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12th Annual Archie League Medal of Safety Awards

A publication of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association

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14 Joseph J. White was on position at PVD and began assisting the pilot, who was having a hard time staying calm. White told him, "It's OK, we're going to work with you on this," and took control. Adding to the difficult situation, the airport surveillance radar antenna (ASR-9) at PVD was out of service, which prevented radar contact with aircraft below 2,000 feet in the vicinity of the airport. At that time, coordination with another scope was established to help White track the aircraft by using long-range radar (LRR). This helped White identify the aircraft's location at low altitudes. White: N73S we have a radar mode that will give us radar to about two- thousand feet so what we're going to try to do is keep radar that way and get you down to two-thousand and try to get the field in sight for you. White: N73S when able say fuel remaining and souls on board. N5773S: Just one soul on board, 73S. There were low cloud ceilings and IFR conditions that day. The pilot reported that in addition to the aircraft's gear malfunction, the trims, GPS, and autopilot were inoperative. White attempted to vector the aircraft towards the airport for nearly 40 minutes, then initiated no-gyro vectors for ILS Runway 5 at PVD. The pilot was unable to intercept the localizer, so White advised the pilot to descend to 1,200 feet — well below the minimum vectoring altitude in that area. On April 20, 2015, the pilot of a Mooney M20K was experiencing a gear malfunction. JOSEPH J. WHITE Providence ATCT

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