By Shelley Shan / Staff reporterThe Transportation Safety Board yesterday said it would not investigate a fire on a Scoot Airlines flight to Singapore that was reportedly caused by a portable charger in a passenger’s carry-on luggage, as it does not qualify as a major transportation incident.
Taipei, July 31 (CNA) The head of Taiwan's Transportation Safety Board, an independent agency responsible for investigating major transportation accidents, told CNA on Sunday that it will expand its flight recorder or "black box" decoding capabilities to help investigate the cause of more military aircraft crashes.
TRA facing NT$2.5m fine after delaying incident notification
By Shelley Shan / Staff reporter
The Taiwan Railways Administration (TRA) could face a fine of NT$2.5 million (US$89,439) for delayed notifications to the Taiwan Transportation Safety Board about incidents on its network, the board’s chairman said.
Article 9 of the Transportation Occurrences Investigation Act (運輸事故調查法) requires the TRA to notify the board within two hours of receipt of information about railway incidents. Failure to report such information within two hours could result in a fine of NT$500,000 to NT$2.5 million.
However, the TRA does not always report incidents on time, board chairman Young Hong-tsu (楊宏智) said, adding that the last time the railway agency failed to report such information before the deadline was on April 11, when a fire broke out on a northbound Tzuchiang Express train after it stopped at Jhungli Railway Station in Taoyuan.
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