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Air Tahoma was an American cargo airline (Part 121) based in Columbus, Ohio, United States. It was established and started operations in 1996 in San Diego then later moved to Indianapolis in 1998 and to its last location at Rickenbacker International Airport, Columbus.[1] Air Tahoma operated contract cargo flights internationally to the Caribbean, Mexico, Vietnam, Philippines, and the United States. Air Tahoma ceased operations in 2009.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2008) |
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Founded | 1995 | ||||||
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Ceased operations | 2009 | ||||||
Hubs | Rickenbacker International Airport, Miami International Airport, Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport, Subic Bay International Airport | ||||||
Fleet size | 12 | ||||||
Headquarters | Building 597 Rickenbacker International Airport Columbus, OH 43217 |
Noel Rude founded the company in 1996, and it operated out of Rickenbacker Airport in Columbus, OH
Air Tahoma is a spin-off of Cool Air Inc., which was founded in 1986 by Rude and his father, Bud Rude, a veteran of the airline industry who founded the parent company that originally flew firefighting missions in Washington.
FedEx contracted with Air Tahoma to fly to cities without enough traffic to support a larger jet.
Air Tahoma operated twin-engine turboprop Convairs (either the 580 or the 240).
On 13 August 2004 Flight 185 crashed during approach to landing.
Based on the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)'s September 1, 2008 post accident inspection report, Air Tahoma was presented on Friday November 7, 2008 with a list of alleged discrepancies on each of its aircraft. The company voluntarily suspended operations. On Monday, November 10, Air Tahoma presented the FAA with a 150-page document answering or dismissing every item in the FAA report. Air Tahoma subsequently resumed operations and requested input from the FAA as to any known safety items so that they could be properly addressed. Assigned FAA inspectors told the carrier it was "business as usual," and their instructions were to continue their daily surveillance.
With no new information, the FAA issued an emergency revocation on January 13, 2009, citing many systemic violations of the Federal Aviation Regulations.
The Company appealed the revocation. During the appeal process, the FAA revoked all ferry flights to reposition the company's aircraft to its home base and blocked any attempt by the company to place aircraft with other operators. In exchange for dropping its appeal, the FAA allowed the company to move its aircraft home and agreed not to withhold necessary inspectors from other operators trying to lease Air Tahoma aircraft.
The Inspector General also conducted an investigation of Air Tahoma and its management personnel. As part of the investigation,[2] two primary FAA officials with detailed knowledge of Air Tahoma stated:
"The First Inspector" read the FAA Enforcement Investigative Report (EIR) that was done after the fatal accident in September 2008; stated that, if that went to trial, 95% of the items within the EIR would be unsubstantiated. Several issues documented in the EIR concerned NDT (non-destructive testing); declared that Air Tahoma contracted much of its NDT work to outside companies.
"The Second Inspector" read the FAA Enforcement Investigative Report (EIR) about Air Tahoma. The EIR mentioned several issues with maintenance aspects and not many issues concerning operational item; stated that, if the maintenance items in the EIR were addressed individually in court, the items would not stand up. Additionally, if Air Tahoma had the money to go to court, many aspects of the EIR would not have held-up; did not elaborate on those issues and his opinions. Although, stated agreed with the EIR, it appeared "loaded on"; did not elaborate.
At the conclusion, the Special Agent In Charge (SAIC) briefed the Assistant United States Attorney (AUSA) about the information obtained, and the AUSA declined to prosecute the case.
Given that Air Tahoma successfully rebutted every item in the November 7, 2008 list of alleged aircraft discrepancies, and given that the FAA's own inspectors believed that the Enforcement Investigative Report against Air Tahoma would not hold up in court, it is easy to conclude why the FAA aggressively pressured Air Tahoma into dropping its appeal of the revocation order.
The Air Tahoma fleet included the following aircraft (as of September 2007):[1]
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