
An invasion of privacy, pilots' union says
Wednesday, April 12, 2000
By JAMES WALLACE
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
REPORTER
The National Transportation Safety Board set itself on a collision course with airline pilots yesterday, calling for video recorders in the cockpits of all commercial airplanes.
The agency said the recent crash of EgyptAir Flight 990 may never be solved because of a lack of information about what was happening on the flight deck that cameras could have addressed.
Investigators suspect that the backup Egyptian copilot may have deliberately put the jet into a suicidal dive last Halloween as the jet cruised at 33,000 feet -- a view angrily rejected by the Egyptian government.
All 217 people aboard the Boeing 767-300 were killed when it plunged into the Atlantic about 30 minutes out of New York's Kennedy Airport on a night flight to Cairo.
The board's recommendation was detailed in a letter to the Federal Aviation Administration and during an appearance by board Chairman Jim Hall before a Congressional committee.
The biggest union of the nation's commercial airline pilots is strongly opposed to the idea.
The Airline Pilots Association argues it would be an invasion of a pilot's privacy, and there is also concern that the cockpit video from a doomed jetliner would sooner or later show up on the nightly news.
But in his letter to FAA Administration Jane Garvey, Hall said the time has come to supplement the so-called black boxes on commercial jets with a crash-protected cockpit image recording system.
Such a system is technologically and economically feasible, Hall said and would advance safety and possibly save millions of dollars and thousands of hours of investigation.
"The safety board recognizes the privacy issue with recording images of pilots," Hall said in his letter. "However, the board believes that given the history of complex accident investigations and lack of crucial information regarding the cockpit environment, the safety of the flying public must take precedence."
Hall said he will ask Congress to implement provisions to prevent the public release of cockpit video recordings. The NTSB is prevented by law from ever releasing the actual sound recordings a plane's cockpit voice recorder, though it does occasionally release written transcripts of what was recorded.
Even the release of transcripts has upset commercial pilots and their union.
In addition to the EgyptAir plane, Hall cited several other crashes to support the argument for cockpit video recordings: the 1996 Valujet crash near Miami, the 1998 Swissair crash off the coast of Nova Scotia and the crash of SilkAir's Boeing 737 in Indonesia in 1997.
The board found that the Valuejet crash was caused by a fire that broke out in forward cargo hold. The cause of the Swissair crash remains under investigation, but the pilots reported smoke in the cockpit.
Had both jets been equipped with cockpit video recorders, Hall said, investigators would have invaluable information about the conditions in the cockpit and whether proper procedures were followed.
"If the conditions were known, it might be possible to modify aircraft systems or training programs to assist future crews in recognizing these indications and effecting a safe recovery," Hall said.
The SilkAir crash is believed to have been caused by the deliberate act of the plane's troubled captain, who apparently disconnected the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder to mask his actions and then put the Boeing 737 into a steep dive from its cruising altitude of 35,000 feet.
"The lack of recorded information concerning the circumstances in the cockpit has continued to hamper the investigation," Hall said.
That is also the case with Egypt-Air Flight 990.
Investigators have found nothing in an analysis of the cockpit voice recorder and the jet's flight data recorder that would point toward a bomb or a mechanical problem as the cause of the crash.
Last November, with no evidence that the crash was an accident, Hall was prepared to turn the investigation over to the FBI when the Egyptian government strenuously objected.
Since then, the board has been working closely with Egyptian aviation authorities to gather as much factual information about the crash as possible, and Hall has had little to say about the on-going probe -- until yesterday.
In an appearance before the House Transportation aviation subcommittee to lay out the board's recommendation, Hall said the probable cause of the EgyptAir disaster not been determined, but information from the plane's flight data recorder was consistent with "a deliberate action on the part of one of the crew members."
A cockpit video recorder on the jet would have shown "who was in the cockpit, who was in what seat, who left and when," Hall told the subcommittee.
The head of Air Line Pilots Association, which represents about 55,000 pilots, also appeared before the House committee. Union president Duane Woerth said time and money would be better spent on more sophisticated flight data recorders.
"Given the state of existing protective legislation, cockpit video is an egregious invasion of privacy for minimal, if any, safety data," he told the committee. "It would just be a matter of time before the world shares first-hand the cockpit environment in the seconds before a disaster," Woerth said in prepared testimony.
In a front page story on the controversial issue this week, the Wall Street Journal interviewed several airline pilots.
"It's just like the old Soviet Union, with Big Brother watching you," a USAirways DC-9 captain told the paper.
And a 737 captain was quoted by the paper as saying if video cameras are placed in the cockpit, "I'll have a place to hang my hat."
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COCKPIT VIDEO POLICY STATEMENT In some recent press items, it was inferred that ALPA supported cockpit video recorders as long as "protection is in place". As Paul Harvey would say, "and now the rest of the story". Both ALPA and IFALPA have policy which state two requirements for any onboard video recording. VIDEO
TAPE RECORDERS IN THE COCKPIT ALPA opposes the installation of cockpit video recorders until protective provisions are in place to prevent the misuse of information obtained from cockpit video recorders. Such protective provisions must include legislation to prevent the release of information obtained from cockpit video recorders to anyone outside the accident investigation and must include contractual and regulatory requirements to ensure that information obtained from cockpit video recorders cannot be used as a basis for punitive action against a flight crew member by the airline or government agency. Since flight crew activity such as flight control manipulation, engine thrust setting and the audible environment of the cockpit are already recorded by other flight recorders, cockpit video recorders must be installed in such away as to ensure that they focus on and record only the instrument panel of the cockpit and not record flight crew activity. (ALPA Administration Manual Section 80, Paragraph N.) We will fight with all our resources to enforce this policy. We understand completely the views of our membership on this subject. Cpt. Paul McCarthy |