Robert A. Sturgell,
Hyderabad, India October 15, 2008
India Air Show
Let me begin by thanking the Ministry of Civil Aviation and the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry for this opportunity.
It doesn’t get more exciting than this, especially for those of us who love aviation. Air shows have a special way of connecting us with our past, our present, and our future.
This is especially true in India, and right here in Hyderabad, where aviation is growing so rapidly.
Just consider the spot where we stand at this precise moment. Think back to earlier this year on March 22nd. Thai Airways flight 330 took off from this very site and closed an important chapter in India’s aviation history.
It was the last flight to take off from what’s now the old international airport, marking the end of more than 70 years of aviation operations.
At the same time, it opened a new chapter with the state-of-the-art Rajiv Gandhi International that many of us flew into earlier this week.
This is what aviation in India is all about — moving forward and opening new chapters. It’s about the future.
As you look to tomorrow, there’s no question that you’ll face many challenges as you expand your infrastructure. But you’re not alone.
These challenges are the very ones that confront us all as we look to ensure safety and improve operational efficiencies while we increase capacity.
Aviation is an economic driver for our countries, and we need to provide a system that’s capable of meeting future demand.
To help us succeed, we’ve established a Joint Aviation Steering Committee with working groups to address safety and efficiency issues.
We’re casting this net as widely as we can, promoting partnership and cooperation in areas like air traffic management, aircraft certification, airports, safety oversight, and the environment.
Through this partnership, we hope to learn from each other and find common threads that will lead us toward safety and efficiency solutions that benefit everyone.
A good example of something that works — the Commercial Aviation Safety Team — CAST. This international partnership is focused on preventing fatal aviation accidents before they happen.
To date, it’s identified 70 specific safety risks — and corresponding actions to mitigate those risks — in many areas.
They include Controlled Flight Into Terrain, Approach and Landing, Loss of Control, Runway Incursions, and Mid-Air Collisions. As a former line pilot, I can tell you that these areas are on our mind all the time. CAST really does make a difference.
When I talk about sharing information, it includes an even wider range of operational safety data, like information collected through ramp inspections.
If we broaden our databases to include info from more countries, we can pinpoint more recurring safety issues. This can help us avoid incidents and accidents before they become tomorrow’s headline.
Improving data sharing also means promoting voluntary safety information sharing.
We need to promote effective and non-punitive procedures for reporting potential safety issues.
This applies to every tier of our aviation system.
Whether it’s a tower controller, a machinist on the production line, or a pilot in the cockpit, we need systems in place that are conducive to reporting safety issues.
In the United States, our effort to increase capacity centers on the Next Generation. It’s a major priority for me and every employee at the FAA. And I encourage you to visit our exhibit at the air show and see for yourself what NextGen is all about.
In the air and on the ground, NextGen means transformation to a more automated system, greater airport design flexibility, reduced physical footprint, reduced separation between runways, and a smaller environmental footprint.
The recent Ajay Prasad Committee report provides India with a similar path for its aviation system.
As our nations develop and implement our respective future aviation systems, we need to ensure that they’re harmonized.
This was one of the key points I underscored at the ICAO NextGen/SESAR Integration Forum in Montreal last month.
In the aviation system of the future, a pilot should find the same procedures whether flying into Dulles or Delhi, Hartsfield or Hyderabad.
It’s ambitious, I know, but it’s a big part of what we hope to accomplish through initiatives like our aviation partnership with India.
I also believe that, to make this partnership even stronger, it’s important to have the right people.
And we do. Ladies and gentlemen, please join me in welcoming the FAA’s newest representative to India, Mr. Aaron Wilkins. Aaron, please stand up.
Aaron’s been with the FAA for over a decade.
Most recently, he was in our Beijing office, where he worked on a range of aviation activities, including the Olympics. Please take a minute to introduce yourselves to him when we’re done.
Thanks, Aaron.
In closing, I would like to congratulate the Indian government and the Federal of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry for what they’ve accomplished here this week. I would also like to wish everyone in the audience a successful air show. As you meet with your colleagues and engage in aviation discussions here this week, remember to think global. Our future, and the future of aviation safety, depends on it.
Thank you.
Fonte: FAA 20/10/2008.
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Failed FAA Pilot Bobby Sturgell Racks Up His 3,000th Civilian Kill, And Somehow Keeps Flying
To this day, our federal government in the United States has continued to allow the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), for good reason otherwise known as the “Tombstone Agency”, to be run by a morally-bereft incompetent liar and perjurer by the name of Robert Allan “Bobby” Sturgell. You already know Bobby Sturgell. He self-touts his “Top Gun” status while seemingly unable to cite any bona fide combat experience. He professes his married status while somehow unable to wear a wedding ring while on business trips. He feigns public official status while borne of a DelMarVa shoot-’em-up biker bar until recently owned by Bobby’s FBI Mom who served as J. Edgar Hoover’s secretary. Bobby Sturgell is the imposter known as FAA “Acting” Administrator.
How apt.
A few months ago, Bobby Sturgell racked up his 3,000th civilian aviation kill. That’s a lot of notches on Top Gun’s wing.
In but one (1) short year in office as bumbling “Acting Administrator” of the FAA, Bobby Sturgell has finished the job, and he has murdered aviation safety. Yet Bobby Sturgell’s homicide-of-decency commenced at least 5 years ago when Bobby Sturgell joined the FAA back in 2003.
The period of time from 2003 forward, to the date within the next few weeks that Bobby Sturgell ejects from his corner office at 800 Independence, shall be forever known as:
“The Bobby Sturgell Tombstone FAA Regime, 2003-2008”.
United States aviation fatality statistics are public record, and are available on the Internet. They are the NTSB’s own damning admission. See:
http://ejectsturgell.blogspot.com/2008/10/failed-faa-pilot-bobby-sturgell-racks.html
According to Quiet Rockland’s count of the NTSB statistics of approximately one (1) week ago, since the year in which Bobby Sturgell joined the FAA, in 2003 – no less than Three Thousand, Three Hundred And Eighty-Three (3,383) human beings have died in aviation accidents and other aviation incidents in the United States. The body-count number has undoubtedly increased since then.
These 3,383 tombstones are on Bobby Sturgell’s head. Naturally, Bobby Sturgell did not run every single one of these planes and corpses into the ground in aviation flame-out, even though Bobby Sturgell’s incompetence well could have. Rather, in this case, the Sturgellian offense is not mere negligence alone. The offense is willful on Bobby Sturgell’s part, and 5 years perpetuated. The fact is that it is Bobby Sturgell himself, Sturgell’s arrant recidivist pandering to aeromercantile interests to the exclusion of human safety, Sturgell’s inhuman abuse of the ATC work-force, and Sturgell’s continual and contemptuous lawless derision for the Culture of Safety that should otherwise govern American aviation, that are the primary causes of these 3,383 dead bodies.
In reply, Bobby Sturgell will squirm, avoid, deny responsibility, blame the victim, and blame others – just like he always does out of his own cowardice. Yet today, we – Americans - hold Bobby Sturgell accountable. Today, WE count the bodies that Bobby Sturgell is afraid and unwilling to count.
The blood is on Bobby Sturgell’s ugly FAA airline-bought-and-paid-for hands. It is now confirmed. Sturgell’s failed FAA regime is responsible for the loss of more human life than that which occurred at The World Trade Center in Manhattan on September 11, 2001.
Quiet Rockland invites anyone else similarly-concerned, to carry out their own careful count of Bobby Sturgell’s and FAA’s fatality statistics since 2003. We are warning you, it is an unpleasant and difficult task. The NTSB aviation fatality links follow, immediately below.
Meanwhile, Bobby Sturgell and the other FAA ghouls continue to “celebrate” FAA’s “50th Anniversary”, with verbatim quotations like these:
http://www.faa.gov/news/speeches/news_story.cfm?newsId=10274
“The… women and men of the FAA over the years have pulled together in one direction to create the safest transportation system in the history of the world”.
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Acting Administrator Robert A. “Bobby” Sturgell
August 21, 2008 Speech And Press Release Entitled: “The Credit Goes to You” – “FAA 50th Anniversary” (Washington, D.C.).
http://www.airventure.org/2008/6fri1/administrator.html
“[I]t’s the safest period we’ve ever been in aviation”.
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Acting Administrator Robert A. “Bobby” Sturgell
August 1, 2008 EAA Air Venture Speech and Interview (Oshkosh, WI).
http://www.faa.gov/news/press_releases/news_story.cfm?newsId=10196
“We are currently experiencing the safest period in aviation history… That’s not chance. It’s not a miracle. It’s the result of an entire industry making safety its driving focus”.
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Acting Administrator Robert A. “Bobby” Sturgell
April 2, 2008 Speech And Press Release Entitled: “FAA Announces Improvements to Inspection Program - Initial Airline Audit Validates Agency’s Overall Approach to Aviation Safety”, (Washington, D.C.).
http://www.faa.gov/news/testimony/news_story.cfm?newsId=9572
“[W]e should note that we are living in the safest period in aviation history… Safety is and will always be the primary goal of the FAA”.
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Acting Administrator Robert A. “Bobby” Sturgell
September 26, 2007 Testimony And Statement Before the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, Subcommittee on Aviation, (Washington, D.C.).
Bobby Sturgell would deceive you into believing that his failed FAA regime was “the safest period in aviation history”.
The souls of no less than 3,383 dead, now attest otherwise.
Bobby Sturgell is a liar.
Bobby Sturgell and his failed FAA regime are responsible for an outrageous and unacceptable number of aviation fatalities.
The Bobby Sturgell FAA was the worst FAA regime in the agency’s 50-year history.
Aviation Fatality Statistics, United States - Year 2003 Through Year 2008:
http://ejectsturgell.blogspot.com/2008/10/failed-faa-pilot-bobby-sturgell-racks.html
Aviation Fatality And Injury Statistics, Worldwide - Year 2003 Through Year 2008:
http://removesturgell.blogspot.com/2008/10/failed-faa-pilot-bobby-sturgell-racks.html
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