Re: irrational fear of flying
It looks like Boeing has accepted responsibility for the door bolt issue, but does anyone remember the Alaska Airlines maintenance scandal of 1998-99? I went to HS with a fellow who went to aviation mechanic school and then went on to receive his airline administration degree. He was working for then, USAirways, when Alaska recruited a ton of "outside" maintenance staff including him and 30 co-workers, moving them to Seattle, to address the "culture of deceit" as he called it at the time. From Wikipedia:
In 1998, an Alaska Airlines mechanic named John Liotine, who worked in the Alaska Airlines maintenance center in Oakland, California, told the FAA that supervisors were approving records of maintenance that they were not allowed to approve or that indicated work had been completed when, in fact, it had not. Liotine began working with federal investigators by secretly audio recording his supervisors. On December 22, 1998, federal authorities raided an Alaska Airlines property and seized maintenance records. In August 1999, Alaska Airlines put Liotine on paid leave, and in 2000, Liotine filed a libel suit against the airline. The crash of AS261 became a part of the federal investigation against Alaska Airlines, because, in 1997, Liotine had recommended that the jackscrew and gimbal nut of the accident aircraft be replaced, but had been overruled by another supervisor. In December 2001, federal prosecutors stated that they were not going to file criminal charges against Alaska Airlines. Around that time, Alaska Airlines agreed to settle the libel suit by paying about $500,000; as part of the settlement, Liotine resigned.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
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