I think it's unfair to characterize what the airlines have done as no progress. That's clearly not what we found,
I think there were a number of other issues concerning compliance with the applicable rules. All of those contain a lot of potential for lessons learned.
I've been concerned all along that there is too much closeness between the city and the FAA and that somebody at the FAA has taken out a rubberstamp and said, 'OK, go ahead and do it. Assess all this money on the people who come to the airport. Don't worry about it,'
I've been concerned all along that there is too much closeness between the city and the FAA and that somebody at the FAA has taken out a rubberstamp and said, 'OK, go ahead and do it. Assess all this money on the people who come to the airport. Don't worry about it,'
In a lot of cases we couldn't make hide nor hair of them.
In the first quarter of 2005, arrival delays were up 17 percent over the first quarter of 2004, and affected more than 25 percent of all flights.
the current level of compliance with approved security procedures was unacceptably low.
The road ahead is long, ... Aggressive progress is going to be required by the airlines, the airport and FAA too if consumer confidence is going to be restored.
The transition to increased use of outside repair facilities is not the issue. It is that maintenance, wherever it is done, requires oversight.
We found they'd show up once, twice, three times a year. I think that's a big issue.
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Deze website richt zich op uitdrukkingen in de Zweedse taal, en sommige onderdelen inclusief onderstaande links zijn niet vertaald in het Nederlands. Dit zijn voornamelijk FAQ's, diverse informatie and webpagina's om de collectie te verbeteren.