latimes.com
Plane With 29 Aboard Narrowly Misses News Chopper Near LAX
By Jennifer Oldham
Times Staff Writer
September 2, 2006
A small airliner coming in for a landing at Los Angeles International Airport early Friday narrowly missed a helicopter flying about 1,200 feet over the city near La Tijera Boulevard and the 405 Freeway, officials said.
An alarm sounded in the cockpit of American Eagle Flight 3034 from Santa Barbara, warning the pilot that he was too close to the helicopter and prompting him to abruptly pull up, said Dave Jackson, a spokesman for American Eagle. Twenty-six passengers and three crew members were on board. The Saab turboprop came within 100 feet vertically of the helicopter and about a quarter of a mile horizontally, said Ian Gregor, a spokesman with the Federal Aviation Administration.
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The close call illustrates just how much traffic — a mix of smaller airplanes, jumbo jets and helicopters — plies the narrowly defined highways in the sky above the Los Angeles Basin. The San Diego air traffic control center that directs airplanes flying between about 2,000 feet and 13,000 feet in Southern California airspace handled more flights between January and June than any other facility in the country, according to the FAA.
In Friday's incident, a controller cleared the American Eagle pilot to land on LAX's northernmost runway about 6 a.m. Instead of making a routine approach from the Harbor Freeway, the pilot made a sharp turn, descended below 2,500 feet and headed for the airport, Gregor said. Jets typically fly above 2,500 feet in protected airspace around LAX. Smaller airplanes and helicopters routinely use airspace below this level. A few seconds later, the pilot encountered the helicopter, which was chartered by KABC-TV Channel 7, officials said.
"Tower, this is 34," the pilot radioed to controllers. "There's a helicopter right off our wing." The pilot asked to abort his landing and go around the airport to come in for another try. After he landed on the second attempt, the pilot called the LAX tower and said his airplane had come so close to the helicopter that he could "see the whites of the helicopter pilot's eyes," controllers said... Controllers said the American Eagle pilot should have told them that he planned to cut his approach short.
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http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-nearmiss2sep02,1,2425253.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california