Planes nearly collide over Colorado

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Henk Voortwijs
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Planes nearly collide over Colorado

Post by Henk Voortwijs »

DENVER -- The CALL7 Investigators have confirmed the FAA is investigating
a Nov 23rd incident where two passenger jets nearly collided in the
airspace over Colorado.
Sources told CALL7 Investigator John Ferrugia the two planes merged on Air
Traffic Control radar at the same altitude and in the same moment.
Said one source, "They were within a blink of an eye of colliding," and
"It was the ugliest thing I've ever seen in all my years."
A spokesman for the FAA, Mike Fergus, told 7NEWS, "Alarms went off," in
the Denver Air Route Traffic Control Center or "Longmont Center" as it is
typically referred.
The incident is classified as an "operational error" which, Fergus
explained, is typically a mistake made by an air traffic controller.
It happened around 7am on the Monday before Thanksgiving, when airline
traffic was beginning to increase for the upcoming holiday.
Several planes were en route to Denver on an arrival path from the
northeast, called "Sayge Six."
Sayge is described to 7NEWS as a "highway in the sky" with traffic only
allowed to travel in one direction, toward DIA, at 19,000 feet and 250 knots
for jets.
The Sayge marker is about 47 miles northeast of DIA, and is an air traffic
control handoff point between Longmont Center and DIA Approach Control.
Sources told Ferrugia that on Nov 23, air traffic was very busy over
Colorado and Republic Flight 1539 was vectored on a route toward DIA that was
south of the Sayge "highway" and running parallel to other air traffic.
Republic Flight 1539 had already passed the Sayge marker when an air
traffic controller in Longmont Center told the pilots to "proceed to Sayge,"
apparently thinking the pilots would simply merge with the traffic already on
the "highway," sources said.
7NEWS was told the Republic captain questioned the controller's command,
which was repeated.
The pilots then turned about 180 degrees toward the Sayge marker and were
traveling in the wrong direction on the "highway," explained the sources.
Inbound to DIA on the "highway" was SkyWest Flight 6764.
Fergus told 7NEWS alarms sounded in at least one of the cockpits telling
the pilots to take evasive action.
One plane dove while the other was ordered to pull up, and the two missed
by about 200 vertical feet, sources said. The source could not confirm the
horizontal separation of the two planes because the radar images briefly
merged into a single image.
Following behind the SkyWest flight, and also inbound on the Sayge
arrival, was Frontier Airlines Flight 615, which also "lost separation" with the
Republic jet, however, sources said the danger was not immediate.
The FAA has confirmed many of the details of the incident and is
investigating, but Fergus wanted to emphasize that even though there appears to have
been an error in air traffic control, the backup emergency systems onboard
the aircraft worked properly and alerted the pilots who succeeded in safely
separating the aircraft.
No one is believed to have been hurt in the incident.
Fergus explained that incidents are categorized by the FAA as A, B, C, or
D level with "A" incidents being the most critical.
He said this particular "operational error" was classified as "B."

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