WASHINGTON - Southwest Airlines flew planes past safety inspection deadlines. Two United Airlines jets skidded off a runway because of faulty wiring. A US Airways flight lost a chunk of a wing in midflight.
Those were among the recent safety lapses that Rep. Jim Oberstar, D-Minn., on Thursday demanded that the airline industry and its regulators in the Bush administration explain. The chairman of the House Transportation Committee blasted the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for what he called its "cozy" relationship with the nation's airline industry during a hearing on Capitol Hill.
"This is the most egregious lapse in safety at the FAA in 23 years," Oberstar said. "Complacency has set in at the highest levels in FAA management."
Oberstar's broadside was only the latest in a string of ringing critiques of the Bush administration, elevating him as one of its harshest critics. Recently, Oberstar has also been critical of the National Transportation Safety Board's investigation of the Interstate 35W bridge collapse.
Oberstar's investigation of airline safety has grabbed Washington's attention like none of his previous assaults.
Witnesses at the hearing included current and former FAA employees and some of the airline industry's major players, including Herb Kelleher, executive chairman of Southwest Airlines, and Gary Kelly, its CEO. Last month, news broke that Southwest was flying planes past scheduled FAA inspections, in violation of government requirements.
"I think the FAA has done a tremendous job historically," Kelleher said.
"Having a totally hostile FAA, I think, would cause carriers to be less forthcoming with some of the mistakes they have made, and shy away from some of the programs."