Time To Pack Up Your Airport Coffee Pot and the Couch?
This is an important issue!
We all appreciate the FAA’s work in funding improvements to
General Aviation airports. Their funneling of financial support
makes our airports safer and more useful for all types of General
Aviation operations. This is good. However, a dark side of this
funding has recently come to light.
That is FAA Order 5190.6B, also known as “Compliance Guidance
Letter 2009-1 – Through-the-Fence and On-Airport Residential
Access to Federally Obligated Airports.” This new
policy forbids local airport authorities from entering into new
“through-the-fence” agreements with surrounding land owners and
requires that existing agreements not be renewed. Previously
worded guidance used the word “discourage” while the new
directive uses the word “prohibit.”
This FAA order, 5190.6B, is the guiding light used by FAA
employees, state aviation officials, airport managers, and the
pilots and tenants of airports around these United States. When
the FAA announced an onerous series of new prohibitions in the
Manual on September 30, 2009, they did so without any public
input or comments. Regrettably, extreme airport access
prohibitions appear to have been capriciously added by FAA
staffers – with little or no input from anyone but the rule
makers in their respective mirrors.
Prohibiting through-the-fence access at FAA funded airports flies
in the face of a long history of Americans building their homes –
and hangars – adjacent to public use airports. Aircraft access to
these airports was never in question. Now it apparently is.
The logic the FAA is using is akin to prohibiting automobile
access to federally funded highways for people who own homes with
garages next to a highway. Does that make any sense? Of course
not, and neither does prohibiting someone from “driving” their
plane to an adjacent airport. If the FAA gets away with this new
rule, I wonder what they will do when someone buys a new
Terrafugia and drives it across the street to the airport and
takes off? For that matter, what will they do when I drive my
Taylor Aerocar to the airport and take off?
Prior to the September 30, 2009, amendment, the FAA policy on
through-the-fence access read as follows: “As a general
principle, FAA will recommend that airport owners refrain from
entering into any agreement which grants access to the public
landing area by an aircraft normally stored and serviced on
adjacent property. Exceptions can be granted on a case-by-case
basis where operating restrictions ensure safety and equitable
compensation for use of the airport.” This represents
over 50 years of FAA support and approval of thoughtful
through-the-fence access. Yet, the new FAA rule states:
“there are no acceptable residential through-the-fence
agreements.” In fact, it appears that the FAA is ordering
any FAA-funded airports to cancel existing agreements that don’t
have end dates.
This is clearly a wrong turn by the FAA at a time when General
Aviation needs all the help it can get. My guess is that the
policy makers who came up with this restrictive idea are not
pilots and are not active in General Aviation. It’s a problem
that has become epidemic in recent years; there are fewer and
fewer aviators at the FAA. Certainly, this ridiculous rule-making
shows a complete disconnect with the GA community.
What Can You Do To Help? One of our regular contributors, Dr.
Brent Blue, has created a web site that’s a good place to start.
It’s www.ThroughTheFence.org (you can also read Dr. Blue’s
Opinion page in the December issue of AircraftOwner:
http://aircraftowneronline.com/lg_display.cfm/page/20/catalog/57)
. You have through March 31, 2010, to submit your comments on
future changes to 5190.6B using the following instructions:
1. Go to: www.regulations.gov/search/Regs/home.html#home
2. Type: FAA-2009-0924-0001 into the Keyword or ID search block,
which will bring you to the FAA Order 5190.6B docket site
3. To the far right of the first line, click on the “submit a
comment” link
4. This comment site will let you attach other documents to your
comments.
To read the EAA and AOPA’s responses to the FAA, visit these
links:
For the AOPA: www.aircraftownernews.com/AOPA_FAA_TTF_Letter.pdf
For the EAA: www.aircraftownernews.com/EAA_FAA_TTF_Letter.pdf
We you want to read the FAA document; visit this site. It’s
the700 page manual which replaced a 60 page manual dated 1989.
The particular through-the-fence material is in Chapter 20:
www.faa.gov/airports/resources/publications/orders/compliance_5190_6
Take That Coffee Pot and Couch Out of Your Hangar
NOW!
We need to stop this sort of baseless regulation gone wild. It’s
not out of the realm of possibility that you will not be allowed
to have a couch or coffee pot in your hangar if it’s on an
airport receiving federal funding. In fact, some reading this
document suggest that is already the case.
Never Surrender As we go into the New Year, it is becoming clear
that 2010 will be no different from recent years. We must
continuously defend General Aviation at every turn. This issue is
no exception. General Aviation increasingly seems like an island
of sanity and we must defend it. So in the words of our great
fellow pilot Winston Churchill:
“We shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be, we
shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing
grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we
shall fight in the hills; we shall never
surrender.”
By sticking together, and only by sticking together, we can
continue to share and enjoy the benefits General Aviaiton brings
to America. Fly safe in these coming months.
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