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HOOFDDORP, The Netherlands, July 3 /PRNewswire/ -- Despite all the promises and promotional videos, the European
Union's regulation of the aviation industry has now hit an all time low
placing passengers at an unacceptable level of risk. With 2009 rapidly
becoming one of the worst accident periods for many years including the
recent tragic events resulting in loss of life, any weaknesses within the
European Aviation Authorities and the EU only serve to promote unsafe
practices.
As a result, documented evidence confirms that commercially
operated aircraft are, on a daily basis, flying with defects that have not
been properly assessed. The consequence is to deliberately pass on the
increased risk factor to the unwitting fare paying passenger. AEI believes
however that a passenger purchasing an airline ticket does so in the belief
that airline's take their safety responsibilities seriously.
With maintenance budgets coming second only to fuel, airlines
are becoming ever more desperate to cut costs. This often involves deviation
from maintenance regulations when away from a maintenance base often by
placing flight crews under pressure to diagnose unserviceable aircraft
themselves although completely unqualified to do so.
Aircraft, of course, can be permitted to fly with certain
defects, but only after following strict procedures which includes proper
defect diagnosis by a qualified engineer prior to consulting the
manufacturers dispatch deviation guide, the so called Minimum Equipment List
(MEL).
This is endorsed by aircraft manufacturer's recommendations relating to
the use of the MEL such as:
The aim of the MEL is not to encourage aircraft operation with
inoperative equipment, because it is not desirable for an aircraft to be
dispatched in these conditions, and such a situation is permitted only as a
result of careful analysis. The MEL should, therefore, be consulted on the
ground, and only when a failure has been identified and confirmed.
AEI believes the flying public should be both protected from
and made aware of such maintenance malpractices. Safety can only be
guaranteed as long as airlines strictly comply with airworthiness
requirements which include the proper diagnosis of defects by qualified
engineers before any flight continues.
Commercial considerations must not be allowed, under any
circumstances, to take precedent over flight safety issues. AEI cannot
condone airlines using passenger safety as a hollow marketing slogan whilst
undermining safety in areas normally hidden from passengers. Passenger safety
must be paramount as aircraft are replaceable, human life is not.
http://www.airengineers.org
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