These towers, in the last five to ten years, have become
much more popular and utilized as investors look for
locations to install wind farms. The same towers have
been the subject of NTSB advisories as to the danger
they pose to agricultural aviators.
Allen, who was 58 at the time of his death, had logged
over 26,000 hours in his agricultural aircraft, had a
stellar reputation for safety and ability. “He set the
gold standard for aerial application,” said Brent Tadman,
farms operation manager for M&T Staten.
“Steve Allen was
a consummate professional and our go-to agricultural
aviator. His death was a tragic and unacceptable loss
that we all felt,” said Mark Boyd, farms operation
manager for Hastings Island. Both of these gentlemen testified
that the standard of care required farmers to tell
agricultural aviators of obstacles like this one once
they are created, something that did not happen in this
incident.
Andrew Moore, executive director for the National
Agricultural Aviation Association stated, “We believe
that this case, and the result, sets the standard of
care in the agricultural and MET community. Now those
individuals who lease land for the use of METs and wind
energy investors have to recognize that the standard for
them is to mark these towers and obstructions so that
agricultural aviators will be able to be aware of their
presence and avoid them accordingly. Strobe lighting,
painting and other visible markings along with databases
showing exact geographical locations of these towers are
some of the proper safety standards to use to protect
agricultural aviators from low-level towers.”
“Agricultural aviators deal with hazards every day they
are in the air and they need to know of obstacles and
hazards. We believe this case establishes a standard of
care in the community, and wind energy and agricultural
businesses are now on notice of this standard of care
that is required of them and the potential exposure that
they face, should they not properly and adequately mark
these towers so that members of the aviation community
are not killed,” said Rod Thomas, owner of Thomas
Helicopters in Gooding, Idaho and 2014 president of the
National Agricultural Aviation Research and Education
Foundation who also testified in this action.
The National Transportation Safety Board determined
the probable cause(s) of this accident to be an
in-flight collision with an unmarked meteorological
evaluation tower (MET) during an aerial application
flight due to the pilot's failure to see and avoid the
obstacle. Contributing to the accident was the lack of
visual conspicuity of the MET and the lack of
information available to the pilot about the MET before
the flight.
This matter was scheduled for trial in
Contra
Costa County
in front of Hon. Laurel Brady on October 6, 2014.
Previously, Mrs. Allen had helped sponsor legislation in
California and Colorado to have towers
of this nature marked and identified so that
agricultural aviators would be notified and aware of
MET’s existence so they could be avoided.
Mrs. Allen continues to this day working with the
NAAA and others so that these types of obstructions
are adequately marked and other families are not put
through the same type of tragic loss that she and
Steve Allen’s daughters have had to endure.
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