Air Safety Initiative Launched for Private Pilots

U.S. authorities have launched a program to reduce general-aviation crashes 10 percent by 2018.

As The Wall Street Journal reports, the initiative, which is aimed primarily at private pilots, will include more training as well as more advanced analysis of accident trends to develop better preventive strategies.

The effort by the Federal Aviation Administration is intended to reduce crashes in an area of aviation where accidents have been frustratingly persistent over the past 10 years.

The general-aviation fatal accident rate has remained above 1.1 per 100,000 flight hours since 2001. In 2010, there were 268 such crashes, leading to 457 deaths. In contrast, commercial aviation has had years with no fatal crashes, and its major accident rate hovers around one per 2.5 million flights.

Detailed analysis of airline crashes — carried out by pilot unions, federal officials and outside experts working together — are considered a significant factor behind the 80 percent reduction in U.S. commercial airliner crash rates since the late 1990s. The more thorough crash studies sketched out in the new general-aviation safety initiative are intended to do the same.

The FAA will start its general-aviation initiative by dispatching 3,120 employees and volunteers to contact private pilots about the effort. But unlike commercial safety initiatives, the new  training and other safety improvements will be voluntary.

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