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Colgan, for example, had a safety program on paper before the accident, but hadn't implemented it, investigators said. After the accident, the airline promised to put a program in place by July. A year later, Colgan has made substantial progress but is still not at the point where it is collecting data, they said. "What about all of the other the regional carriers? Do we have to wait for them to have an accident and to appear here to get them to have a (data-gathering) program?" NTSB Chairman Deborah Hersman asked. "It does seem to be a motivator," replied Cox. Even carriers that implement the program sometimes gather data from only a fraction of their airplanes. One regional carrier participating in the program has 260 planes but has equipped only 10 of them with data-gathering recorders, said the NTSB's Cox. "So if you choose to creatively interpret that, you could say that all those passengers on all those miles and all those airplanes with that airline are counted as (covered by the safety program), but it's very misleading," he said. Babbitt said some airlines are too small for participation to be practical, or they fly older planes that don't have data-gathering capabilities. But Inspector General Calvin Scovel said the FAA hasn't offered a plan to encourage smaller carriers to participate, even though expanding the program to smaller carriers was one of the agency's key goals in response to the Buffalo crash. He also said many airlines made only vague commitments to the FAA and offered no timetable but the agency hasn't followed up with them. Babbitt says crafting new regulations is a cumbersome and time-consuming process, and that's why he's chosen to pursue voluntary safety initiatives with airlines as well. Changing the culture at FAA could also take time. During the Bush administration, the agency saw airlines as clients to be served. Last September, Babbitt ordered FAA employees to stop referring to airlines as their "customers." At a House hearing last week, Babbitt said it's a misperception that the FAA's actions are ineffective or insufficient. "The vehemence of the criticism FAA receives doesn't comport with the safety statistics," he said. ___ On the Net: Federal Aviation Administration http://www.faa.gov/ National Transportation Safety Board http://www.ntsb.gov/
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