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GAO Takes FAA To Task On Airborne Laser Hits

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Key Takeaways:

  • Aiming lasers at aircraft is a federal crime that poses serious risks to pilots, including distraction, disorientation, and potential temporary or permanent vision harm, with incidents on the rise.
  • The FAA's investigation process for laser incidents is cumbersome, marked by low pilot response rates to questionnaires and inconsistent sharing of collected information with law enforcement.
  • Interagency cooperation to address laser safety dissolved in 2015, and the FAA's mandated quarterly reports to Congress on these incidents are incomplete, hindering a full understanding of investigations and enforcement actions.
  • Mitigation efforts include the development of laser-blocking eyewear and cockpit films, as well as training for pilots on how to respond effectively to laser strikes.
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Aiming a laser at an aircraft can distract or disorient pilots and is a federal crime,” begins the executive summary of a 51-page Government Accountability Office (GAO) report on the practice. A typical incident occurs when someone on the ground aims a laser at an airborne aircraft, usually in a high-workload environment like an approach to a nearby airport. In even benign encounters, the intense light can temporarily blind flightcrew members; in more severe incidents, a pilot’s vision may be permanently harmed.

Therefore, it should come as no surprise that lasing an airborne aircraft is illegal. The FAA investigates laser incidents and pursues civil penalties against perpetrators while assisting the FBI and U.S. attorneys in investigating the incidents. It also should come as no surprise that identifying those responsible is difficult. Nevertheless, enforcement actions resulting in penalties have included fines ranging from $50 to $27,338, and sentences of up to 51 months, according to the GAO. But the FAA’s investigative process is cumbersome and its results often are not shared with federal law enforcement, again according to the GAO. That’s a problem, especially since laser-aiming incidents are on the rise, the GAO says, as reflected by a graph accompanying the report, which is reproduced on the bottom of the opposite page.

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