After a 15-month investigation into the emergency landing of a US Airways plane on the Hudson River last year, the National Transportation Safety Board is urging airlines to improve the way they handle water landings. If adopted, the overhaul of emergency systems would be the most far-reaching change in plane safety equipment and procedures in 25 years, the Wall Street Journal reports.
The NTSB recommended both life vests and seat cushion flotation devices on all passenger planes and better emergency instructions before takeoff. Investigators also concluded that, if boats had not responded quickly after the US Airways jet hit the Hudson, fatalities would have been likely because of insufficient procedures and guidelines on what to do once a plane is in the water.
The board’s recommendations are not mandatory, and carrying life vests on all planes has been shot down before by industry as too expensive, the Journal reports.



[...] Safety Board: Planes Need Better Emergency Equipment, Procedures [...]