FAA shuts down Hawaii cargo operator Transair

Safety investigation was underway before July freighter crash

Images from NTSB of airliner fuselage at bottom of ocean, cracked up.

Transair 727-200 at the bottom of the ocean off Honolulu. (Image: NTSB/Flickr)

The Federal Aviation Administration has suspended the operating authority of Honolulu-based Rhoades Aviation after one of its Transair cargo jets crash-landed in the ocean early this month.

The agency said safety investigators had been looking at the company since last fall and that it will be prevented from flying or conducting maintenance inspections until it complies with FAA regulations.

The agency’s decision is separate from the ongoing investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board into the July accident of a Transair Boeing 737-200 that crashed into the Pacific Ocean near Honolulu. Both pilots survived. 

The FAA, in a statement provided to American Shipper, said it began investigating the maintenance and safety practices of Rhoades Aviation last fall. On June 13, the FAA notified Rhoades Aviation that the agency intended to rescind the authority for the airline to conduct maintenance inspections due to deficiencies identified during the investigation. The company was given 30 days under administrative process to ask the FAA to reconsider, which it did not do.


On Friday, the FAA notified Rhoades Aviation that the agency was moving forward with plans to rescind its ability to conduct maintenance inspections, effectively preventing it from operating. Transair currently has one operational 737-200 freighter.

The Wall Street Journal first reported the FAA’s decision against Rhoades Aviation.

The Transair pilots were returning to Honolulu because they lost power in one of their engines when they ditched the plane in the ocean.

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