Reno, Nevada Crash: Are Air Races Safe?

It'sa "motorsports event like no other."

ByABC News
September 17, 2011, 4:24 PM

Sept. 17, 2011— -- Organizers of the National Championship Air Races in Reno, Nev., have long touted the speed and drama inherent in their annual event, the last of its kind in the country.

Their web site boasts of a "motorsports event like no other" -- aircraft reaching speeds of 500 miles per hour, screaming around an oval course, sometimes traveling no more than 50 feet off the ground.

"Each race is just one thrilling episode of a weeklong pylon-to-pylon drama filled with excitement at every turn and endings you will never see coming," the Web site boasts.

But those words have taken on a haunting new meaning following Friday's disaster, when a World War II-era fighter plane crashed near spectators, killing at least nine people, including the 74-year-old pilot, and injuring dozens of others.

Although the air races took place under Federal Aviation Administration rules, the tragedy is raising questions whether these "car races in the sky" should be banned as just too dangerous for pilots and spectators alike.

Doug Bodine, a pilot who has raced at Reno for the last six years, told The Associated Press the FAA and Reno officials "need to consider ending the air races as one of the options."

That view was echoed on the website of the Reno Gazette-Journal.

"This foolhardy local event needs to go away," one commenter on the site wrote. Asking "what in the world" was an elderly man "doing racing in this thing," the commenter added, "Commercial pilots have to be retired at 62. There is probably a very good reason for that policy."

"Maybe it's time to switch to a bowling tournament instead," another reader added.

Others are defending the races.

"There is zero evidence that the age of the pilot was any factor in the accident at all. Jumping to uninformed conclusions before the smoke even clears is typical of people that have no meaningful experience with aviation. It is not possible to make life 'safe.' Only the gutless try to do so. Machines moving at high speed are dangerous. Stay away if you haven't the courage to fly them, or watch them be flown," said one poster on the Gazette-Journal's site.

Another added, "Terribly tragic accident at such a fun event. Risks in life every day, but we learn and go on. Right now we are very sad."

After flying into Reno, Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., said he wants to keep the races, but only if they can be made more safe.

"I do not want to see this event here in northern Nevada come to an end. I think it has history, I think people have enjoyed it over the years," he said. "But how do you get over, how do you get over a tragic event like this? And that's what's going to be decided in the next six months."

Before Friday, 19 pilots had died in accidents at the Reno air races but no spectators had been killed or seriously injured since the annual event began in 1964.

Race organizers compare the risks of the event to those at drag racing, or Indy or NASCAR races, where there have also been crashes in which fans were injured or killed.

"When you fly an airplane, there are certain risks just taking off and landing," Michael Houghton, president and CEO of the Reno Air Races, said today. "When you add the other dimension of racing -- it's a fast sport. It's not unlike Indianapolis or NASCAR.

"Every racing pilot understands the risks. They are perhaps the best pilots in the world," he said.