The recent accident in Houston is just the latest noteworthy instance in what a major New York Times investigation this summer determined to be an alarming pattern of safety lapses and near misses in the skies and on the runways in the USA. According to internal records of the Federal Aviation Agency, the Times reported that these safety lapses and near misses occurred as a result of human error. The Times report further revealed that runway incursions of the sort described above have nearly doubled, from 987 to 1732, despite the widespread proliferation of advanced technologies.
A follow-up report by the Times revealed that Austins airport alone has experienced so many close calls as a result of air traffic controller error that a pilot proclaimed, Theyre trying to kill us in Austin. One such incident involved an air traffic controller clearing a FedEx cargo plane to land on a runway just as a Southwest Airlines jet was set to take off on the same runway. The air traffic controller in question said the Southwest jet would take off before the FedEx plane got too close, though the two planes ended up just seconds from colliding, with the FedEx plane skimming less than 100 feet over the Southwest jet, whose 128 passengers had no clue how narrowly they just escaped death.