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GAO-03-1175R 1 (2003-09-23)

handle is hein.gao/gaobaamhu0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 


   I


        Accountability * Integrity * Reliability
United States General Accounting Office
Washington, DC 20548







           September 23, 2003

           The Honorable James L. Oberstar
           Ranking Democratic Member
           Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure
           U.S. House of Representatives

           Subject:      Aviation Safety: Information on FAA's Data on Operational Errors at Air
                         Traffic Control Towers

          A fundamental principle of aviation safety is the need to maintain adequate separation
          between aircraft and to ensure that aircraft maintain a safe distance from terrain,
          obstructions, and airspace that is not designated for routine air travel. Air traffic controllers
          employ separation rules and procedures that define safe separation in the air and on the
          ground.' An operational error occurs when the separation rules and procedures are not
          followed due to equipment or human error. Data maintained by the Federal Aviation
          Administration (FAA) indicate that a very small number of operational errors occur in any
          given year-on average about three operational errors per day occurred in fiscal year 2002.
          However, some of these occurrences can pose safety risks by directing aircraft onto
          converging courses and, potentially, midair collisions.

          You asked us to provide information on FAA's data on operational errors and whether this
          data can be used to identify types of air traffic control facilities with greater safety risks.
          Specifically, you asked us to (1) determine what is known about the reliability and validity of
          the data that FAA maintains on operational errors and (2) identify whether comparisons of
          operational errors among air traffic control facilities can be used to determine the facilities'
          relative safety record.







          'The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has established a separation standard in the en route
          environment of 5 nautical miles horizontally and either 1,000 or 2,000 feet vertically depending on
          altitude. In the terminal environment, horizontal separation is generally between 3 and 5 nautical miles
          depending on the type of aircraft.
          2 Data reliability refers to the accuracy and completeness of data. We define data as reliable when they
          are (1) complete and (2) accurate. Reliability does not mean that data are error free, but that the data
          is sufficient for the intended purposes. Validity refers to whether the data actually represent what one
          thinks is being measured. See U.S. General Accounting Office, Assessing the Reliability of Computer-
          Processed Data, GAO-02-15G (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 2002).


GAO-03-1175R Operational Errors Data

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