New Year's Revelers Come to Chicago
From Far and Wide
Jan 01, 2007 11:23 AM Filed in:
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Interesting
In The Sky! A Bird? A Plane? A ... UFO?
United Airlines denies its workers filed reports about saucerlike
object hovering at O'Hare
By
Jon Hilkevitch
January 1, 2007
It sounds like a tired joke--but a group of airline employees
insist they are in earnest, and they are upset that neither their
bosses nor the government will take them seriously.
A flying saucerlike object hovered low over O'Hare International
Airport for several minutes before bolting through thick clouds
with such intense energy that it left an eerie hole in overcast
skies, said some United Airlines employees who observed the
phenomenon.
Was it an alien spaceship? A weather balloon lost in the airspace
over the world's second-busiest airport? A top-secret military
craft? Or simply a reflection from lights that played a trick on
the eyes?
Officials at United professed no knowledge of the Nov. 7
event--which was reported to the airline by as many as a dozen of
its own workers--when the Tribune started asking questions
recently. But the Federal Aviation Administration said its air
traffic control tower at O'Hare did receive a call from a United
supervisor asking if controllers had spotted a mysterious
elliptical-shaped craft sitting motionless over Concourse C of the
United terminal.
No controllers saw the object, and a preliminary check of radar
found nothing out of the ordinary, FAA spokeswoman Elizabeth Isham
Cory said.
The FAA is not conducting a further investigation, Cory said. The
theory is the sighting was caused by a "weather phenomenon," she
said.
The UFO report has sparked some chuckles among controllers in
O'Hare tower.
"To fly 7 million light years to O'Hare and then have to turn
around and go home because your gate was occupied is simply
unacceptable," said O'Hare controller and union official Craig
Burzych.
Some of the witnesses, interviewed by the Tribune, said they are
upset that neither the government nor the airline is probing the
incident.
Whatever the object was, it could have interfered with O'Hare's
radar and other equipment, and even created a collision risk, they
said.
The Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (the term that
extraterrestrial-watchers nowadays prefer over Unidentified Flying
Object) was first seen by a United ramp worker who was directing
back a United plane at Gate C17, according to an account the worker
provided to the National UFO Reporting Center.
The sighting occurred during daylight, about 4:30 p.m., just before
sunset.
All the witnesses said the object was dark gray and well defined in
the overcast skies. They said the craft, estimated by different
accounts to be 6 feet to 24 feet in diameter, did not display any
lights.
Some said it looked like a rotating Frisbee, while others said it
did not appear to be spinning. All agreed the object made no noise
and it was at a fixed position in the sky, just below the
1,900-foot cloud deck, until shooting off into the clouds.
Witnesses shaken by sighting
"I tend to be scientific by nature, and I don't understand why
aliens would hover over a busy airport," said a United mechanic who
was in the cockpit of a Boeing 777 that he was taxiing to a
maintenance hangar when he observed the metallic-looking object
above Gate C17.
"But I know that what I saw and what a lot of other people saw
stood out very clearly, and it definitely was not an [Earth]
aircraft," the mechanic said.
One United employee appeared emotionally shaken by the sighting and
"experienced some religious issues" over it, one co-worker
said.
A United manager said he ran outside his office in Concourse B
after hearing the report about the sighting on an internal airline
radio frequency.
"I stood outside in the gate area not knowing what to think, just
trying to figure out what it was," he said. "I knew no one would
make a false call like that. But if somebody was bouncing a weather
balloon or something else over O'Hare, we had to stop it because it
was in very close proximity to our flight operations."
Some joke, others research
The databases of various UFO-watching groups are full of accounts
filed by pilots about sightings of unknown aircraft and anomalies
that affected navigational equipment onboard planes.
Whether any of the UFO incidents are real or merely the result of
individual perceptions, some experts say the events pose a
potential safety risk to pilots and their passengers.
"There have been documented cases where safety appears to have been
implicated, and more and more we are coming to the point of view
that we are dealing with an intelligent phenomenon," said Richard
Haines, science director at the National Aviation Reporting Center
on Anomalous Phenomena, a private agency.
"We must be proactive before an aircraft goes down," said Haines, a
former chief of the Space Human Factors Office at NASA's Ames
Research Center.
Haines is investigating the O'Hare incident. He said he has
determined that no weather balloons were launched in the vicinity
of O'Hare on Nov. 7.
"It's absurd that the military would be conducting aerial test
flights" near the airport, Haines said.
All the witnesses to the O'Hare event, who included at least
several pilots, said they are certain based on the disc's
appearance and flight characteristics that it was not an airplane,
helicopter, weather balloon or any other craft known to man.
United denies UFO report
They're not sure what was hanging out for several minutes in the
restricted airspace, but they are upset that no one in power has
taken the matter seriously.
A United spokeswoman said there is no record of the UFO report. She
said United officials do not recall discussion of any such
incident.
"There's nothing in the duty manager log, which is used to report
unusual incidents," said United spokeswoman Megan McCarthy. "I
checked around. There's no record of anything."
The pilots of the United plane being directed back from Gate C17
also were notified by United personnel of the sighting, and one of
the pilots reportedly opened a windscreen in the cockpit to get a
better view of the object estimated to be hovering 1,500 feet above
the ground.
The object was seen to suddenly accelerate straight up through the
solid overcast skies, which the FAA reported had 1,900-foot cloud
ceilings at the time.
"It was like somebody punched a hole in the sky," said one United
employee.
Witnesses said they had a hard time visually tracking the object as
it streaked through the dense clouds.
It left behind an open hole of clear air in the cloud layer, the
witnesses said, adding that the hole disappeared within a few
minutes.
The United employees interviewed by the Tribune spoke on condition
of anonymity.
Some said they were interviewed by United officials and instructed
to write reports and draw pictures of what they observed, and that
they were advised by United officials to refrain from speaking
about what they saw.
Federal agency backtracks
Like United, the FAA originally told the Tribune that it had no
information on the alleged UFO sighting. But the federal agency
quickly reversed its position after the newspaper filed a Freedom
of Information Act request.
An internal FAA review of air-traffic communications tapes, a step
toward complying with the Tribune request, turned up the call by
the United supervisor to an FAA manager in the airport tower, Cory
said.
Cory said the weather might have factored into what the witnesses
thought they saw.
"Our theory on this is that it was a weather phenomenon," she said.
"That night was a perfect atmospheric condition in terms of low
[cloud] ceiling and a lot of airport lights. When the lights shine
up into the clouds, sometimes you can see funny things. That's our
take on it."