![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have two questions about who do you call when ...
I was talking with a police officer the other day. We were talking about planes and police work and blah blah blah. Then he says, "I saw some guy buzzing the neighborhood the other day. I got the tail number and I would have reported him but I didn't know who to call." I would think that all police have a hotlist of phone numbers - FBI, DEA, etc. I would think that the FAA would be on this list. But I guess not. My problem was, I didn't know what to tell him. The only thing I could think of was FSS. I figured they would at least be able to re-direct the call. Does the FAA have special emergency contact numbers for this sort of thing? My other question is related to my own problems. Let's say that I have landing gear trouble at night, out in the middle of nowhere. There may be country airports nearby but nothing that is open. Even if I could get Flight Service or a center controller on the radio would they know who to call to bring fire and rescue to airport lost-in-the-woods, Middle, America? Yes, I'm sure the right answer is to head to a bigger airport that is open. Work with me here. I'm just curious. Does Flight Service or controllers have emergency contact numbers for all of the airports near their sectors? -- Travis |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
FSDO is who you need to call.
Travis Marlatte wrote: I have two questions about who do you call when ... I was talking with a police officer the other day. We were talking about planes and police work and blah blah blah. Then he says, "I saw some guy buzzing the neighborhood the other day. I got the tail number and I would have reported him but I didn't know who to call." I would think that all police have a hotlist of phone numbers - FBI, DEA, etc. I would think that the FAA would be on this list. But I guess not. My problem was, I didn't know what to tell him. The only thing I could think of was FSS. I figured they would at least be able to re-direct the call. Does the FAA have special emergency contact numbers for this sort of thing? My other question is related to my own problems. Let's say that I have landing gear trouble at night, out in the middle of nowhere. There may be country airports nearby but nothing that is open. Even if I could get Flight Service or a center controller on the radio would they know who to call to bring fire and rescue to airport lost-in-the-woods, Middle, America? Yes, I'm sure the right answer is to head to a bigger airport that is open. Work with me here. I'm just curious. Does Flight Service or controllers have emergency contact numbers for all of the airports near their sectors? -- Travis |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
as for the gear problem and you're landing out in no-where's ville.. the
local ATC (center/appch) will have contact with FSS who does (or did) have contact numbers for all those local airports.. (they have to do a telephone ground search for late aircraft before starting an air search and rescue), most of the time they contact the local Airport manager or local constable. They can get your crash-rescue rolling.. BT "Newps" wrote in message . net... FSDO is who you need to call. Travis Marlatte wrote: I have two questions about who do you call when ... I was talking with a police officer the other day. We were talking about planes and police work and blah blah blah. Then he says, "I saw some guy buzzing the neighborhood the other day. I got the tail number and I would have reported him but I didn't know who to call." I would think that all police have a hotlist of phone numbers - FBI, DEA, etc. I would think that the FAA would be on this list. But I guess not. My problem was, I didn't know what to tell him. The only thing I could think of was FSS. I figured they would at least be able to re-direct the call. Does the FAA have special emergency contact numbers for this sort of thing? My other question is related to my own problems. Let's say that I have landing gear trouble at night, out in the middle of nowhere. There may be country airports nearby but nothing that is open. Even if I could get Flight Service or a center controller on the radio would they know who to call to bring fire and rescue to airport lost-in-the-woods, Middle, America? Yes, I'm sure the right answer is to head to a bigger airport that is open. Work with me here. I'm just curious. Does Flight Service or controllers have emergency contact numbers for all of the airports near their sectors? -- Travis |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Travis Marlatte" wrote in message
nk.net... I was talking with a police officer the other day. We were talking about planes and police work and blah blah blah. Then he says, "I saw some guy buzzing the neighborhood the other day. I got the tail number and I would have reported him but I didn't know who to call." The local FSDO. Since it's not an emergency, I'm not sure why you'd want a special emergency contact number. My other question is related to my own problems. Let's say that I have landing gear trouble at night, out in the middle of nowhere. I assume you are concerned no fire trucks will be at your destination airport? I would call the FSS. I don't know that they have all the appropriate phone numbers, but they are the people in the best position to help you. However, most kinds of landing gear trouble should require little more than some assistance in getting your airplane off the runway after you land (so no one else lands on it). Change your question to "if I have an engine fire, and have to land immediately, who do I call", and then it's probably more important, assuming you've got a spare moment (you may well not). I would tune to 121.5, call a mayday, and activate my ELT. Then I'd get back to the business of trying to get an airplane that's on fire down on the ground safely in the dark. Pete |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Travis,
Does the FAA have special emergency contact numbers for this sort of thing? Yes, the FAA does have a number. Here is the information from the FAA's website: "FAA Safety Hotline: 1-800-255-1111 "This hotline is primarily for those with specific knowledge of alleged violations of the Federal Aviation Regulations (FARs) or other safety issues such as improper record keeping, unsafe aviation practices and failure to comply with proper procedures. If the toll-free number is used for reporting, caller identity or information can be protected under the Privacy Act but only if the caller requests confidentiality. The identities of callers are protected from disclosure. "The toll-free number provides 24-hours, seven-days-a-week coverage. If callers believe an issue is time-critical, an option on the after-hours voice recording will connect them with FAA personnel who will take appropriate action." |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Call Signs | sid | Naval Aviation | 3 | April 27th 04 09:38 PM |
Machinista 2004 - call for entries | Robb Mitchell Machinista.org | Home Built | 0 | February 24th 04 02:19 PM |
Looking for an old Cessna 172 - call sign: C-GUZE | Grant Gilron | Aviation Marketplace | 5 | October 13th 03 01:29 AM |
U.S. Navy will make port call in Vietnam | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | October 12th 03 08:03 PM |
"Compassion" call sign | paul desruisseaux | Piloting | 6 | July 28th 03 02:51 PM |