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Changes In Aerial Firefighting Considered

Federal Panel Chosen To Look Into Fatal Crashes

POSTED: 7:38 a.m. MDT August 1, 2002

An outside panel of aviation safety experts has been chosen to recommend changes in aerial firefighting before the next fire season, U.S. Forest Service officials said.

Large airtanker drops slurry along the fire line

The panel will be headed by former National Transportation Safety Board chairman Jim Hall, said Tony Kern, Forest Service aviation director.

The announcement Wednesday came a day after a fatal crash Tuesday of a helicopter working on hot spots from a wildfire near Rocky Mountain National Park. It was the third fatal aerial firefighting crash in two months in the West and the second near Estes Park.

The other crashes involved air tankers.

Kern said the Forest Service would consider grounding firefighting helicopters for inspections if there is any indication that a structural defect contributed to the accident Tuesday.

Investigators have not said what might have caused the crash.

On July 22, Forest Service officials warned firefighting helicopter crews that they should not fly with water-bucket lines that were less than 50 feet long.

The bulletin came after two cases in which winds may have blown water buckets on shorter lines up into helicopters and damaged tail rotors.

It was unclear whether that contributed to the latest crash.

Changes to aerial firefighting could come even without the recommendations of the outside panel.

Rep. Joel Hefley, R-Colo., has introduced a bill that would allow the Forest Service to request military aircraft for wildfires. Those aircraft are much newer than many of the privately contracted World War II tankers used now.

Forest Service spokesman Joe Walsh in Washington, D.C., said that this fire season has required heavier use of aircraft than the Forest Service ever anticipated.

"We designed the system originally for the tankers to drop retardant in the initial attack to contain the fire quickly," Walsh said. "With these horrific fires, we're using our tankers for a longer period of time. We never envisioned the tankers flying for days on fires like the Hayman Fire."

The Hayman Fire was the state's largest wildfire. It burned on nearly 138,000 acres.

This season the Forest Service has contracted 46 tankers and about 150 helicopters.


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