Search Icon
< Home /Accident Investigation /NTSB Operations Return to Normal

NTSB Operations Return to Normal

Jan 28, 2019
Fifteen aviation accidents resulting in 21 fatalities were not investigated during the shutdown.

Normal operations resumed Monday at the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) after a 35-day partial shutdown that saw 367 of the agency’s 397 employees furloughed.

The NTSB said that during the partial government shutdown, there were 22 accidents — including 15 aviation accidents that resulted in 21 fatalities — to which the agency did not dispatch investigators; all 22 accidents now require investigative action. The delay means that “perishable evidence may have been lost, which potentially could prevent determination of probable cause for those accidents,” the NTSB said.

During the shutdown, the NTSB halted work on 1,815 ongoing general aviation and limited aviation safety investigations and postponed the scheduled release of its 2019–2020 Most Wanted List of Transportation Safety Improvements as well as a board meeting that was to have determined the probable cause of a March 2017 runway excursion in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Release of the Most Wanted List …

* You must be an FSF Member to have full access to this article.

get full access to this article by joining today

FSF Membership includes full access to the AeroSafety World, a daily publication providing our members the latest news and information in aviation safety.

Join Today

Popular Categories

Explore Articles

ICAO Secretary General to Deliver Keynote at FSF Networking and Awards Dinner

ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) Secretary General Juan Carlos Salazar will deliver ...

Human Factors & Aviation Medicine 2005 – 2006

These documents are in Adobe® Portable Document Format (PDF) and require a copy of Adobe Reader® to view them. If you do no...

Foundation Recognizing EUROCONTROL and Embry-Riddle With Awards

The awards will be presented June 24 at the annual Networking and Awards Dinner in Washington....

Google Ads

Related posts

View Archives

Aviation Safety Pioneer Gloria Heath Dies

Gloria Heath, a founding member of Flight Safety Foundation who was instrumental in the earliest efforts to disseminate aviat...

New Final Report Issued on Ditching That Led to Review of ATSB Methods

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) has issued a final report on its reopened investigation of the Nov. 18, 2009, d...

New Final Report Issued on Ditching That Led to Review of ATSB Methods

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) has issued a final report on its reopened investigation of the Nov. 18, 2009, d...

Pilot’s Medical Exemption Cited as Contributing to Fatal 2016 Balloon Accident

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) should end a policy that exempts commercial balloon operators from obtaining m...

FAA Orders A380 Engine Inspections

Citing the uncontained failure of an Airbus A380 engine during a trans-Atlantic flight in September, the U.S. Federal Aviatio...

Help Us Make The Skies Safer

“For nearly 80 years, the Foundation has been a leading force in aviation safety around the world. Our work is made possible by our members. Join today to help ensure that the Foundation remains the authoritative voice on all matters pertaining to aviation safety.”

– Hassan Shahidi | President and CEO

G-R25C05ZKWX