Hopefully they will hire more Air Traffic Controllers and make sure the pilots of the planes are fit to fly (enough sleep, no drinking, no drugs to stay awake. etc).
2006-08-31 11:06:37
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answer #1
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answered by waterlily92054 1
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none. IF they do isn't rather odd they only discuss these matters AFTER a plane goes down? reason being, if they were to make planes, truly, as safe as possible, it would wind up costing the airlines billions of dollars in retrofitting. would probably bankrupt all of them in the process. SO, they figure the most economical way to handle this is to change ONLY when change is needed i.e. lots of people die in a plane crash.
2006-08-31 18:02:00
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Probably nothing if it's determined to be human error as the root cause. We won't know that for sure until the accident investigation results are published, probably in a year or so. No sense speculating on anything until then.
2006-08-31 18:56:42
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answer #3
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answered by Bostonian In MO 7
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none they have their own points system,which is of course death to the ratio of what it would cost to mandate any change,but it was pilot error,FAA has nothing to do with this
2006-08-31 18:06:33
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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None. They're the most lax federal agency.
2006-08-31 18:00:31
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answer #5
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answered by Lovely78 3
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