Fri, Oct 02, 2015
Finds FAA’s Contingency Plans And Security Protocols Were Insufficient At Chicago Air Traffic Control Facilities
The Department of Transportation Inspector General (IG) has released a report requested by Senator Richard J. Durbin and Representatives Bill Foster, Mike Quigley, Tammy Duckworth, Jan Schakowsky, and Dan Lipinski following an investigation into circumstances surrounding a fire at an Air Traffic Control Center in Chicago last year.
According to the report's executive summary, on September 26, 2014, an FAA contract employee deliberately started a fire that destroyed critical equipment at FAA’s Chicago Air Route Traffic Control Center in Aurora, IL. As a result of the damage, Chicago Center was unable to control air traffic for more than 2 weeks, thousands of flights were delayed or cancelled, and aviation stakeholders reportedly lost over $350 million.
The IG's office found that the contingency plans developed by FAA did not adequately address redundancy or resiliency and were insufficient to quickly restore operations after the Chicago fire. Moreover, the damage highlighted weaknesses in FAA’s current air traffic control infrastructure, which has limited flexibility to respond to system failures. In addition, the security protocols in effect at the time of the fire were insufficient to identify, counter, or mitigate the impact of an insider threat. While FAA has completed reviews of its contingency plans and security protocols following the incident, significant work remains to prevent or mitigate the impact of similar events in the future.
The IG made seven recommendations to help FAA improve redundancy and resiliency in the National Airspace System and implement improvements to its operational contingency plans and security protocols. FAA concurred with all seven, and the IG said in the report executive summary that they are considered resolved but open pending completion of planned actions.
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