Opps
it was Jim Campbell, sorry guys.
Kelly,
I
truly support the way you put it through, I could not have it make it clearer.
Even though I am in Canada I support the all the efforts to bring the FAA to
its senses. There is a need to fight it tooth and nails and not give an inch.
As you said an inch given one day can become a mile not too soon
thereafter.
Even
if I am up north of you guys anything that happen at your end may come and
bite us in the proverbial derriere. Making our life that much difficult. Lots
of the things that happen on either side of the border has an affect to all of
us.
Some
things happening here may also affect you and vice versa due to the exchange
of process between our Transport Canada and the FAA at your end. We have some
development that may become advantageous to some of you happening here on the
homebuilt/experimental front that involves certified
planes.
I only suggest that all of you pilots, builders, experimental
aviation related individuals just keep at it. It takes time and efforts but it
is worth it at the end. If you want to make an omelette you have to brake
some eggs. Somehow there is a way to get rid of these misguided individuals at
the top of these agencies. These people may even be on the payroll
of the airlines industry!......... If things like Enron exist I would not
even be surprised, weirder things have already happened. I may be overreaching
but I have been right before.
Get
the political activism full bore at them. Its like trying to eat an elephant
you just take it one bite at the time, but in the end you get there. Best luck
in your efforts. One of your neighbour from the great white
north.
Alain Ouellet
CH300
Brampton, Ontario
Off subject.......Should be of interest to all of the group
!!
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Forwarded Message: -------------- From: keltro@att.net (Kelly
Troyer) Subject: FAA Attack on GA Date: Mon, 7 May 2007
16:23:22 +0000
Barnstorming: The FAA's User-Fee Stance
Is An Attack On Us All Why Did The FAA Declare War On GA?
There was a time in the "good old days" when the FAA was not
only supposed, but was mandated, to be a close ally, (even a
proponent) to all of aviation. Congressional intervention and concerns
about the FAA's objectivity destroyed all that in the wake of an
airline crash and the freakish fallout that occurred, thereafter. To
many in the world of aviation, this was a mistake.
And, to
those of us who understand how media and politics work a little bit
better than others (because of the fact that we are involved in it
each and every day), it was more than a mistake, it was a sure path to
disaster.
That is where we find ourselves today. An FAA, devoid of
any responsibility to promote or defend the industry it serves,
appears to have gone on the attack and threatens much of what aviator
s and aviation professionals hold dear. Aero-News, unlike many of the
alphabet associations that have to work closely and kindly with the
FAA, finds itself in a position to have to speak out in a somewhat
unkind fashion. We've long had a love/hate affair with the FAA for
as long as we've been in existence... we know well that the great
majority of the people within the FAA are great advocates for
aviation, true professionals, and lovers of the craft. However; the
organization itself, (that great monstrous machine created by Uncle
Sam), is not so kind and, today, not so professional. In what can
only be seen as a power grab, and a political repositioning of
itself within the government structure, the FAA has decided to
shake up not only the way it is funded, but seems to be willing to
buddy up, like never before, with the almighty airline industry...
to the detriment of all else in aviation and aerospace.
I must
admit t o some head scratching over all that has occurred. The FAA's
rationale for a new funding mechanism makes no fundamental sense, and
numerous industry experts on both sides of the equation have cast more
than sufficient doubt upon any changes in the current FAA funding
scenario, too many see it as an accident waiting to happen.
Further; there is no question that despite the fact that the FAA
has an aggressive but yet unspecified agenda for a next-generation
air transportation upgrade, that the current funding system (and
the unquestioned growth that is expected to occur) has more than
sufficient resources to see the FAA through the process of
upgrading our, sadly, out of date air traffic system. Mind you, the
FAA has given us precious little detail on what a new air traffic
system will encompass. They've been short on detail, rarely answer
cohesive questions, and have left much of Washington scratching
their heads in bewil de rment over what is, or is not, coming our
way. What everyone agrees with, though, is that we do indeed need a
significantly more modernized way to move air transport from point
a to point B.... and sooner or later, we expect the FAA to have to
deliver it. But... how?
More important, it behooves us to ask
before the FAA shakes up everything that we know... what the hell are
they thinking?
The current strategy... whether you look at this
proposals put forth by the FAA or the supposedly kinder/gentler Senate
proposal, poses grave dangers to much of aviation. And while the
current Senate proposal is seen as less toxic to the general aviation
world, I must emphatically insist that all those in aviation who
may not necessarily be affected by this proposal be aware of the
cardinal rule of politics when it comes to user-fee/tax issues...
"just because they're not after you today, doesn't mean they won't
be after you tom orr ow."
I have come to the inescapable
conclusion that the FAA has lost all sense of objectivity where this
proposal is concerned. I strongly believe that they have staked their
reputation on seeing some measure of this proposal approved, and that
the political destinies of many powerful people are linked to seeing
this thing rammed down our throats. It is obvious to virtually
everyone we have consulted, on both sides of the issue, that the
airline industry has had a powerful effect on FAA decision making.
This is an airline industry, of course, that has been in bankruptcy
for most of the last several years, and has decimated its ranks with
fraud, greed, misinformation, pension raids, employee abuse, poor
management, and constant requests for the American taxpayer to bail
them out of their many, self-inflicted, ills.
I simply do not
understand how anyone can give the airline industry any credibility
after their pe rformance in the last few years. Even prior to 2001,
the airline industry has been characterized by periods of gross
mismanagement, and a growing dependence upon the government for
handouts, special treatment, favorable rule-making, and all manner of
favoritism. The industry can and will survive (and there are segments
that do seem to have much of their act together), but it's time for a
little bit of tough love, better management, and dealing with the
stark face of reality. Giving the airlines preferential treatment,
decimating much of general aviation (whom they apparently see as some
type of threat, for no known reason), and eventually giving them power
in FAA decision-making itself, clearly spells a doomsday scenario for
much of this nation's valuable transportation infrastructure.
No... I do not trust the airlines. And, I do not trust the FAA.
What little credibility and trust I have been able to place with
them in th e wake of 2001 has been virtually destroyed by some of
the most shoddy reasoning and decision-making I have yet seen.
Those of us in aviation who are opposing this current generation of
proposals, in whatever form they may be presented, need to stand
steadfastly together and resist all efforts to compromise. This is
one of those circumstances when compromise does us little or no
good. The inch we may give will grow to a yard in no time at all...
and get worse with each step.
Even if general aviation is not
affected by upcoming compromise proposals, we need to signal our
intensive solidarity with the rest of the aviation industry that may
be under the microscope. The FAA and airline industry's 'taking on' of
business aviation, and picking on those "fat cats in their business
jets" is tragically flawed and myopic thinking.
Business jets
are not fat cat toys, they are tools of commerce. They make money.
They mak e oppo rtunities. They grow the nation. They produce
progress, jobs, income, and prosperity for the world around them. Yes,
it's fashionable to poke fun at the big expensive business jet, but
the big expensive business jet is rarely abused, and is (truly) only a
pitifully small fraction of all the business in general aviation
world. We need to do what ever it takes to stand together, to display
a solid and steadfast front to the world, to make our case clear that
all of aviation has value, and that all of aviation requires that
heretofore available government services continue to be made
available, and are modernized, within the present funding structure.
If not, we're going to lose an incredibly vital resource while this
nation and it's citizens, will suffer.
It is also time to get
in the face of the FAA decision makers, and their bosom buddies among
the airline community, to let them know that alienating the business
and ge neral aviation world can and should have severe consequences.
We need to make some examples of some of the greediest and more flawed
arguments and show any entity that threatens the rest of aviation,
that this industry will not put up with it.
We can do this on
a number of scales... For instance, because of a speech given by
United Airlines CEO Glenn Tilton (shown right) at the FAA Aviation
Forecast Conference a few weeks ago, and his mischaracterization of
GA as a bunch of Gulfstreams, I deliberately stood up and
questioned him about his rationale and his thinking. I pointed out
that most of GA does not fly a Gulfstream, I pointed out that
Tilton's desire to see us pay our "fair share" made no sense when
he was asking us to pay our "fair share" of a system that was
designed for his industry and the myriad extra services that were
made available to them, but are beyond our need or use. Finally, I
pointed ou t that h is rationale for penalizing general aviation with
user fees was akin to asking "the canoe to pay to raise the
drawbridge." Tilton did not want to respond. Tilton copped out.
Tilton obviously had his mind made up and no amount of facts or
rationale were going to shake the hardened edifice of an opinion
based on self interest and greed.
As a result, I've struck
back in my own way. Aero-News has not booked a ticket on United
Airlines since his comments. Over the course of the next year I will
be responsible for buying several hundred airline tickets for my
staff, and for my associated businesses. Unless there is no choice,
and I do mean NO CHOICE, it will be a cold frigid day in hell, at high
noon, at the height of the summer season, before we book a ticket on
United. I realize that much of the airline industry shares his
viewpoint... but Tilton was the guy who got up on a podium and
belittled a vast segment of a viation w ith his misunderstanding,
arrogance, and factual misrepresentations. Let him pay for them and
let him do so without a dime of our money.
Folks... I've just
come off one of the most extraordinary weeks of my life. This week has
been steeped in all segments of aviation -- I flew in Zero Gravity
(aboard a Boeing 727) with Professor Stephen Hawking... I looped and
rolled my Glasair III off the Florida coast... I flew Cessna's new
Citation Mustang... I checked a buddy out in his new Mooney... I
traveled a good deal on America's airliners (NOT UAL) to get to and
fro... and I got to do a little bit of soaring in a sturdy old Grob
Twin II Acro sailplane. I loved and valued all the ways in which I
aviated... equally and for unique/important reasons. I have never
found any aspect of aviation to be any thing but synergistic with
the rest. There is equal value in all of aviation and we should
stand together, united, agai nst all th reats.
There should be
no barriers, no jealousies, no schism, no antagonism, no competition,
and no lack of support from one segment of aviation for another. I
strongly feel that horrible damage has been done to the entire
aviation industry by the fractious behavior of the FAA and the
airlines, and I dearly desire to return to the good old days when the
FAA had a responsibility to serve us, protect us, and speak of our
value (collectively) to the world. In the meantime, though, the FAA
needs to get off this ridiculous user-fee high horse, get back to
reality, and quit attacking those whom it needs to protect and
serve.
Until then, the FAA has broken faith with the world of
aviation -- and the aviators and aviation professionals who work and
play with it. We cannot let them continue in this path for long.
We either need a change of heart, or a change of leadership, so
that the FAA can once again retur n to being a valued and trusted part
of the aviation industry and an ally, rather than what they are now...
the distrusted enemy and foe of much that we value. -- Jim Campbell,
ANN
Editor-In-Chief
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