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#1
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I've been working on organizing a few relief flights and have learned some
things. In spite of AOPA tell GA to stay out of the way, there is a big need for transporting people around the disaster region. I think the point is you need to stay out of the way of the rescue helos. Workers with non-profit relief organizations as well as refugees need to move. Refugees would like to go stay with extended families rather than sleep in a stadium. Call one of the many relief organizations listed at www.aircareall.org and tell them you're coming. Show up and you'll be pressed into service. You can get into the TFRs pretty easily. If you're IFR, file a flight plan with flight service and identify yourself as a relief flight, they will provide instructions. Near the TFR area you'll be handed off to one of two P-3C AWACS (callsign Omaha 44 or Omaha 45) who will coordinate your flight in the TFR. If you are VFR, call the central FAA Recovery Desk at 800-333-4286 or 703-904-4547 and provide your call sign, aircraft type, destination, and ETA. They will provide you instructions and a squawk that will be your ticket into the TFR. Regional information is provided by Anniston Flight Service at 256-832-2120. GA airports should be assumed to be daytime VFR only unless you call ahead and verify their capabilities. www.aircareall.org explains how the FAA has decided that Part 91 charitable flights are tax deductable and do not conflict with Part 135 regs as long as there is no reimbursement by passengers for the expenses and any donations the passengers make are not tied to the flight. We've got a 3 day weekend ahead, pull the plane out and get to it. |
#2
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![]() Doug wrote: I've been working on organizing a few relief flights and have learned some things. In spite of AOPA tell GA to stay out of the way, there is a big need for transporting people around the disaster region. I think the point is you need to stay out of the way of the rescue helos. Workers with non-profit relief organizations as well as refugees need to move. Refugees would like to go stay with extended families rather than sleep in a stadium. Call one of the many relief organizations listed at www.aircareall.org and tell them you're coming. Show up and you'll be pressed into service. You can get into the TFRs pretty easily. If you're IFR, file a flight plan with flight service and identify yourself as a relief flight, they will provide instructions. Near the TFR area you'll be handed off to one of two P-3C AWACS (callsign Omaha 44 or Omaha 45) who will coordinate your flight in the TFR. If you are VFR, call the central FAA Recovery Desk at 800-333-4286 or 703-904-4547 and provide your call sign, aircraft type, destination, and ETA. They will provide you instructions and a squawk that will be your ticket into the TFR. Regional information is provided by Anniston Flight Service at 256-832-2120. GA airports should be assumed to be daytime VFR only unless you call ahead and verify their capabilities. www.aircareall.org explains how the FAA has decided that Part 91 charitable flights are tax deductable and do not conflict with Part 135 regs as long as there is no reimbursement by passengers for the expenses and any donations the passengers make are not tied to the flight. We've got a 3 day weekend ahead, pull the plane out and get to it. Excellent info Doug, thanks. For the time being let's all quit politicizing this disaster and try to take some helpful immediate action until there are not human lives in direct peril. -R |
#3
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Also,
http://www.vacationrentalsforfamilies.com/ Their planning a Sunday flight mission. SAC "Doug" wrote in message news ![]() I've been working on organizing a few relief flights and have learned some things. In spite of AOPA tell GA to stay out of the way, there is a big need for transporting people around the disaster region. I think the point is you need to stay out of the way of the rescue helos. Workers with non-profit relief organizations as well as refugees need to move. Refugees would like to go stay with extended families rather than sleep in a stadium. Call one of the many relief organizations listed at www.aircareall.org and tell them you're coming. Show up and you'll be pressed into service. You can get into the TFRs pretty easily. If you're IFR, file a flight plan with flight service and identify yourself as a relief flight, they will provide instructions. Near the TFR area you'll be handed off to one of two P-3C AWACS (callsign Omaha 44 or Omaha 45) who will coordinate your flight in the TFR. If you are VFR, call the central FAA Recovery Desk at 800-333-4286 or 703-904-4547 and provide your call sign, aircraft type, destination, and ETA. They will provide you instructions and a squawk that will be your ticket into the TFR. Regional information is provided by Anniston Flight Service at 256-832-2120. GA airports should be assumed to be daytime VFR only unless you call ahead and verify their capabilities. www.aircareall.org explains how the FAA has decided that Part 91 charitable flights are tax deductable and do not conflict with Part 135 regs as long as there is no reimbursement by passengers for the expenses and any donations the passengers make are not tied to the flight. We've got a 3 day weekend ahead, pull the plane out and get to it. |
#4
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![]() Doug wrote: I've been working on organizing a few relief flights and have learned some things. In spite of AOPA tell GA to stay out of the way, there is a big need for transporting people around the disaster region. I think the point is you need to stay out of the way of the rescue helos. Workers with non-profit relief organizations as well as refugees need to move. Refugees would like to go stay with extended families rather than sleep in a stadium. Call one of the many relief organizations listed at www.aircareall.org and tell them you're coming. Show up and you'll be pressed into service. You can get into the TFRs pretty easily. If you're IFR, file a flight plan with flight service and identify yourself as a relief flight, they will provide instructions. Near the TFR area you'll be handed off to one of two P-3C AWACS (callsign Omaha 44 or Omaha 45) who will coordinate your flight in the TFR. If you are VFR, call the central FAA Recovery Desk at 800-333-4286 or 703-904-4547 and provide your call sign, aircraft type, destination, and ETA. They will provide you instructions and a squawk that will be your ticket into the TFR. Regional information is provided by Anniston Flight Service at 256-832-2120. GA airports should be assumed to be daytime VFR only unless you call ahead and verify their capabilities. www.aircareall.org explains how the FAA has decided that Part 91 charitable flights are tax deductable and do not conflict with Part 135 regs as long as there is no reimbursement by passengers for the expenses and any donations the passengers make are not tied to the flight. We've got a 3 day weekend ahead, pull the plane out and get to it. I found this in my email this afternoon. I'm going to try and participate. I'll also pass the www.aircareall.org info back to the APA in case they're able to carry some people on the way back west. -R snip General Aviation responds to hurricane Katrina victims by transporting medial supplies to Baton Rouge. The Arizona Pilots Association and it's newest chapter Flights for Life at the request of Ken "Spanky" Moskowitz of KTAR radio (620) Phoenix are in the process of organizing a medical airlift for the victims of hurricane Katrina. Medical supplies from different sources in the Phoenix metropolitan area will be transported to Williams Gateway Airport by truck where they will be weighed and loaded onto aircraft and flown to Baton Rouge, LA on Sunday September 4. Wheels up at 10: a.m. Trucks will arrive at the new Gateway Aviation Services terminal to unload the supplies. Aircraft will park in the new transient area. Please call Arv Schultz at (602) 989-5225 or Tim Barrios at (602) 679-3505 to become a part of this humanitarian relief effort. Thank you. Arv Schultz President Arizona Pilots Assoc snip |
#5
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Doug or anyone else here,
I'm living in the UK but have US and UK PPLs, over 400 hours single engine, mostly tailwheel and Pitts time, though I have in the past been checked out on 172 and PA28. Does anyone have any info on where a pilot can donate his flying skills if he doesn't come to the operation with his own airplane? I can make my way to the relief area and offer to fly, but not entirely sure where to start. Before I start phoning all the organizations on the aircareall website, I was hoping maybe someone here had some info already. Anything you can provide will be helpful. Cheers, Shawn "Doug" wrote in message news ![]() I've been working on organizing a few relief flights and have learned some things. In spite of AOPA tell GA to stay out of the way, there is a big need for transporting people around the disaster region. I think the point is you need to stay out of the way of the rescue helos. Workers with non-profit relief organizations as well as refugees need to move. Refugees would like to go stay with extended families rather than sleep in a stadium. Call one of the many relief organizations listed at www.aircareall.org and tell them you're coming. Show up and you'll be pressed into service. You can get into the TFRs pretty easily. If you're IFR, file a flight plan with flight service and identify yourself as a relief flight, they will provide instructions. Near the TFR area you'll be handed off to one of two P-3C AWACS (callsign Omaha 44 or Omaha 45) who will coordinate your flight in the TFR. If you are VFR, call the central FAA Recovery Desk at 800-333-4286 or 703-904-4547 and provide your call sign, aircraft type, destination, and ETA. They will provide you instructions and a squawk that will be your ticket into the TFR. Regional information is provided by Anniston Flight Service at 256-832-2120. GA airports should be assumed to be daytime VFR only unless you call ahead and verify their capabilities. www.aircareall.org explains how the FAA has decided that Part 91 charitable flights are tax deductable and do not conflict with Part 135 regs as long as there is no reimbursement by passengers for the expenses and any donations the passengers make are not tied to the flight. We've got a 3 day weekend ahead, pull the plane out and get to it. |
#6
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ShawnD2112 wrote:
Does anyone have any info on where a pilot can donate his flying skills if he doesn't come to the operation with his own airplane? I can make my way to the relief area and offer to fly, but not entirely sure where to start. Before I start phoning all the organizations on the aircareall website, I was hoping maybe someone here had some info already. Anything you can provide will be helpful. If you have an instrument rating, you could offer your piloting time and a rental aircraft to Angel Flight (http://www.angelflightamerica.org/) or the Vacation Rentals group (http://www.vacationrentalsforfamilies.com/). I am confident that the demand for volunteer pilots will be strong throughout the next several months. Not sure if this applies to you, but it is worth pointing out that pilots who donate an aircraft (rental or owned) and who are willing to pay their own costs (fuel, rental, etc) are the types who will be in demand. For the GA pilot willing to help out, there's no free flight time involved in this. -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#7
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Thanks for the implication on free flight time, Peter. Very helpful.
I don't think searching rubble to recover bodies is something I'd handle terribly well and there are plenty of people around who could volunteer to drive trucks, but not so many that could help fly in docs or supplies to maximise the use of aircraft when crews need a break. An aircraft can fly all day and night, it's pilot can't, but relief pilots could double or triple the number of flights in a day. Shawn "Peter R." wrote in message news ![]() ShawnD2112 wrote: Does anyone have any info on where a pilot can donate his flying skills if he doesn't come to the operation with his own airplane? I can make my way to the relief area and offer to fly, but not entirely sure where to start. Before I start phoning all the organizations on the aircareall website, I was hoping maybe someone here had some info already. Anything you can provide will be helpful. If you have an instrument rating, you could offer your piloting time and a rental aircraft to Angel Flight (http://www.angelflightamerica.org/) or the Vacation Rentals group (http://www.vacationrentalsforfamilies.com/). I am confident that the demand for volunteer pilots will be strong throughout the next several months. Not sure if this applies to you, but it is worth pointing out that pilots who donate an aircraft (rental or owned) and who are willing to pay their own costs (fuel, rental, etc) are the types who will be in demand. For the GA pilot willing to help out, there's no free flight time involved in this. -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#8
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"ShawnD2112" wrote in message
k... Doug or anyone else here, I'm living in the UK but have US and UK PPLs, over 400 hours single engine, mostly tailwheel and Pitts time, though I have in the past been checked out on 172 and PA28. Does anyone have any info on where a pilot can donate his flying skills if he doesn't come to the operation with his own airplane? I can make my way to the relief area and offer to fly, but not entirely sure where to start. Before I start phoning all the organizations on the aircareall website, I was hoping maybe someone here had some info already. Anything you can provide will be helpful. Cheers, Shawn http://www.vacationrentalsforfamilies.com/ requires that all flights have a co-pilot. I came here as a single pilot so I'll need a plane-less pilot assigned with me and there are others in a similar situation. Contact them you will be of help. |
#9
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Steve,
That's the kind of thing I wanted to hear. I filled out their on-line form and will see if they get back to me today. Where is the operation going to be based and how might I get there from, say Atlanta? Shawn "Steve S" wrote in message ... "ShawnD2112" wrote in message k... Doug or anyone else here, I'm living in the UK but have US and UK PPLs, over 400 hours single engine, mostly tailwheel and Pitts time, though I have in the past been checked out on 172 and PA28. Does anyone have any info on where a pilot can donate his flying skills if he doesn't come to the operation with his own airplane? I can make my way to the relief area and offer to fly, but not entirely sure where to start. Before I start phoning all the organizations on the aircareall website, I was hoping maybe someone here had some info already. Anything you can provide will be helpful. Cheers, Shawn http://www.vacationrentalsforfamilies.com/ requires that all flights have a co-pilot. I came here as a single pilot so I'll need a plane-less pilot assigned with me and there are others in a similar situation. Contact them you will be of help. |
#10
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"ShawnD2112" wrote in message
k... Steve, That's the kind of thing I wanted to hear. I filled out their on-line form and will see if they get back to me today. Where is the operation going to be based and how might I get there from, say Atlanta? Shawn If you're in Atlanta you're already there. They are staging at Peachtree-Dekalb airport in Atlanta. Fly Dr's out of PDK Atlanta and fly a family back to a home somewhere in Ga, SC, NC. I just heard that FEMA will be providing fuel. First flights are tomorrow morning. |
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