Dr Moore wrote: ↑Wed Apr 14, 2021 11:28 pm
Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Wed Apr 14, 2021 5:10 pm
Here is the substance of the FOIA I will submit to NARA:
1. Any and all records of the National Transportation Safety Board, the Federal Aviation Administration, or the Civil Aeronautics Board of aircraft accidents and/or incidents that occurred in Utah from January 1, 1970 through December 31, 1977.
2. Any and all indexes of files of the National Transportation Safety Board, the Federal Aviation Administration or the Civil Aeronautics Board that include records from January 1, 1970 through December 31, 1977.
3. Any and all records of document management procedures, including retention, disposition, destruction or transfer to any other agency or organization, of reports of the National Transportation Safety Board, the Federal Aviation Administration, or the Civil Aeronautics Board that apply to Reports of aircraft accidents or incidents.
4. Any statistical or summary reports of the National Transportation Safety Board, the Federal Aviation Administration or the Civil Aeronautics Board that include period totals of aviation accidents or incidents.
The terms "aviation accident" and "incident" refer to the defined terms found in 49 CFR § 830.2.
Seems pretty complete. I bet you already know what you will find, but good luck anyway.
Do emergency services -- fire, police -- have records that can be requested via FOIA?
If a plane lands in a field with an exploded engine, how does that plane get moved and re-certified for flight? Would there be logs of the repair and re-certification for flight worthiness somewhere?
All the hubbub of transferring passengers from a field, removing a busted plane, adds noise that would not have gone unnoticed. So we're kind of back to the lack of newspaper coverage making the scene less believable.
Thanks for looking it over, Dr. Moore. I really don't know what to expect. According to the general description of accident reports in the National Archives, the reports I've requested are supposed to be in FAA correspondence folders or CAB board minutes. There is general collection of FAA documents and one of CAB documents, but I couldn't find a similar collection of NTSB documents. From general reading, Congress moved responsibility for determine probable cause from the CAB to the NTSB years before, but they failed to give the NTSB enough funding to do the job. So, it kind of subbed out some investigations to the FAA and maybe, based on records at the National Archives, to the CAB. Organizationally, it's a cluster.... and the records are the same.
I don't feel good about being to find the records I think are important, but it's worth a shot.
FOIA applies to the federal government. I know Washington has an equivalent statue for state and local records. I haven't checked Utah. My wild-assed guess is that those kinds of records would have been destroyed long ago under records retention policies.
The problem of course is which, of the many different and sometimes conflicting details in the different versions, correspond to what really happened? Field or just safe landing? Engine fire or explosion and/or wings flambe? What gets in a newspaper is subject to so many variables that I think it really depends on how extreme the actual event was.
I'd defer to DrW on logs and recertification requirements, but from what he's said in the past, even a simple engine failure would be logged in both the pilot and aircraft logbooks. And I would hope that recertifications would be required. I don't know whether those records would still exist. Might be worth checking.
I keep wondering how to test the whole newspaper thing. If we had a complete list of incidents and accidents for, say, the 1970s, we might have a big enough list of events in the county where Nelson says they landed to compare to what the newspapers reported to draw at least some conclusions. But if we had that list, I don't think we'd need to check the papers.
We'll just have to see what we get.