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Sun, May 09, 2004

AOPA ASF Report: Record Low for GA Accidents

Annual Nall Report shows record low for single year accidents

General aviation pilots set a record low for the number of accidents in a single year, according to the AOPA Air Safety Foundation's annual Joseph T. Nall General Aviation Safety Report. The nation's most comprehensive examination of general aviation (GA) safety and GA accident trends is now available online. Printed copies will begin shipping soon.

The ASF study is based on National Transportation Safety Board reports on accidents during 2002 involving fixed-wing GA aircraft weighing less than 12,500 pounds - the majority of the GA fleet. Its findings are all the more encouraging because the low number of accidents eclipses the previous record set in 2001 when most of GA was effectively grounded for an extended period in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks.

"But there is a downside to the report," said ASF Executive Director Bruce Landsberg. "Accidents that simply should not happen - those due to fuel mismanagement and flights into bad weather, mostly under VFR - continue." Pilot-related causes account for approximately three-quarters of all GA accidents. Mechanical failure or error accounts for another 18 percent.

"In every form of human activity involving machinery, the hardware is
invariably more reliable than the human operator," the report says. "This does not mean that accidents are inevitable, nor does it mean that just by trying harder, or by adding multiple layers of regulation, the safety record will improve significantly. It does mean that a thoughtful approach to every flight by every pilot with a realistic assessment of risk and appropriate training is essential."

Report highlights three areas of continuing concern and disproves two common myths

Just three phases of flight - takeoff, landing, and maneuvering - account for two-thirds of all pilot-related GA accidents, and nearly half of all fatal accidents. Maneuvering flight - especially low-level maneuvering - remains the one phase of flight that produces the greatest number of fatal accidents. More than half of all accidents that occur during maneuvering flight involve fatalities.

Weather-related accidents have the highest probability of fatalities, with continued VFR flight into instrument meteorological conditions (IMC) the most deadly subset of all weather-related causes. While continued flight into IMC accounts for less than two percent of all GA accidents, nearly all of those end in fatalities.

This year's Nall Report findings also debunked two popular non-pilot myths. The chances of a person on the ground being hurt or killed by a GA aircraft are almost non-existent. In 2002, only nine off-airport accidents caused injuries to people on the ground: three of those involved fatalities. And the common public misconception that a light aircraft crash is tantamount to a death sentence was also dispelled. The vast majority of accidents in 2002 were fatality-free, as has been the case every year since modern record-keeping began in 1938.

Nall Report findings guide AOPA Air Safety Foundation education efforts

Data in of the Nall Report guides the AOPA Air Safety Foundation as it develops safety seminars, interactive online programs, videos and printed Safety Advisors. For instance, the recent Maneuvering Flight seminar was a direct result of findings in last year's Nall Report. A complete listing of ASF safety seminars and downloadable Safety Advisors are available online.

"The Nall Report findings and the raw data that support them always raise a number of questions," said Landsberg. "If pilots continue to make the same mistakes, do we need to change training methods? Looking at the fatality statistics, most low level maneuvering flight and many VFR into IMC accidents are not skill- or knowledge-based, but rather errors in judgment. Should we expect the training community to tackle what may be largely a psychological problem?

Financial support for the Nall Report comes from the Emil Buehler Trust and pilot donors to the AOPA Air Safety Foundation. To request a printed copy of the report, call 1-800-638-3101, or write to the AOPA Air Safety Foundation, 421 Aviation Way, Frederick, Md., 21701.

FMI: www.asf.org, www.aopa.org/asf/publications/03nall.pdf

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