FAA proposing £1 million penalty against Pinnacle
24 October 2011 IFALPA Daily News
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is proposing civil penalties against Pinnacle Airlines amounting to $1,042,500, for allegedly operating two aircraft on a total of 63 flights, when they were not in compliance with the appropriate regulations.
The first allegation concerns a Canadair jet which Pinnacle operated on 23 flights between “April 30 and May 4, 2009 on which flight crew members performed procedures that should have been performed by maintenance employees, after FAA inspectors had denied an airline request to make the work an operations task instead of a maintenance task. The airline’s general maintenance manual requires maintenance workers to install and remove a cable kit when operating an aircraft with an inoperative or missing wheel assembly for the passenger door. Instead, flight crew members performed the procedure on the flights in question”.
In the second allegation “Pinnacle failed to complete inspections of the low-pressure turbine case on a Canadair Regional Jet. The inspections were to identify and track growth of a crack in the case to make sure the crack did not grow to exceed the maximum allowable length. The inspections required by the airline’s continuous airworthiness maintenance program must be done every 300 to no more than 600 operating hours. The FAA said Pinnacle let 640 operating hours pass between a May 22, 2010 inspection and a subsequent inspection on Aug. 31, 2010. During that time, a 3.5-inch crack grew to four inches in length. The FAA alleges the airline operated the aircraft on 40 passenger flights between Aug. 25 and 31, when it was not in compliance”.
Pinnacle has 30 days from receipt of the FAA’s enforcement letters to answer the allegations.