The Air Travelers' Association has introduced its
first Airline Safety Report Card, which grades the
safety performance of airlines worldwide. Each
airline's grade is based on its fatal-accident rate.
This calculations are transformed into letter
grades: A is tops, F is lowest, just like when you
went to school.
The first report, based on data from 1987 to
1996, reassuringly gives 83.8 percent of all the
airlines graded an A rating. However, 11.2 percent
received an F.
Of interest to divers is that all the Caribbean
airlines got an A. The survey covers only airlines
that flew more than 20,000 flights in the 10-year
period, but these include ALM, Air Aruba,
Bahamasair, Dominicana de Aviacion, Air Jamaica,
Cayman Air, and BWIA.
Obviously not taking into account lost
luggage and stranded divers, Taca managed an A,
as did most Central American airlines, with the
exception of Guatemala's Aviateca and Panama's
Copa, which both received an F.
In Southeast Asia, Garuda and Thai International
scored only a C. Of the two domestic
carriers in Indonesia, Merpati scored an F while
Sempati rated an A. Phillipine Airlines also made
an F grade. Malayian Air, Silk Air, and Singapore
Air all received an A.
The Air Travelers' Association intends to
update the airline grade cards twice a year. I
received my copy of the Report Card through
their web site at www.1800AIRSAFE.COM (1-800-
247-7233 to order by phone). The report is free,
but shipping and handling is $4.95 for the 20-page
pamphlet. Also be aware that when you order the
Report, you are automatically enrolled in Travel
Advantage, a service that claims to provide airline,
hotel, and car-rental savings. What is not mentioned
in the Air Travelers' Association's literature
or on their web page is that if you do not cancel
your membership to Travel Advantage after the
free three-month introductory period, your credit
card will be charged $49.95.
J. Q.