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#1
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I was just reading both the land lease, and hangar keeper agreements for the
now City owned Morey Airport. (C29), and they both state: "The Lessee further agrees not to transport, or cause to be transported, onto airport premises, gasoline or other flammable fluids for the purpose of self-fueling aircraft." I've heard it mentioned here that an airport that receives federal funds cannot make rules like this, and must designate an area on the airport for self fueling. Of course, they can require a paid 'self fueling' permit, and charge a flowage fee. But that's a fair compromise, IMO. Does anyone have a specific FAR reference that I can print out and provide to a board member? TIA -- Ben C-172 - N13258 @ 87Y |
#2
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There's no FAR per se, but Advisory Circular 150/5190-5. However, it
says: "An airport owner is under no obligation to permit aircraft owners to introduce on the airport equipment, personnel or practices which would be unsafe, unsightly, detrimental to the public welfare,..." This sounds doubtful FAA would do anything, and when FAA ever does something to enforce grant assurances, it has to do with protecting against waste the money which taxpayers have invested in the airport, not the convenience of one or a few airport tenants. You would need to consult the FAA office which manages the grants for the airport, which usually is not associated with the FSDO. There's another growing reality, in that while they'll argue safety, monopoly is really at its root. But if there's only one FBO on the field, both FAA and the City may feel that survival of the airport (and therefore protection of taxpayer investment) could depend upon survival of the FBO. Or if there's two FBO's and one fails, then a monopoly remains. Our City has to periodically threaten our one FBO with lawsuit over routine business matters but not push too hard. When the County considered taking over, which would send City fathers into orgasm, the first thing they did was put out RFP's for an FBO. The only qualified applicant was the present guy; it's still a City airport. Welcome to general aviation in the new millennium. Fred F. "Ben Smith" wrote: ... I've heard it mentioned here that an airport that receives federal funds cannot make rules like this, and must designate an area on the airport for self fueling. Of course, they can require a paid 'self fueling' permit, and charge a flowage fee. But that's a fair compromise, IMO. Does anyone have a specific FAR reference that I can print out and provide to a board member? TIA |
#3
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That's in there too, but the applicable part is the part that says:
"An aircraft owner, who is entitled to use the landing area of an airport, may tie down, adjust, repair, refuel, clean, and otherwise service his/her own aircraft, provided the service is performed by the aircraft owner or his/her employees with resources supplied by the aircraft owner...." There's some wishy-washy language about "reasonable rules and standards," about fueling/maintenance/etc, but they can't prevent you from doing it (if there's a nickel of federal funding in it). So, they might be able to say, "You have to provide adequate grounding and fire suppression to refuel, and use DOT-approved containers," but they can't stop you. The grounding and fire extinguisher is just plain a good idea, anyway. Grounding isn't optional! -Cory TaxSrv wrote: : There's no FAR per se, but Advisory Circular 150/5190-5. However, it : says: : "An airport owner is under no obligation to permit aircraft owners to : introduce on the airport equipment, personnel or practices which would : be unsafe, unsightly, detrimental to the public welfare,..." : This sounds doubtful FAA would do anything, and when FAA ever does : something to enforce grant assurances, it has to do with protecting : against waste the money which taxpayers have invested in the airport, : not the convenience of one or a few airport tenants. You would need to : consult the FAA office which manages the grants for the airport, which : usually is not associated with the FSDO. : There's another growing reality, in that while they'll argue safety, : monopoly is really at its root. But if there's only one FBO on the : field, both FAA and the City may feel that survival of the airport : (and therefore protection of taxpayer investment) could depend upon : survival of the FBO. Or if there's two FBO's and one fails, then a : monopoly remains. Our City has to periodically threaten our one FBO : with lawsuit over routine business matters but not push too hard. : When the County considered taking over, which would send City fathers : into orgasm, the first thing they did was put out RFP's for an FBO. : The only qualified applicant was the present guy; it's still a City : airport. Welcome to general aviation in the new millennium. : Fred F. : "Ben Smith" wrote: : ... : I've heard it mentioned here that an airport that receives federal : funds : cannot make rules like this, and must designate an area on the : airport for : self fueling. Of course, they can require a paid 'self fueling' : permit, and : charge a flowage fee. But that's a fair compromise, IMO. : : Does anyone have a specific FAR reference that I can print out and : provide : to a board member? TIA -- ************************************************** *********************** * The prime directive of Linux: * * - learn what you don't know, * * - teach what you do. * * (Just my 20 USm$) * ************************************************** *********************** |
#4
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![]() "Gene Kearns" wrote in message ... This is very incorrect. AC numeration is AC(Applicable FAR)... Thus, this poster needs to read FAR 150. From what is described here.... the airport is in violation 14 CFR Part 150. That's not true. The AC numbers mimic but aren't directly mapped into the FAR parts. The ones that end in zero usually don't, as this one doesn't . 14 CFR 150 talks about Airport Noise Planning. He most likely wants to check Part 151, which covers the Federal Aid to Airports. |
#5
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"Gene Kearns" wrote in
: On Mon, 5 Apr 2004 12:07:35 -0400, "Ron Natalie" wrote: "Gene Kearns" wrote in message . .. This is very incorrect. AC numeration is AC(Applicable FAR)... Thus, this poster needs to read FAR 150. From what is described here.... the airport is in violation 14 CFR Part 150. That's not true. The AC numbers mimic but aren't directly mapped into the FAR parts. The ones that end in zero usually don't, as this one doesn't . 14 CFR 150 talks about Airport Noise Planning. He most likely wants to check Part 151, which covers the Federal Aid to Airports. Oops... Your answer is more correct than mine. I believe he does want FAR 151 instead of 150. Also, there is an FAA Order that directs FAA field personnel how to handle this matter.... sorry, don't have that number handy, but I can dig it up, if anyone is interested. A google of "exclusive aeronautical rights" might yield some useful information. http://www.faa.gov/arp/pdf/5190-6a.pdf Page 11 SPECIFICALLY addresses your situation if the airport recieves, or has received any federal funds. -- ET ![]() "A common mistake people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools."---- Douglas Adams |
#6
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ET wrote in
: A google of "exclusive aeronautical rights" might yield some useful information. http://www.faa.gov/arp/pdf/5190-6a.pdf Page 11 SPECIFICALLY addresses your situation if the airport recieves, or has received any federal funds. Thought I would add something interesting, the above publicaton specifically says you must be allow to fuel your own aircraft. It even goes on to mention mo-gas... It also says the airport owner can charge you the same "fuel flowage fee" that it charges the fbo, if they do charge them.... -- ET ![]() "A common mistake people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools."---- Douglas Adams |
#7
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Page 11 SPECIFICALLY addresses your situation if the airport recieves,
or has received any federal funds. Thought I would add something interesting, the above publicaton specifically says you must be allow to fuel your own aircraft. It even goes on to mention mo-gas... It also says the airport owner can charge you the same "fuel flowage fee" that it charges the fbo, if they do charge them.... -- ET ![]() The "kicker" is, the airport can require you to maintain the same safety standards for storage, handling and filtering your fuel as they require for the fbo or other fuel distributor. BT |
#8
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"Gene Kearns" wrote:
"Storage and transport of aviation fuel, though not procured for resale, should be subject to reasonable restrictions and minimum standards for equipment, location and handling practices." I think the words "reasonable" and "minimum" are pretty important in this context. Another interesting concept might be that there is no mo-gas on the field at any FBO. I think this is all theoretical. If an airport operator imposes restrictions under the cover of safety, but which have the practical which have the practical effect of banning self-fueling, the chances of FAA doing anything about it, if not outright taking the side of the apt operator, are about zero. We can't expect FAA to take up the cause of a few, small airport tenants but which jeopardizes an FBO, which can jeopardize survival of the airport, which then jeopardizes taxpayer funds invested in it. As an officer in our airport association, I've seen written correspondence from FAA on related grant enforcement matters. The last letter in direct response our association, in fact, was surprising curt in tone, saying in effect, reality is what it is. In another example at a nearby apt, which requires proof of $10 million bond or insurance, unobtainable by banner-tow operators, this has the net effect of prohibiting banner towing. There, the FAA politely told our banner guys...too bad. The issue here is that cities/counties typically self-insure, and responsible public officials should not expose taxpayers to the liability. $10 mil liability protection is not unreasonable these days, but the fact that nobody will write the coverage is not FAA's problem. A similar argument can be made wrt to fueling safety requirements. Fred F. |
#9
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"Gene Kearns" wrote:
The fallacy of this argument is that (1) the FAA is not in the business of protecting FBOs any more than the aircraft owner's commercial interests and (2) the tax money is accepted by an airport authority..... not the FBO. I agree, but it's not that the FAA seeks to protect the FBO per se, it's that they may have no choice but to allow the airport operator/sponsor to write rules which reach an accommodation satisfactory to all parties. One of FAA's purposes in grant management is to keep reliever airports open and get full use of taxpayer money as dictated by Congress. In a case where fuel sales are judged important enough to dictate survivability of the airport, I just can't see FAA stepping in to defend the right of tentants to divert fuel dollars to local gas stations. It's not just the FBO that's hurt; the City loses on the per-gallon fees. What would happen in our case, as in the past where the City found its budgets threatened, is local Congress people intervene to "assist" all the parties in reaching an accommodation. It's unrealistic to me that FAA would initiate an action to trigger this process over an issue such as self-fueling. Their position at the table would be indefensible, since the cover by their own documents is the fuzzy definition of "reasonable restrictions." Tax funds are for the many not the airport authority and/or the FBO.... thus the laws prohibiting fraud and good-ole-boy networks.... the federal prohibition against granting exclusive aeronautical rights. Except FAA grant money may not be used for airport operations and maintenance, only capital improvements. Funds to operate come from us users, plus commonly subsidies by local gov't. There are limits to the latter that voters will tolerate, leaving only users to foot the bills. There's no good ole boy network at my airport; the City and the FBO don't like each other at all. But the voters are getting fed up with the airport, and the FBO has this aversion to net operating losses. Fred F. |
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