WASHINGTON — National Transportation Safety Board members were deeply troubled Tuesday over years of ignored warnings about helicopter traffic dangers and other problems, long before an American Airlines jet and an Army Black Hawk collided a year ago, killing 67 people near Washington, D.C.
A helicopter route in the approach path of a Reagan National Airport runway created a dangerous airspace and irregular safety reviews made it worse, the board said. That was a key factor in the crash along with air traffic overly relying on asking helicopter pilots to avoid aircraft.
The Federal Aviation Administration took steps to address those major concerns not long after the crash, but throughout the daylong hearing, investigators emphasized the history of unaddressed risks. Those include the FAA denying a regional supervisor's 2023 request to reduce air traffic at Reagan and failures to relocate the helicopter route or warn pilots more after an eerily similar near miss in 2013.
NTSB Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy made no apology for her occasionally stern tone.
''We should be angry. This was 100% preventable. We've issued recommendations in the past that were applicable to use. We have talked about seeing and avoid for well over five decades. It's shameful. I don't want to be here years from now looking at other families that had to suffer such devastating loss.''
Families watch for accountability
Family members listened intently during the hearing. Some were escorted out, including two in tears, as they saw an animation recreating some of final moments of their loved ones' lives. Others wore black shirts bearing the names of first responder units.
''The negligence of not fixing things that needed to be fixed killed my brother and 66 other people,'' Kristen Miller-Zahn, who watched from the front row, said during a break.