, AIR TRAFFIC, PASSENGERS. |
摘要: |
The aviation industry has forecast a potential 66-percent increase in passenger travel from 1999 to 2008. The U.S. aviation accident rate, which has remained relatively constant over the past two decades, must be substantially lowered to avoid escalating numbers of aviation deaths as air traffic increases. A key to reducing the aviation accident rate is for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to have an effective process for inspecting the nation's airline operations. In the past, we and others have expressed concerns about the adequacy of FAA's inspection process to meet that challenge. Concerns about the inspection process focused on unstructured, nonsystematic inspections that produced few reports of safety problems and on the adequacy of inspectors' technical training. These concerns also raised questions about the quality and consistency of the resulting inspection data and their usefulness for conducting analyses and targeting FAA'S resources to the greatest safety risks. FAA has responded to these concerns by redesigning the safety inspection system that it uses to oversee the nation's airlines. FAA began using the revised approach, called the Air Transportation Oversight System (ATOS), for a limited number of airlines during the system's initial implementation on October 1, 1998. Currently, the nation's 10 largest passenger airlines are under ATOS. At your request, we reviewed FAA'S implementation of the new system. |
总页数: |
41 |
报告类型: |
科技报告 |