NTSB News

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 9, 2000    (SB-00-06)

NTSB SYMPOSIUM ON
TRANSPORTATION SAFETY AND THE LAW
(PROPRIETARY DATA, PRIVACY, CRIMINAL PROSECUTIONS)



Washington, DC - The National Transportation Safety Board will host a symposium next month designed to air the conflicts between the growing need for data to improve transportation safety and the industry's concern about the use of that data in regulatory actions, law suits and criminal prosecutions.

In announcing the symposium, NTSB Chairman Jim Hall noted that there is broad agreement among safety experts on the need for more comprehensive and sophisticated data.  "In the future," Hall said, "as transportation systems increase in complexity, investigators will need more and better data available to them if they are to determine an accident's cause, recommend ways to prevent similar accidents, and ensure the safety of the traveling public.  The need for information must always be balanced with our citizen's privacy concerns."

The symposium will bring together knowledgeable participants from government, industry (all transportation modes) and the legal community to examine the problems and hopefully point the way to solutions that can appropriately satisfy the concerns of all sectors.  "The NTSB's aim," Chairman Hall stated, "is to help create a context in which safety data can be aggressively gathered while the legitimate rights of all concerned are protected."
 
The symposium will be held on April 25-26, 2000, at the Hyatt Regency Crystal City Hotel, 2799 Jefferson Davis Highway, Arlington, Virginia 22202.

Issues to be discussed include:

More information about the symposium, including a detailed agenda and list of participants can be found on the Safety Board's web site (http://www.ntsb.gov).

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NTSB Media Contact:
Paul Schlamm (202) 314-6100

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