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The first officer, Rebecca Shaw, 24, had earned less than $16,000 the previous year. She lived with her parents near Seattle and commuted across the country overnight to Newark, N.J., to make Flight 3407. She felt sick but didn't want to pull out of the trip because she had already traveled so far, according to a cockpit voice recorder transcript. It's not clear how much sleep either pilot received the night before the flight. The last six fatal domestic airline accidents involved regional carriers. The NTSB has cited pilot performance as a factor in three of those accidents. Flight 3407 highlighted issues the airline industry has been struggling with for decades such as how to strengthen regulations on pilot fatigue and training. It also raised questions about whether there are two levels of safety
-- one for major airlines and another for regional airlines. "The Buffalo crash was clearly a watershed event in safety," said Bill Voss, president of the Flight Safety Foundation of Alexandria, Va. "It made people concerned about the very structure of the industry." Babbitt said the agency plans to propose new regulations this spring to address pilot work schedules and improve crew training programs. The agency is also working on a regulation to increase the experience and training a first officer must have to fly for a commercial airline. ___ On the Net:
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