Las Vegas, NV, USA
The flight crew of an Airbus A320, operated by an air carrier, was conducting a visual approach to runway 25L while a Learjet 60 (LR60) was simultaneously cleared for takeoff from runway 19L. The pilot of the A320 elected to execute a go-around and came into hazardous proximity with the LR60 as it departed runway 19L. After the pilot of the A320 executed the go-around, neither local controller was able to provide control instructions to separate the two aircraft. The closest proximity of the two aircraft was approximately 0.3 nautical miles laterally and 100 feet vertically. The two aircraft were being controlled by different tower controllers, who were simultaneously routing aircraft to land on runway 25L and to depart from runway 19L--nonintersecting, converging runways whose flight paths intersect. This procedure was not prohibited by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), and there were no FAA-prescribed separation minima or procedures for air traffic controllers to follow when conducting simultaneous independent converging runway operations in the event a pilot elected to execute a go-around. This resulted in the aircraft going around coming into close proximity with the departure aircraft where the flight paths intersected.
On April 26, 2012, at 1225, two aircraft came within hazardous proximity of one another at McCarran International Airport (LAS), Las Vegas, Nevada, when JBU483, an Airbus Industries A320 arriving at LAS from General Edward Lawrence Logan International Airport (BOS), Boston, Massachusetts, initiated a go around from runway 25L and came into hazardous proximity of XARAV, a Mexican-registered Bombardier Lear Jet 60 (LR60) departing runway 19L. JBU483 made an evasive turn to the left and XARAV initiated a rapid climb. The aircraft came within 0.30 nautical miles laterally and 100’ vertically where the runway flight paths intersected off the departure ends of runway 19L and runway 25L. Both aircraft were under control of two different LAS ATCT local controllers at the time of the incident. There was no damage reported to either aircraft, or any injuries to passengers or crew. JBU483 was an Airbus Industries A320 scheduled 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 121 passenger flight operating from Boston Logan International Airport to Las Vegas, Nevada. The flight was on a visual approach to runway 25L at Las Vegas McCarran International Airport. XARAV was a non-scheduled 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 personal flight operating from Las Vegas McCarran International Airport. For further information, see the Air Traffic Control Group Chairman's Report in the docket for this case.
Federal Aviation Administration procedures that do not ensure separation in the event of a go-around during simultaneous independent runway operations on runways that do not physically intersect but whose flight paths intersect.
Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database
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