U. S. Department of Transportation



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Runway Incursion Severity Risk Analysis:

September 14, 2012

FINAL Report

Produced for:

Runway Safety

Office of Safety

Air Traffic Organization

Federal Aviation Administration

Washington, D.C.

Produced by:

Lee Biernbaum and Garrett Hagemann

U.S. Department of Transportation

Research and Innovative Technology Administration

Volpe National Transportation Systems Center

Cambridge, MA

DOCUMENT APPROVAL


Document Number of Final Version

Date of Document

mm/dd/yyyy



Approver Initials

Date of Approval

Draft

07/31/2012







Final

09/14/2012











































DOCUMENT CHANGE HISTORY

Document Number

Version Number

Draft or Final

Date of Document

mm/dd/yyyy



Author’s Initials

Author’s Org

Description of Change











































Technical Report Documentation Page

1. Report No.

DOT-VNTSC-FAA-12-13

2. Government Accession No.


3. Recipient's Catalog No.


4. Title and Subtitle

Runway Incursion Severity Risk Analysis

5. Report Date

September 14, 2012

6. Performing Organization Code


7. Author(s)

Lee Biernbaum, Garrett Hagemann


8. Performing Organization Report No.

DOT-VNTSC-FAA-12-13

9. Performing Organization Name and Address

U.S. Department of Transportation

Volpe National Transportation Systems Center

55 Broadway

Cambridge, MA 02142

10. Work Unit No. (TRAIS)


11. Contract or Grant No.

FA6AB3, FA01B1

12. Sponsoring Agency Name and Address

U.S. Department of Transportation

Federal Aviation Administration

Air Traffic Organization, Office of Safety and Technical Training

800 Independence Avenue, SW

Washington, DC 20591

13. Type of Report and Period Covered

Final Report, September 2010 –September 2012

14. Sponsoring Agency Code


15. Supplementary Notes

16. Abstract
Runway incursions are defined as the unauthorized presence of a vehicle, pedestrian, or aircraft on a runway. Identifying situations or conditions in which runway incursions are more likely to be severe can suggest policy implications and areas for future safety research. Previous work in this area focused on a narrative approach. This study seeks to examine runway incursions from a statistical perspective and provide insights into the broad trends underlying severity.
This report analyzes 10 years of runway incursion event information. A variety of FAA data sources were used to provide information on the event itself, airport characteristics, and airport operations at the time of the incident. Weather information was also incorporated using automated weather readings from airports. The culmination of the analysis is a series of discrete choice models focusing on different sets of incident characteristics.
As this represents the first regression-based analysis of these data, the results are suggestive rather than definitive. For example, controller incidents appear to be more severe on average. The results also suggest some areas for further investigation: specifically a need for understanding the frequency of incursions and improvements to the severity measure.


17. Key Words

Runway incursion, air traffic control, incident severity, safety analysis, discrete choice, multinomial logit, ordinal logit, airport safety, runway safety

18. Distribution Statement

No restrictions

19. Security Classif. (of this report)

Unclassified

20. Security Classif. (of this page)

Unclassified

21. No. of Pages

271

22. Price



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