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NTSB Hearings End On SWA Midway Overrun Accident

"We Never Talk About Any Of That Stuff..."

They're over: two days of hearings into a deadly mishap at Midway airport, where a Southwest Airlines Boeing 737-700 ran off the end of the runway and onto a busy Chicago street.

It happened on December 8, 2005... a snowy night in Chicago. In fact, Flight 1248 didn't take off from Baltimore on time because of weather delays in Chicago.

Once airborne, the condition of the runways at Midway was a topic for frequent discussion between Captain Bruce Sutherland and First Officer Steven Oliver along the way.

There was a lot of radio chatter between Flight 1248 and the ground on that topic as well.

"Wow. Wooo. If it's poor it's scary," Oliver told Sutherland about Midway's runway conditions midway into the flight.

"I ain't doin' it," replied Sutherland, a 26-year career pilot in the Air Force pilot, before joining Southwest in 1995. At 59, he was one year shy of the FAA-mandated retirement age at the time of the accident.

As Aero-News reported Tuesday, the reported condition of Midway's Runway 31-Center waivered throughout the flight, between "poor" to "good," with variable tailwinds. As a result... the crew got various stories about the slickness of the runway... all of them subjective.

Mark Rosenker is acting Chairman of the NTSB. In an exclusive interview with Aero-News... he says that's one aspect of the accident that will clearly get a lot of attention as the safety board digests what it's heard over the past two days.

"We had, I think, a very productive hearing," Rosenker (above) said. "We haven't done the specific analysis yet... so we have to take a look specifically and analyze what the cockpit voice recorder said, analyze any of the commuications between the airport and the cockpit crwew, and recognize what dispatch provided."

 
Listen To ANN's Exclusive Interview With Acting NTSB Chairman Mark Rosenker

 

Rosenker added the NTSB has not yet determined the exact conditions of the runway on that fateful December night -- but in an eerie foreshadowing of what was to come, the pilots discussed en route to Chicago what could happen if the plane failed to stop in time.

"No procedure if that sucker fails when you touch down?" Oliver asks Sutherland, speaking of the plane's automatic braking system, which the pilots were to use for the first time. "We just go through the fence? We never talk about any of that stuff, ya know?"

Sadly, we all know how Flight 1248 ended... with a Boeing 737 skidding down a snow-slicked runway, heading for a blast fence... and a busy roadway.

"Come on, baby. ... Son of a [expletive]," the captain blurted out, according to the transcript of the CVR released Tuesday, and reported by the Chicago Tribune.

"Jump on the brakes, are ya?" First Officer Steven Oliver yelled back.

And, in the most poignant statement on the CVR... "Oh, no, a car."

Sutherland shouted that moments before the 737-700 overran the end of the runway... and struck the car that six-year-old Joshua Woods was riding in. Woods was killed in the accident.

The NTSB is expected to take the information gathered in this week's hearing, and use it to determine the probable cause of the accident.

FMI: www.ntsb.gov, www.southwest.com

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