Although there were no fatalities in the accident, it highlighted a number of shortcomings with jet aircraft operations at Kansas City Municipal Airport. At , runway 18-36 was barely long enough for Boeing 707 aircraft. The airport could not be expanded, as it was surrounded on three sides by the
Missouri River and a rail yard on the east side. Pilots demanded action in Kansas City after the Flight 12 accident. Runway grooving was a brand new development at the time Flight 12 occurred. Kansas City airport officials grooved the airport, which greatly improved braking conditions afterward. The
Federal Aviation Administration implemented a program to institute runway grooving more broadly, and by 1969 the FAA had implemented grooving at four airports:
Atlanta Municipal Airport,
Chicago Midway Airport,
John F. Kennedy Airport, and
Washington National Airport. However, commercial pilots continued to consider the airport unsafe even after it was grooved. In September 1969, the
Airline Pilots Association (ALPA) released a member survey which named Kansas City Municipal Airport as one of the 10 most dangerous airports in America. Runway conditions at the airport, and the Flight 12 accident, were given by ALPA as specific reasons for including Kansas City on their 10 worst list. A new airport,
Kansas City International Airport, was built to provide commercial air service to Kansas City. The new airport would have two runways, one and the other , offering a greater safety margin for commercial jet aircraft such as the Boeing 707. In 1972 commercial airline operations were moved to the new airport. Continental continued to use the "Flight 12" designation on its Honolulu to Los Angeles routing. After its acquisition by
United Airlines, the flight number was kept for its LAX-HNL routing but it is now used on an IAH-LGA routing. ==Similar accidents==