The
Federal Aviation Administration may be looking to reverse its ban on electronic
devices during airplane takeoffs and landings, according to a new report. Amid
growing evidence that portable devices such as smartphones,
tablets, and notebook computers pose no real threat to aviation safety, a
spokesman from the F.A.A. told the New
York Times that the agency is taking a “fresh look” at its
policy governing the use of personal electronics on
planes. "With
the advent of new and evolving electronic technology, and because the airlines
have not conducted the testing necessary to approve the use of new devices, the
F.A.A. is taking a fresh look at the use of personal electronic devices, other
than cell phones, on aircraft," Laura J. Brown, a deputy assistant
administrator for public affairs at the F.A.A. told the Times. Such
devices are currently banned from use doing during takeoff and landing because
of the potential dangers they pose -- dangers that many argue simply don’t
exist. The F.A.A. has so far taken a “better safe than sorry approach.” In
2006, the agency commissioned the Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics, a
nonprofit group that tests and reports on technical travel and communications
issues, to test the effects of electronic gadgets on planes.
These
findings were inconclusive. “Insufficient information to support changing the
policies,” Les Dorr, an F.A.A. spokesman, told the Times. “There was no
evidence saying these devices can’t interfere with a plane, and there was no
evidence saying that they can.” But a growing body of evidence suggests that
these fears are more myth than reality. Tests conducted by the New York Times
at EMT Labs, an independent testing facility in Mountain View, Calif., that
screens gadgets for health and safety standards, showed that Amazon’s popular Kindle e-reader
emitted less than 0.00003 volts per meter when in use. The F.A.A. requires that
a plane be able to withstand up to 100 volts per meter of electrical
interference. “The power coming off a Kindle is completely minuscule and can’t
do anything to interfere with a plane,” explained Jay Gandhi, chief executive
of EMT Labs. Still, the F.A.A. has maintained its hardline stance. Last
November, a woman was removed from an American Eagle flight
for ignoring requests to turn off her cell phone. “As with any regulation,
safety is always our top priority, and no changes will be made until we are
certain they will not impact safety and security,” an F.A.A. spokesman told
FoxNews.com. “For some time, the FAA’s rules have permitted an airline to
allow passenger use of PEDs if the airline demonstrates the devices will not
interfere with aircraft avionics.” “The FAA is exploring ways to bring together
all of the key stakeholders involved, but, ultimately, testing is the
responsibility of each airline. We recognize that this is an area of
consumer interest, and our goal is to bring together these key stakeholders to
help facilitate a discussion as we have in the past.”
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