Also, note that a major disruption of air traffic control could easily result in a major airline crash, which would have killed far more people than Howard could possibly have killed personally. Is creating, say, a 10% that 200 people will die less bad than actually killing five or ten people yourself?
Politicians get their power from controlling people, not things. So it's no surprise that they try to 'fix' a system by controlling people and assume the things will take care of themselves.Broomstick wrote:The point has also been made that this isn't just about human actors. A truly accidental fire might have happened, or a major tornado could have hit the facility, or some other thing occur that would wipe out an ARTCC's ability to function. There's a lot of noise from the politicians about controlling the human factor - better screening, testing, security - but they're NOT talking about non-human risks.
There needs to be better back up for major parts of the system like ARTCCs
Why isn't that being discussed? Money? Stupidity? Both? We can beat up and tweak the human element all we want, that doesn't really fix the vulnerability here. It's not just a matter of making the current ARTCCs more robust, there needs to be better backup, probably reserve facilities. There has been too much centralizing in the name of efficiency. Yes, it is more efficient - until it isn't anymore. A robust and resilient system has redundancy. Aviation KNOWS this - that's why airliners have at least three parallel systems for critical things, like flight instruments and at least two live human pilots. It would be a shitload more efficient and cheap not to do this, but no airline manufacturer or airline is going to do that because shit really does happen in real life and that redundancy saves lives and money time and again.
The problem is that the aviation industry is not what is making decisions to build or not build various support facilities like ARTCCs. It's politics. That's why there is no funding, no redundancy, and way too much finger pointing.
It is my opinion, perhaps poorly founded, that this is doubly true in the modern era. Because we have relatively many politicians who have risen purely through political ranks. And relatively few politicians with career experience in areas like the military, or engineering, or medicine, or, hell, anything that forces a person to come to terms with the fact that not all their problems can be made to go away with a clever argument and a "you there, clean up that mess!"