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![]() Let me see if I've got this right. It's okay to carry sick or injured passengers without the pilot meeting the drug testing and minimum hours requirements. But those conducting short sightseeing flights are no longer able to get a waiver for drug testing, and must now have 500 hours instead of the former 200 hour minimum. So the public at large is better protected, but the sick and injured are not? NEW AOPA PUBLICATION OUTLINES RULES FOR SIGHTSEEING FLIGHTS If you conduct sightseeing flights, whether for charity or for profit, new FAA rules (http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...26airtour.html) affect you. AOPA has updated its "Charity Flying Safety Brief (http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/SB05.pdf)," posted free online, to reflect those changes. For example, flight schools that give sightseeing rides under the Part 91 25-mile exception must now apply for a "Letter of Authorization" from the FAA and show proof that they have an FAA-approved anti-drug and alcohol program. Private pilots who conduct sightseeing flights to raise funds for charity now must have a minimum total flight time of 500 hours, up from 200. However, the rule changes don't affect all forms of charitable flying. Volunteer private pilots still may transport a sick or injured person and take a charitable tax deduction for their expenses, says the Air Care Alliance (http://www.aircareall.org/news.htm). http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195117 |
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Larry Dighera wrote:
Let me see if I've got this right. It's okay to carry sick or injured passengers without the pilot meeting the drug testing and minimum hours requirements. But those conducting short sightseeing flights are no longer able to get a waiver for drug testing, and must now have 500 hours instead of the former 200 hour minimum. So the public at large is better protected, but the sick and injured are not? You could read it that way. Applying a risk management viewpoint, another reading might be that all sightseeing trips are frivolous and unnecessary and as-such the pilot and passengers can bear a greater burden of compliance or simply not fly. OTOH, the non-availability of a medical flight might have a very large negative consequences outweighing the tiny risk of a drug-impaired pilot. Wow, I just thought like a bureaucrat. I think I need to go read a technical manual for awhile.... |
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On May 4, 10:28 am, Larry Dighera wrote:
Let me see if I've got this right. It's okay to carry sick or injured passengers without the pilot meeting the drug testing and minimum hours requirements. But those conducting short sightseeing flights are no longer able to get a waiver for drug testing, and must now have 500 hours instead of the former 200 hour minimum. So the public at large is better protected, but the sick and injured are not? NEW AOPA PUBLICATION OUTLINES RULES FOR SIGHTSEEING FLIGHTS If you conduct sightseeing flights, whether for charity or for profit, new FAA rules (http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...26airtour.html) affect you. AOPA has updated its "Charity Flying Safety Brief (http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/SB05.pdf)," posted free online, to reflect those changes. For example, flight schools that give sightseeing rides under the Part 91 25-mile exception must now apply for a "Letter of Authorization" from the FAA and show proof that they have an FAA-approved anti-drug and alcohol program. Private pilots who conduct sightseeing flights to raise funds for charity now must have a minimum total flight time of 500 hours, up from 200. However, the rule changes don't affect all forms of charitable flying. Volunteer private pilots still may transport a sick or injured person and take a charitable tax deduction for their expenses, says the Air Care Alliance (http://www.aircareall.org/news.htm)....ll.html#195117 I assume there was a massive number of accidents on these sightseeing flights where the pilot was found to be on drugs?? I assume that, like 135, the drug testing of the pilot is just the begining. All the A&Ps, IA, the avioincs tech, the FBO manager who arranges the maintenance, etc must ALL be on drug testing programs. -Robert |
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On 4 May 2007 11:34:52 -0700, "Robert M. Gary"
wrote in . com: On May 4, 10:28 am, Larry Dighera wrote: Let me see if I've got this right. It's okay to carry sick or injured passengers without the pilot meeting the drug testing and minimum hours requirements. But those conducting short sightseeing flights are no longer able to get a waiver for drug testing, and must now have 500 hours instead of the former 200 hour minimum. So the public at large is better protected, but the sick and injured are not? NEW AOPA PUBLICATION OUTLINES RULES FOR SIGHTSEEING FLIGHTS If you conduct sightseeing flights, whether for charity or for profit, new FAA rules (http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...26airtour.html) affect you. AOPA has updated its "Charity Flying Safety Brief (http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/SB05.pdf)," posted free online, to reflect those changes. For example, flight schools that give sightseeing rides under the Part 91 25-mile exception must now apply for a "Letter of Authorization" from the FAA and show proof that they have an FAA-approved anti-drug and alcohol program. Private pilots who conduct sightseeing flights to raise funds for charity now must have a minimum total flight time of 500 hours, up from 200. However, the rule changes don't affect all forms of charitable flying. Volunteer private pilots still may transport a sick or injured person and take a charitable tax deduction for their expenses, says the Air Care Alliance (http://www.aircareall.org/news.htm)....ll.html#195117 I assume there was a massive number of accidents on these sightseeing flights where the pilot was found to be on drugs?? A search he http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/query.asp with the keywords "sightseeing drug" turned up no records. I assume that, like 135, the drug testing of the pilot is just the begining. All the A&Ps, IA, the avioincs tech, the FBO manager who arranges the maintenance, etc must ALL be on drug testing programs. Perhaps. The new 91.146 regulation is he http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text....1.3.10.2.4.28 Here's what AOPA has to say: http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/SB05.pdf Regulatory Changes Pilots need to be aware of some significant changes to the regulations governing charity fundraising flights. Beginning March 15, 2007: • Private pilots must have at least 500 hours total flight time in order to participate (the previous minimum was 200 hours). • Before takeoff, pilots are required to brief passengers on seatbelt use, aircraft egress, and (for overwater flights) ditching procedures and use of life preservers. • For overwater flights, passengers are required to wear life preservers (unless the overwater operation is necessary only for takeoff or landing). • Limits are placed on the number of events in which sponsors and pilots may participate (four per calendar year for charitable or nonprofit causes; one per calendar year for community events). • Pilots are no longer required to submit to drug and alcohol testing (previously, exemptions were handled on an individual basis). Although they’ve been incorporated into a new regulation (FAR 91.146), the remaining requirements are largely unchanged. Pilots are still limited to nonstop, day VFR flights conducted within a 25 statute mile radius of the departure airport. For a detailed guide to the new requirements, visit www.aopa.org/whatsnew/regulatory/charity.html. FAR Part 135 is he http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text....23.11.11.5.83 |
#5
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![]() "Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... Let me see if I've got this right. It's okay to carry sick or injured passengers without the pilot meeting the drug testing and minimum hours requirements. But those conducting short sightseeing flights are no longer able to get a waiver for drug testing, and must now have 500 hours instead of the former 200 hour minimum. So the public at large is better protected, but the sick and injured are not? NEW AOPA PUBLICATION OUTLINES RULES FOR SIGHTSEEING FLIGHTS If you conduct sightseeing flights, whether for charity or for profit, new FAA rules (http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...26airtour.html) affect you. AOPA has updated its "Charity Flying Safety Brief (http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/SB05.pdf)," posted free online, to reflect those changes. For example, flight schools that give sightseeing rides under the Part 91 25-mile exception must now apply for a "Letter of Authorization" from the FAA and show proof that they have an FAA-approved anti-drug and alcohol program. Private pilots who conduct sightseeing flights to raise funds for charity now must have a minimum total flight time of 500 hours, up from 200. However, the rule changes don't affect all forms of charitable flying. Volunteer private pilots still may transport a sick or injured person and take a charitable tax deduction for their expenses, says the Air Care Alliance (http://www.aircareall.org/news.htm). http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195117 Young Eagle flights are in this category. If I remember right there is an exception for them also? |
#6
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On May 5, 4:51 am, "Blueskies" wrote:
"Larry Dighera" wrote in messagenews:7uqm33ppqgsqn4u61hkmrfordduulfv6nk@4ax .com... Let me see if I've got this right. It's okay to carry sick or injured passengers without the pilot meeting the drug testing and minimum hours requirements. But those conducting short sightseeing flights are no longer able to get a waiver for drug testing, and must now have 500 hours instead of the former 200 hour minimum. So the public at large is better protected, but the sick and injured are not? NEW AOPA PUBLICATION OUTLINES RULES FOR SIGHTSEEING FLIGHTS If you conduct sightseeing flights, whether for charity or for profit, new FAA rules (http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...26airtour.html) affect you. AOPA has updated its "Charity Flying Safety Brief (http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/SB05.pdf)," posted free online, to reflect those changes. For example, flight schools that give sightseeing rides under the Part 91 25-mile exception must now apply for a "Letter of Authorization" from the FAA and show proof that they have an FAA-approved anti-drug and alcohol program. Private pilots who conduct sightseeing flights to raise funds for charity now must have a minimum total flight time of 500 hours, up from 200. However, the rule changes don't affect all forms of charitable flying. Volunteer private pilots still may transport a sick or injured person and take a charitable tax deduction for their expenses, says the Air Care Alliance (http://www.aircareall.org/news.htm). http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195117 Young Eagle flights are in this category. If I remember right there is an exception for them also?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The additional hours may apply to YoungEagles but the drug testing wouldn't because there is no charge made to the passenger. I've always flown YoungEagles for BSA, which has always had higher minimum hours than EAA. -Robert |
#7
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ups.com... On May 5, 4:51 am, "Blueskies" wrote: "Larry Dighera" wrote in messagenews:7uqm33ppqgsqn4u61hkmrfordduulfv6nk@4ax .com... Let me see if I've got this right. It's okay to carry sick or injured passengers without the pilot meeting the drug testing and minimum hours requirements. But those conducting short sightseeing flights are no longer able to get a waiver for drug testing, and must now have 500 hours instead of the former 200 hour minimum. So the public at large is better protected, but the sick and injured are not? NEW AOPA PUBLICATION OUTLINES RULES FOR SIGHTSEEING FLIGHTS If you conduct sightseeing flights, whether for charity or for profit, new FAA rules (http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...26airtour.html) affect you. AOPA has updated its "Charity Flying Safety Brief (http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/SB05.pdf)," posted free online, to reflect those changes. For example, flight schools that give sightseeing rides under the Part 91 25-mile exception must now apply for a "Letter of Authorization" from the FAA and show proof that they have an FAA-approved anti-drug and alcohol program. Private pilots who conduct sightseeing flights to raise funds for charity now must have a minimum total flight time of 500 hours, up from 200. However, the rule changes don't affect all forms of charitable flying. Volunteer private pilots still may transport a sick or injured person and take a charitable tax deduction for their expenses, says the Air Care Alliance (http://www.aircareall.org/news.htm). http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195117 Young Eagle flights are in this category. If I remember right there is an exception for them also?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The additional hours may apply to YoungEagles but the drug testing wouldn't because there is no charge made to the passenger. I've always flown YoungEagles for BSA, which has always had higher minimum hours than EAA. -Robert What about the limits in a calendar year? Only 4 events! |
#8
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On May 5, 10:39 am, "Blueskies" wrote:
"Robert M. Gary" wrote in oglegroups.com... On May 5, 4:51 am, "Blueskies" wrote: "Larry Dighera" wrote in messagenews:7uqm33ppqgsqn4u61hkmrfordduulfv6nk@4ax .com... Let me see if I've got this right. It's okay to carry sick or injured passengers without the pilot meeting the drug testing and minimum hours requirements. But those conducting short sightseeing flights are no longer able to get a waiver for drug testing, and must now have 500 hours instead of the former 200 hour minimum. So the public at large is better protected, but the sick and injured are not? NEW AOPA PUBLICATION OUTLINES RULES FOR SIGHTSEEING FLIGHTS If you conduct sightseeing flights, whether for charity or for profit, new FAA rules (http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...26airtour.html) affect you. AOPA has updated its "Charity Flying Safety Brief (http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/SB05.pdf)," posted free online, to reflect those changes. For example, flight schools that give sightseeing rides under the Part 91 25-mile exception must now apply for a "Letter of Authorization" from the FAA and show proof that they have an FAA-approved anti-drug and alcohol program. Private pilots who conduct sightseeing flights to raise funds for charity now must have a minimum total flight time of 500 hours, up from 200. However, the rule changes don't affect all forms of charitable flying. Volunteer private pilots still may transport a sick or injured person and take a charitable tax deduction for their expenses, says the Air Care Alliance (http://www.aircareall.org/news.htm). http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195117 Young Eagle flights are in this category. If I remember right there is an exception for them also?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The additional hours may apply to YoungEagles but the drug testing wouldn't because there is no charge made to the passenger. I've always flown YoungEagles for BSA, which has always had higher minimum hours than EAA. -Robert What about the limits in a calendar year? Only 4 events!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I thought the 4 events only applied to situations where the pax paid for the ride (not Young Eagles) i.e. charity lifts. I've donated rides to the PTA, who then auctions them off. I had to use the drug test exemption from AOPA at the time. Sounds like now I would get 4 freebies w/o having to fill out the drug test exemption. In all of this, what really sucks *%# is the poor CFI at the FBO who has to turn away the guy who shows up asking to take pictures of his property. Today CFI's often get hours by taking people up for local revenue rides (not just instruction). -Robert |
#9
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote In all of this, what really sucks *%# is the poor CFI at the FBO who has to turn away the guy who shows up asking to take pictures of his property. Today CFI's often get hours by taking people up for local revenue rides (not just instruction). I would think the CFI would say, " I can take you up for an introduction instructional flight, but I can't take you up just to take pictures." -- Jim in NC |
#10
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On May 5, 3:02 pm, "Morgans" wrote:
"Robert M. Gary" wrote In all of this, what really sucks *%# is the poor CFI at the FBO who has to turn away the guy who shows up asking to take pictures of his property. Today CFI's often get hours by taking people up for local revenue rides (not just instruction). I would think the CFI would say, " I can take you up for an introduction instructional flight, but I can't take you up just to take pictures." -- Jim in NC The problem is that if the FSDO thinks what you are doing is wrong (even if you are rigtht) they can make your life very difficult. Personally, as a CFI, I won't do any such flights anymore unless we get guidance from AOPA. Its just not worth not being able to fly while the FSDO fights with you (regardless if you end up winning or not). -Robert, CFII |
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