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Mon, Jun 19, 2006

NTSB Announce Public Hearing On Cargo Flight Safety

Part Of February UPS Inflight Fire Investigation

Aero-News has learned the National Transportation Safety Board will convene a two-day hearing on July 12 & 13, 2006, to consider safety issues surrounding cargo aircraft and the potential risks of transporting cargo such as lithium batteries. The hearing is part of the board's ongoing investigation into the fire onboard a United Parcel Service (UPS) DC-8 at Philadelphia International Airport (PHL) earlier this year.

"The public hearing will focus on an accident that occurred on a cargo plane that caught fire while carrying potentially dangerous goods," said Deborah Hersman, the designated chairwoman for the hearing. "We will examine this topic to determine what needs to be done to protect the crew, the aircraft, and the cargo on these types of flights."

As Aero-News reported, on February 8 the UPS airplane landed at PHL after the crew reported a cargo smoke indication. The three flightcrew members received minor injuries, and fire caused substantial damage to the airplane and numerous cargo containers on board.

During the two-day hearing representatives from the NTSB, Federal Aviation Administration, UPS, Boeing, and the Independent Pilots Association will gather information from industry and government representatives on several topics including Airport Rescue and Firefighting response to the UPS accident; the design, testing and recalls of lithium batteries; regulations concerning the shipping of lithium batteries; and aircraft fire detection and suppression systems.

Information from the hearing will be used by the Safety Board to prepare a final report on the accident, including safety recommendations aimed at preventing similar accidents in the future.

FMI: www.ntsb.gov

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