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The controllers, supervisors and others interviewed in that incident said the island-like obstruction in the center of the tower room might have been a factor, but the report didn't offer specifics about what the obstruction was or how it may have affected controllers' work that day. Though at least one air-traffic controller didn't believe it was a factor. Asked by investigators why the room hadn't been reconfigured, one air-traffic controller cited "stubbornness" on the part of those who designed it. And a control supervisor said the configuration has "got to go." A message left late Monday seeking comment from the NTSB was immediately returned. Chicago Department of Aviation spokeswoman Karen Pride said she couldn't comment until airport officials had been able to review the report. Chicago-based transportation expert Joseph Schwieterman said he hadn't seen the preliminary report, but he said air-traffic controllers over the years have expressed concern about some design features at O'Hare. "My takeaway is that O'Hare -- despite improvements over the years
-- still has a lot of older features that can create incidents," he said. "It is still a highly complicated airport
-- with intersections that are potential problem spots." But while near misses always raise some concerns, he saw no reason why they should cause alarm among air travelers passing through O'Hare. He noted that such incidents are extremely rare, especially consideringthe volume of U.S. air passenger traffic.
[Associated
Press;
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