Virgin America Passes FAA 'Proving Runs' with Flying Colors
Virgin America | Dec. 22, 2006
Virgin America has completed the last formal step in the Federal Aviation Administration's (FAA) airline certification review - that of flight proving runs. As a result, the airline now only awaits approval from the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) before they can begin operations.
As part of any new airline's regulatory review process, the FAA performs a comprehensive safety review and first examines all aspects of a new carrier's safety programs, operations manuals, training procedures, and personnel qualifications. They then use tabletop operations exercises, aircraft evacuations, and actual flights to test the safety effectiveness of airline flight crews and management in simulated real world scenarios. The "proving run" flights are the final step in this Systems Safety and operational review process, and Virgin America was required to fly aircraft and FAA examiners on flights to and from San Francisco, New York, and other airports.
Virgin America is the first new airline to be certified through the FAA's new Air Transportation and Oversight System (ATOS) compliant certification procedures. ATOS is the FAA's newest and most advanced safety surveillance program.
Upon completion of the flight proving runs, FAA officials praised Virgin America's performance as exemplary. The airline said one FAA official noted "I have done 35 certifications and by far this was the best I've ever seen."
Virgin America's Senior Vice President of Flight Operations Bob Weatherly praised the airline's operations personnel following the final test flight. "This is an outstanding team - the likes of which I've never seen in my 30 plus years in the airline industry. I want to commend them all for their outstanding teamwork, expertise, skill and performance in successfully accomplishing this intensive Systems Safety and operational review."
Virgin America now awaits its show cause order from DOT. This order is expected to outline any remaining issues that must be addressed before the DOT will issue a final order that permits the company to begin passenger operations.
Virgin America hopes to commence service in the Spring of 2007 from its home base at San Francisco International Airport to New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. The airline now has a team of 169 employees and has taken delivery of nine aircraft.