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FAA bans fixed-wing planes from N.Y. path

Yankee's crash promoted airspace restriction on East River corridor

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USA SMALL PLANE CRASHED INTO NEW YORK CITY APARTMENT BUILDING
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From first impact to first responders, view images from the small plane crash in New York City.
updated 6:53 p.m. ET Oct. 13, 2006

NEW YORK - Small fixed-wing planes have been banned from flying along the East River in New York City unless the pilot is in contact with air traffic control, the Federal Aviation Administration said Friday.

The announcement comes two days after a plane carrying New York Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle above the East River slammed into a skyscraper.

The new ban will affect small aircraft, but not helicopters, that previously have been allowed to fly along the river, which runs along the east side of Manhattan Island. All air traffic along the river has been limited to 1,100 feet in altitude.

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Federal officials on Friday wound up an onsite investigation of a Wednesday's crash that killed Lidle and Tyler Stanger, a 26-year-old flight instructor from California.

The FAA said a review of operations and procedures in the East River corridor prompted the rule change, which will require pilots of small, fixed-wing aircraft to obtain approval from air traffic controllers before entering the area.

The FAA said the flight restrictions go into effect immediately.

The general aviation corridors around Manhattan have been “the Wild West,” said Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y earlier Friday. He and Sen. Charles Schumer said anyone flying near the island should be under the supervision of air traffic controllers, especially in the post-Sept. 11 era.

“A smart terrorist could load up a small, little plane with biological, chemical or even nuclear material and fly up the Hudson or East rivers, no questions asked,” said Schumer, D-N.Y. “I hope this will be a wake-up call to the FAA to re-examine flight patterns, which, amazingly enough, they haven’t done since 9/11.”

New York’s Republican governor, George Pataki, also said the Federal Aviation Administration “needs to take a much tougher line” about private, or general aviation, flights over the city.

Lidle’s single-engine plane slammed into the building Wednesday while flying over the East River, which separates Manhattan from Brooklyn and Queens and is lined with skyscrapers and landmarks, including the United Nations. He and California-based flight instructor, Tyler Stanger, were killed.

Who was in control?
It was unclear who was at the controls. The question of who was flying Lidle’s 545 Cirrus SR20 will influence whether his family receives a $1.5 million insurance payment from baseball’s benefit plan. The plan excludes “any incident related to travel in an aircraft ... while acting in any capacity other than as a passenger.”

The plane looped around the Statue of Liberty, then followed the East River over the Brooklyn Bridge and past the U.N., authorities said.

Much of the airspace over the rivers that encircle Manhattan is unrestricted for small aircraft flying under 1,100 feet, a little lower than the Empire State Building. Small planes and helicopters beneath that ceiling aren’t required to file flight plans or check in with air traffic controllers, as long as they are over water.

By about 96th Street, general aviation aircraft headed north must either execute a U-turn to avoid the restricted airspace around LaGuardia Airport or get permission from air traffic control to go any further.

Lidle’s plane struck The Belaire condominium tower near that turnaround point.


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