There are a lot of incidents that occur in commercial airlines that the public never hears about, its been that way for a very long time, and is
nothing new. The most frequent problems are hydraulic failures, and blown tires. This happens pretty regularly, and you would never hear about it on
the news unless the news agency picked up the call on a scanner, and had a truck near the airport to film the landing. I probably worked a hydraulic
failure once every two to three months, just on my airlines, at my station, and on my shift. Bits fall off aircraft all the time as well, but unless
they hit something, or land in the middle of a very public area, again you will not hear about it. Most of the parts that fall off are nonessential
pieces of composite which simply make the aircraft more streamlined, and most of that stuff lands in the middle of BFE nowhere. We used to keep an
incident sheet in flight ops that had all aircraft incidents across all airlines, and it was pages and pages long for every week.
As to near misses, that is another thing that will look worse on paper then it really is. Most of them happen when they switch between the letting a
block of aircraft take-off and a block land. At my airport the blocks were in roughly 3’s most of the time. So for instance the last plane on the
take-off group is sitting at the end of the runway, and the pilot is taking longer then he should to get moving, meanwhile the first landing aircraft
is coming in behind him. The pilot in the landing aircraft can see the aircraft on the runway, and is certainly not going to hit him, but he will wait
until the last possible minute to go-around in hopes the first plane will clear off in time for him to make his landing.
Is there any danger in this scenario that a collision will occur? No.
Will it be shown on paper as a near-miss? Yes.
Is that really a fair estimation of what happened? Not really.
Will it unduly affect customer confidence in aviation? Yes.
The point is that there are a lot of minor emergencies, but they are minor, and they are dealt with. On paper, especially to the layman, they will
look worse then they really are. Flying is safer then driving now matter how you stack it, and to release this type of data to folks who don’t
understand how minor most of the events are, is just going to cause undo skepticism of the airline industry, which actually has a very good safety
average.
Btw, that survey was taken by talking to pilots, one thing you should all know about pilots is that after flying, their second favorite hobby is
bitching about stuff. Even John Lear will attest to that, as he has mentioned it in other threads.