National Air Tour Safety Standards, 6884-6914 [07-580]
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6884
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 29 / Tuesday, February 13, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Parts 61, 91, 119, 121, 135, and
136
[Docket No.: FAA–1998–4521; Amendment
Nos. 61–115, 91–295, 121–328, 135–107,
136–1]
RIN 2120—AF07
National Air Tour Safety Standards
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Final rule.
SUMMARY: This final rule sets safety and
oversight rules for a broad variety of
sightseeing and commercial air tour
flights. The rule responds to National
Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)
recommendations, Government
Accountability Office (GAO) reports,
and Department of Transportation
Inspector General Reports that
recommend better oversight of the
sightseeing and commercial air tour
industry. The intended effect of this
final rule is to standardize requirements
for air tour operators and consolidate air
tour safety standards within part 136.
This final rule is effective March
15, 2007, except for amendments to
§§ 119.1(e)(2), 121.1, and 135.1(a)(5) and
(a)(8), which are effective September 11,
2007. Also, affected parties do not have
to comply with the information
collection requirements in §§ 91.146,
91.147, 136.7, and 136.13 until the FAA
publishes in the Federal Register the
control number assigned by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for this
information collection requirement.
Publication of the control number
notifies the public that OMB has
approved this information collection
requirement under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES:
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Alberta Brown, Air Transportation
Division, AFS–200, Federal Aviation
Administration, 800 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20591;
telephone: (202) 267–8166; facsimile:
(202) 267–8229; e-mail:
alberta.brown@faa.gov. For legal
information, contact: Bruce Glendening,
Operations Law Branch, Federal
Aviation Administration, 800
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20591; telephone: (202)
267–8011; facsimile: (202) 267–7971; email: bruce.glendening@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Availability of Rulemaking Documents
You can get an electronic copy using
the Internet by taking the following
steps:
(1) Go to the search function of the
Department of Transportation’s
electronic Docket Management System
(DMS) Web page (https://dms.dot.gov/
search).
(2) On the search page, type in the last
four digits of the Docket number shown
at the beginning of this document
(4521). Click on search.
(3) On the next page, which contains
the Docket summary information for the
Docket you selected, click on the item
you wish to view.
You can also get an electronic copy
using the Internet through the FAA’s
web page at or the Government Printing
Office’s Web page at: https://
www.access.gpo.gov/sudocs/aces/
acrs140.htm. You can also get a copy of
this final rule by mail by submitting a
request to the Federal Aviation
Administration, Office of Rulemaking,
800 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20591, or by calling
(202) 267–9680.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of
1996 requires FAA to comply with
small entity requests for information or
advice about compliance with statutes
and regulations within its jurisdiction.
You can find out more about SBREFA
on the Internet at https://www.faa.gov/
avr/arm/sbrefa.cfm. All operators
affected by this final rule are ‘‘small’’ by
definition.
Authority for This Rulemaking
The FAA’s authority to issue rules
regarding aviation safety is found in
Title 49 of the United States Code. This
rule is issued under the authority
granted to the Administrator by
Congress in 49 U.S.C. section 40103.
Under section 40103(b)(1), the
Administrator is given the authority to
‘‘develop plans and policy for the use of
the navigable airspace and assign by
regulation or order the use of the
airspace necessary to ensure the safety
of aircraft * * *’’ Section 40103(b)(2)
grants the Administrator the authority to
‘‘prescribe air traffic regulations on the
flight of aircraft including regulations
on safe altitudes for (A) navigating,
protecting and identifying aircraft; (B)
protecting individuals and property on
the ground; (C) using the navigable
airspace efficiently; and (D) preventing
collision between aircraft, between
aircraft and land or water vehicles, and
between aircraft and airborne objects.’’
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Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Summary of the Final Rule
A. Applicability
B. Changes From the NPRM
C. Compliance Dates
D. Before and After This Rule
III. Comment Summary
IV. General Comments on the Proposal
A. NTSB Recommendations
B. SFAR 71 Should Not Be the Model
C. Withdraw the NPRM and Establish an
Advisory Committee
D. Accident Data Does Not Support the
Change
E. Increased Noise and Other Impacts on
National Parks
V. Comments on Part 135 Certification
A. Against Part 135 Certification
B. ‘‘Sightseeing’’ vs. ‘‘Commercial Air
Tour’’
C. Antique/Vintage Civil and Military
Aircraft
VI. Comments on Part 91 Operations
A. Charity, Nonprofit, and Community
Events
1. What is the difference between an
exception, an exemption and a
deviation?
2. What is a charitable organization, a nonprofit, and a community event?
3. The Four-Event Limit for Charitable and
Non-Profit Organizations and the OneEvent Limit for Community Events
4. Private Pilots and the 500-Hour
Requirement
5. Reporting Requirements
6. Life Flights, Angel Flights, and
‘‘Emergency or Medical Service’’
B. Other Flights for Compensation or Hire
1. What Is the Difference Between an
Operations Specification and a Letter of
Authorization?
2. Where Are the FAA’s Drug and Alcohol
Regulations and Who Has To Comply
With Them?
VII. Comments on Part 136 Operating
Requirements
A. Applicability and Definitions
B. Letters of Authorization
C. Minimum Altitudes, Standoff Distances,
Visibility, and Cloud Clearance
D. Affect of the Final Rule on Grand
Canyon and Hawaiian Operations
E. Passenger Briefings
F. Overwater Operations
1. Passenger Briefing for Overwater
Operations
2. Life Preservers
3. Helicopter Floats
G. Helicopter Performance Plan and
Operations
VIII. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
IX. The Amendment—Final Rule Language
I. Background
Air Tour operations are conducted in
all parts of the United States over
various types of terrain. This terrain
includes, but is not limited to, national
parks, fairgrounds, and urban, coastal,
and mountainous areas that range from
unpopulated to densely populated. The
operators conducting these flights as a
regular part of their business are
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commonly known as air tour operators,
and their operations are often referred to
as commercial air tours.
Commercial air tours vary in many
ways, but certain characteristics apply
to nearly all: (1) A single pilot typically
conducts the flight during daylight
hours in a single engine airplane or
helicopter; (2) flights are typically
conducted in visual meteorological
conditions, often without radar coverage
or traffic advisories from an air traffic
control facility; (3) flights may be
conducted near popular scenic areas
geographically limited in size and in
dense air traffic in which the mix of
airplanes and helicopters may have
different flight characteristics (e.g.,
speed and maneuverability). Because of
all of these factors and characteristics, a
pilot must use heightened vigilance and
greater precision in navigation to
conduct a commercial air tour
successfully and safely.
In addition, terrain is often a major
factor considered in a safely conducted
flight. Many popular scenic areas are
located in remote, rugged terrain where
the attraction is the natural beauty of the
site. To view the natural beauty,
commercial air tours are normally
conducted at relatively low altitudes,
between 500 and 1,500 feet above
ground level (AGL). Flights conducted
at these altitudes may be close to
obstructions and often are alongside
higher terrain. In addition, many air
tour operators conduct flights over
water. When the terrain factor is added
to those discussed above, you have a
unique industry needing equally unique
regulations to ensure a safe and
pleasurable experience for the
passenger.
Currently, commercial air tours
beyond 25 statute miles of the departure
airport, and most commercial air tours
over a unit of the national park system,
must be conducted by someone
certificated under Title 14 of the Code
of Federal Regulations (14 CFR) part
119, Certification: Air Carriers and
Commercial Operators. These
commercial air tours must operate in
accordance with either part 121;
Operating Requirements: Domestic,
Flag, and Supplemental Operations, or
part 135; Operating Requirements:
Commuter and On Demand Operations
and Rules Governing Persons On Board
Such Aircraft. Parts 121 and 135 contain
operational, safety, and training rules
that are not limited to air tour
operations.
Part 91, General Operating and Flight
Rules, applies to air tour operators that
takeoff and land at the same airport and
stay within 25 miles of that airport
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using a ‘‘25-mile exception’’ in 14 CFR
119.1(e)(2), 121.1(d), and 135.1(a)(5).
In order to address the unique
circumstances surrounding air tour
operations, the FAA published a notice
of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) in the
Federal Register on October 22, 2003
(68 FR 60572). The proposed rule was
modeled on Special Federal Aviation
Regulation (SFAR) 71, which currently
governs the commercial air tour
industry in Hawaii. In the NPRM, we
proposed to improve the overall safety
of all commercial air tours by requiring
certification under part 119, except for
certain charitable, nonprofit, or
community events. New safety
standards in part 136 were proposed in
the NPRM for all air tour operators, and
the proposal would have resulted in
renaming and expanding the entire part.
We proposed removing the 25-mile
exception altogether. The proposals
presented in the NPRM have been
dropped, revised, or adopted as
discussed in this final rule.
II. Summary of the Final Rule
A. Applicability
This final rule applies to commercial
air tours conducted in airplanes and
helicopters only. It does not apply to
gliders (powered or unpowered),
balloons, parachutes (powered or
unpowered), gyroplanes, or airships.1 In
this final rule we address three groups
of commercial air tour operations in
airplanes and helicopters:
Group 1. Part 119 certificate holders
with authority to conduct commercial
air tour flights in accordance with either
part 121 or part 135;
Group 2. Part 91 operators conducting
commercial air tour flights in
accordance with the exception
contained in section 119.1(e)(2) (also
known as the 25-mile exception); and
Group 3. Part 91 operators conducting
flights for certain charitable, nonprofit,
or community events in accordance
with the exception contained in
§ 119.1(e)(2).
Group 1
This group of commercial air tour
operators must be certificated under 14
CFR 119, to operate in accordance with
either part 121 or 135. Part 121 and part
1 The National Parks Air Tour Management Act
of 2000 (49 U.S.C. 40128) (Act) is only peripherally
implicated by this rule in that the existing
regulations are moved from part 136, subpart A to
part 136, subpart B. The Act applies to all powered
aircraft, not just airplanes and helicopters. To the
extent an operator covered by this rule flies within
an area covered by the Act, it must meet all
requirements imposed either directly or by
regulations implemented under the Act. If not a
helicopter or airplane, the requirements imposed by
this rule will not apply.
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135 contain operational, safety, and
training rules for these operators.
Additionally, this group must comply
with the safety provisions in part 136.
This first group continues to be subject
to the drug and alcohol testing
requirements of parts 121 and 135.
Group 2
This group consists of air tour
operators that would have been
certificated as an air carrier like the first
group if it weren’t for the 25-mile
exception in §§ 119.1(e)(2), 121.1(d),
and 135.1(a)(5). Because of the
exception, this group is allowed to
conduct flights under the operating
rules of part 91. The exception will
continue, except for flights over the
Grand Canyon National Park.2 Even
though flights are not conducted under
part 121 or part 135, this second group
of operators continues to be subject to
drug and alcohol testing requirements.
The number of flights allowed is not
limited,3 but private pilots may not be
used. Each operator must apply for, and
operate in accordance with, a Letter of
Authorization (LOA) issued by the FAA.
This group must comply with the safety
requirements of part 136 subpart A (as
mandated in § 91.147).
Group 3
This last group of operators conducts
commercial air tours for certain
charitable, nonprofit, and community
events. The flights of this group will be
limited to the 25-mile exception. This
final rule establishes a new § 91.146 for
charitable, nonprofit, and community
event flights allowing them to continue
operating in part 91.4 Section 61.113(d)
is revised to delete the word ‘‘airlift,’’
and a reference to the new § 91.146 is
added to allow private pilots to fly such
events, and it allows them to operate
without drug and alcohol testing.
Private pilots must have at least 500
hours total flight time. Sponsors and
their pilots for charitable and nonprofit
events are limited to four events each
2 The exception continues in a limited sense over
all other national parks, because the Act allows a
total of five commercial air tours per month by
someone who does not hold a part 119 certificate.
(See SFAR 50–2; part 93, subpart U; and part 136,
subpart B).
3 Other than at most national parks where flights
are limited to not more than five per month through
§ 136.37.
4 The FAA finds that (1) logging flight time is a
form of compensation; (2) most charities are a
business holding out to the public through
advertising and collection of fees directly through
payment of money much like an air carrier, or
indirectly through ‘‘donations’; and (3) private
pilots normally may not fly for compensation or
hire. However, the FAA finds that it is in the public
interest to allow some charitable, nonprofit, and
community event flights to be conducted under part
91.
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calendar year. Sponsors and their pilots
for a community event are limited to
one event per calendar year. An ‘‘event’’
may involve several flights but may not
last more than three consecutive days.
New § 91.146 defines three kinds of
flights that can be operated under part
91, and need not be operated under part
135. The operators of these flights must
comply with the safety requirements in
part 136 subpart A, but are not required
to conduct drug and alcohol testing.
This group was previously allowed to
operate without drug and alcohol testing
requirements through individual
exemptions. The language from those
exemptions is incorporated into
§ 91.146.
B. Changes From the NPRM
The final rule differs substantially
from what was proposed in the NPRM
in several areas. Most of the changes are
directly in response to comments
submitted by the public. Most of the
significant changes are listed here and
the justification for the changes can be
found under the discussion of
comments and FAA response that
follows. The changes include:
—Part 136 is divided into subparts.
Subpart A is National Air Tour Safety
Standards. Subpart B is National
Regulatory section
Parks Air Tour Management
(previously the only thing in part
136). Subpart C is reserved for SFAR
50–2 and Part 93, subpart U (both
addressing Grand Canyon flight
operations).
—The proposed elimination of the 25statute mile exception in § 119.1 will
not be adopted. The 25-mile
exception remains in §§ 119.1(e)(2),
121.1(d), and 135.1(a)(5).
—Commercial air tour operators in parts
121 or 135 who also conduct
commercial air tours in part 91 must
have both operations specifications
and a Letter of Authorization.
—SFAR 71 for Hawaii is removed and
has been incorporated into the final
rule language as Appendix A to part
136.
—Section 135.1(c) is removed because
certain references to drug and alcohol
testing have been rewritten.
—Proposed deviation authority in the
NPRM is deleted.
—Proposed changes to minimum
altitudes, standoff distances,
visibility, and cloud clearance in the
NPRM are deleted.
—The final rule section for life
preservers for overwater operations
(proposed § 136.13, final § 136.9) is
modified to greatly reduce the burden
Before this rule
for operators for airplanes with floats,
and to some degree, the burden for
helicopters with floats. ‘‘Life
preserver’’ and ‘‘shoreline’’ are
defined in § 136.1.
—Helicopter performance plan
(proposed § 136.17) and Helicopter
operating limitations (proposed
§ 136.19) are merged (final § 136.13)
and amended.
C. Compliance Dates
This final rule is effective thirty days
after publication. Operators must
demonstrate compliance with the new
requirements 180 days thereafter. The
only exception is for helicopter floats.
The FAA recognizes that affected
operators may need more than six
months to equip their helicopters with
floats. Accordingly, we are allowing 18
months for operators who need to
modify their helicopters to complete
those modifications.
D. Before and After this Rule
To further help readers understand
the changes to commercial air tour
operations in this final rule, we include
here a chart that clearly illustrates
which existing regulations this final rule
affects and what new requirements are
included.
After this rule
PART 61
Section 61.113 .........
Paragraph (d) of this section provided
for the use of private pilots during
charity flights. The section contained
certain conditions and limitations on
how private pilots could operate for
compensation or hire in the interest
of charity. Some of those conditions
and limitations included who was
considered a charity, how a sponsor
must notify the FAA of an operation,
what kind of airport was acceptable
for such operations, the airworthiness of the aircraft in operation, and
the number of hours a private pilot
must have to operate such flights.
Section 61.113 now directs the reader to 91.146.
PART 91
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Section 91.146 .........
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Many of the conditions and limitations from 61.113 are retained in this new
section. They are kept mostly intact with some revisions to the private pilot
hour requirement, what information the FAA requests of the sponsor, and
the number of events a sponsor and pilot may participate in each year 5.
New requirements in this section include:
1. We define the terms charitable event, non-profit event, and community
event.
2. A private pilot operating a flight described in this section must have 500
hours. This is increased from the previous requirement for 200 hours.
3. Operations under this section are limited for sponsors and pilots. No sponsor or pilot may exceed 4 charitable or non-profit events per calendar year,
or exceed 1 community event per calendar year.
4. All flights under this section must be non-stop, beginning and ending at the
same airport, and flown within a 25-mile radius of the airport. This has always been the case, but not as easy to find.
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Regulatory section
Section 91.147 .........
Before this rule
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After this rule
Did not exist ..........................................
5. Operators under this section must conduct operations in airplanes or helicopters with a standard airworthiness certificate.
6. Operators under this section must comply with part 136, subpart A (National
Air Tour Safety Standards).
This section applies to part 91 operations for compensation or hire.
1. Operators under this section must apply for and receive a Letter of Authorization (LOA). This removes the burden of Operations Specifications that
come with full air carrier status, yet allows the FAA to build a database of
part 91 compensation or hire operators conducting air tour operations.
2. Operators under this section must comply with drug and alcohol requirements. This is not a new requirement, but some operators have misunderstood the requirement. Certain operators have received an exemption from
drug and alcohol testing requirements.
3. Operators under this section must comply with part 136, subpart A (National
Air Tour Safety Standards).
4. Operators under this section must conduct operations in airplanes or helicopters with a standard airworthiness certificate. Some Antique/Vintage civil
and military aircraft operating under this section will continue to need exemptions from this requirement.
PART 119
Section 119.1 ...........
This section prescribes Applicability,
and paragraph (e)(2) describes the
‘‘25-mile exception’’ cited in the final
rule.
Paragraph (e)(2) remains largely the same. The differences in the final rule
are:
1. The paragraph used to refer to ‘‘sightseeing flights,’’ (undefined) and now
refers to ‘‘Commercial Air Tours’’ (defined in 119.3 and part 136, subpart A).
2. The paragraph clarifies that operations in this exception are for compensation or hire.
3. Operators using this exception must comply with the LOA issued under
91.147.
4. Operations in this exception must be conducted in airplanes or helicopters
with a standard airworthiness certificate.
PART 121
Section 121.1 ...........
This section prescribes Applicability for
Part 121. Paragraph (d) addresses
sightseeing flights.
Paragraph (d) is amended to replace the term ‘‘sightseeing’’ with ‘‘Commercial
Air Tours.’’ This section also requires compliance with part 136, subpart A
(National Air Tour Safety Standards). We make a technical correction in
paragraph (d) to include alcohol testing requirements in two sections that
were inadvertently removed in a previous rulemaking (121.458 and 121.459).
PART 135
Section 135.1 ...........
This section prescribes Applicability for
Part 135. Paragraph (a)(5) addresses sightseeing flights, and paragraphs (c) and (d) defined ‘‘operator’’
and drug and alcohol testing requirements.
1. Paragraph (a)(5) is amended to replace the term ‘‘sightseeing’’ with ‘‘Commercial Air Tours.’’ Also, the paragraph now makes reference to 119.1, and
requires compliance with part 136, subpart A (National Air Tour Safety
Standards).
2. Paragraph (c) is amended. Previously, paragraph (c) defined an ‘‘Operator’’
as it pertains to the requirements for Part 135. We now reference part 119 to
provide the drug and alcohol definition for ‘‘Operator’’ and replace the testing
old paragraph (c) with a new one that is made up of the requirements previously found in paragraph (d). Part 119 did not exist when 135.1(c) was
written, so this is a technical amendment.
PART 136
Did not exist ..........................................
Subpart C .................
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Subpart A (136.1–
136.13).
Subpart B .................
Did not exist ..........................................
Appendix A ...............
Did not exist ..........................................
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This Subpart contains the safety standards and definitions applicable to Commercial Air Tours.
We moved the requirements that were previously the whole of part 136 into
new sections and this new subpart, but didn’t change any of the substance.
This subpart contains National Parks Air Tour Management regulations.
We created a Subpart C and reserved the space for the possible movement of
the Grand Canyon air traffic rules (SFAR 50–2 and Part 93 Subpart U) so
commercial air tour regulations are in one location.
This Appendix holds all of the requirements once found in SFAR 71—Operations in Hawaii. These requirements were previously attached to Part 91,
but we moved them into this newly created Appendix to have all Commercial
Air Tour regulations in one location: Part 136.
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Regulatory section
Before this rule
After this rule
Miscellaneous Requirements
SFAR 71 ...................
Was a separate rule located in front of
Part 91.
SFAR 50–2 and Part
93, Subpart U.
SFAR 50–2 is a separate SFAR located in front of Part 91, and Part
93, Subpart U is where it is.
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III. Comment Summary
We received more than 2,300
comments to this rule from individual
pilots, trade organizations, commercial
air tour operators, charity organizations,
historic aircraft operators and others. At
the request of commenters, the FAA
extended the comment period twice,
allowing a total of 240 days in which to
comment. The FAA also convened two
face-to-face public meetings; one in
Washington, D.C. on May 11, 2004, and
the other in Las Vegas, NV on May 21,
2004. In addition, the FAA conducted a
two-week Virtual Public Meeting on the
Internet from February 23 to March 5,
2004, that was further extended an
additional two weeks to March 19, 2004
due to the many comments received.
While some commenters supported
the proposed rule, most notably the
National Transportation Safety Board
(NTSB), most commenters opposed the
NPRM on one or more of the following
grounds:
1. FAA is attempting to impose a onesize-fits-all mentality.
2. FAA does not recognize the
geographical and environmental
differences associated with different
operations.
3. Part 91 operators will go out of
business if forced into part 135.
4. Millions of Americans would be
denied the opportunity to experience
flight at a grassroots level. This would
ground vintage aircraft, barnstorming,
military history, and other areas of
aviation promotion and heritage.
5. The existing rules are more than
adequate if obeyed by operators and
enforced by the FAA against operators
who do not obey them.
6. The proposal is not supported by
accident data. Since air tour accidents
are all in part 135, why does the FAA
propose to place all operators in part
135?
7. There is insufficient evidence to
ensure that the proposed rules, if
5 We have imported several conditions for private
pilot operations in support of charity, non-profit,
and community event flights from approximately
100 existing exemptions.
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SFAR 71 has always been attached to Part 91. We have taken all of SFAR 71
and inserted it as Appendix A into Part 136. Now air tour operators in Hawaii
will find the same conditions and limitations in SFAR 71 in this new Appendix. We have not changed the text, only the location.
These regulations pertaining to air traffic routes and guidance in Grand Canyon National Park remain unchanged. We reserve ‘‘Subpart C’’ in Part 136
for whenever we decide to co-locate these regulations with other Commercial Air Tour regulations.
adopted, would result in increased
safety.
8. Flights operated for ‘‘charity’’
would be stopped.
9. Deviation authority should not be
in the rule.
10. The proposed rule mixes
helicopters and airplanes at one altitude
(compression).
11. Compliance with proposed
minimum altitudes and standoff
distances result in an undesirable tour
and thus would result in a loss of
business.
12. Many operators have agreements
with air traffic to conduct flights a
certain way and this proposal conflicts
with those specific agreements.
Below we discuss and respond to the
many suggestions and arguments
presented to us during the comment
period. We broke our response to
comments into four major categories to
make it easier to read. Within those four
categories, we have tried to address
some general concerns before providing
any detailed response. For instance, it
became obvious when reading
comments that many people did not
understand the difference between an
‘‘exemption,’’ an ‘‘exception,’’ and a
‘‘deviation.’’ Therefore, we answer that
question before going into specific
comments under the ‘‘part 91
operations’’ section of comment
response. The four categories we’ve
used to organize our response to
comments are:
1. General comments on the proposal;
2. Comments on extending part 135
certification for the entire industry;
3. Comments on part 91 operations;
and
4. Comments on part 136 operating
requirements.
IV. General Comments on the Proposal
The comments addressed here were in
opposition to the general nature of the
rule. Comments in opposition to
specific parts of the proposal are
addressed in the sections two, three,
and four of this preamble.
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A. National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB) Recommendations
The Aircraft Owners and Pilots
Association (AOPA) stated that the
‘‘FAA has promulgated this NPRM in
response to NTSB recommendations
concerning the safety of commercial air
tours.’’ AOPA argued that FAA had
already issued regulations to address
most of the NTSB’s concerns through
SFARs 50–2 (Grand Canyon) and 71
(Hawaii), and therefore, the sole
justification for the NPRM was NTSB
recommendation A–95–58, which
recommended eliminating the 25-mile
sightseeing exception in § 119.1(e)(2).
AOPA asserted that the FAA’s accident
data does not support inclusion of
sightseeing and charity flights,’’ and
contended that ‘‘the FAA is NOT
compelled to adopt all NTSB
recommendations and has the authority
and ability to close NTSB
recommendations with alternative or no
action.’’ AOPA cited a few specific
examples from the 549 NTSB
recommendations it found ‘‘that were
closed with no action taken because the
FAA either disagreed with the NTSB’s
recommendation or failed to take action
in a timely manner.’’
The FAA agrees with AOPA that it is
not compelled to adopt NTSB
recommendations. The NTSB is charged
with issuing recommendations that it
believes will improve the safety of
aviation without any consideration of
the costs of these recommendations. In
this case, the recommendations were
based on a study of the entire air tour
industry; including operations
conducted under the 25-mile exception.
The FAA decided during the NPRM
stage of this rulemaking that the NTSB
recommendations had some validity
and attempted to meet their intent with
proposed rule language.
In view of the comments, we have
decided not to eliminate the 25-mile
exception as presented in the proposal.
The cost associated with placing all air
tour operations into part 121 or part 135
far outweighs any potential increase in
safety. However, aviation safety requires
these commercial air tours comply with
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some additional safety rules. The
problems that resulted in the NTSB
recommendations are not limited to the
Grand Canyon and Hawaii. They are
common to most commercial air tour
flights conducted throughout the U.S.
Thus, many aspects the special aviation
safety rules that apply to commercial air
tour operations in the Grand Canyon
and Hawaii should also apply to the rest
of the country.
The NTSB, in its comments submitted
to the NPRM, supported the proposed
rule and believed implementation of the
requirements in the proposal was long
overdue. We have analyzed all
comments received in response to the
NPRM and find that the regulatory
action the FAA is taking is an
appropriate and responsible response to
the NTSB recommendations.
B. SFAR 71 Should Not Be the Model
A number of commenters, including
the Experimental Aircraft Association
(EAA), the United States Air Tour
Association (USATA), the Helicopter
Association International (HAI), Blue
Hawaiian Helicopters, Air Vegas
Airlines, and the National Air
Transportation Association (NATA),
questioned the FAA’s basis for modeling
the proposed rules on SFAR 71, which
governs the commercial air tour
industry operating in Hawaii.
Commenters argued that the SFAR 71
rules were not responsible for the
improved safety in air tour operations in
Hawaii. They stated that air tour
operations in Hawaii are safer because
of improved technology and operators
taking more action to improve safety.
Specifically, Papillon Airways Inc.,
commenting on behalf of the Tour
Operators Program of Safety (TOPS),
cited two reports that state SFAR 71 had
no effect on the accident rate reduction
since its enactment. One report posited
that the altitude restriction in SFAR 71
has actually made air tours in Hawaii
more dangerous by compressing
available airspace. The other
acknowledged a decrease in accidents
but did not credit SFAR 71 with that
decrease. Papillon claimed that the
reduction in the number of accidents
since SFAR 71 is due entirely to
replaced engines (resulting in fewer
power failures) and the creation of
TOPS.
Other commenters, including the
NTSB and NorthStar, stated that FAA
did not complete a review of the
effectiveness of SFAR 71 in this
rulemaking process, which they believe
is necessary to evaluate whether the
SFAR 71 rules actually accomplished
their intended goal. They also
commented that the majority of existing
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part 121 and 135 air tour operations are
concentrated in unique areas of the
nation, primarily Hawaii and the Grand
Canyon, and that these environments
are not typical of the remainder of the
country. They suggested it would not be
appropriate to extrapolate regulations
that might be working in one
specialized area to the entire universe of
air tour operations. Additionally, they
stated that there are already layers of
regulations applicable to Hawaii and the
Grand Canyon, and the NPRM would
establish complicated rules, making
compliance all the more difficult.
The FAA agrees that there may be
multiple reasons for accident rate
improvement in Hawaii and other parts
of the country. However, we also believe
that SFAR 71 has had a positive impact.
Certainly, improved technology aided in
making air tour operations in Hawaii
safer, but we do not support the claim
that technology and operator action are
solely responsible for improved safety.
Rather, we believe there is a
relationship between the imposition of
a minimum, mandatory safety standard
and the decrease in accidents. Purely
voluntary improvements that
significantly increase safety would be
unlikely to coincide so neatly with the
implementation of SFAR71.
The United States has many areas
with rugged terrain, bodies of water, and
vertical cliffs that are subject to rapidly
changing weather patterns. Although air
tours may vary as to what kind of terrain
is flown over, the FAA’s concerns over
flights conducted throughout the United
States are the same. For example, flight
over water presents a risk to passengers
regardless of whether that water is the
Pacific Ocean, Lake Mead, or a large
reservoir.
C. Withdraw the NPRM and Establish an
Advisory Committee
A number of commenters (AOPA,
NATA, Antique Airplane Association,
Aviation Foundation of America (AFA),
The Lightship Group) recommended the
FAA withdraw the NPRM on the
grounds that, as NATA asserted, ‘‘There
is a lack of sufficient data to support the
FAA’s determination of a need for, and
the costs associated with, the proposed
regulations.’’ AOPA stated, ‘‘Nothing in
the original Federal Register notice or
information that has been made
available during the comment period,
including the FAA virtual meeting,
indicates there is a significant safety
issue on sightseeing and charity flights
that the FAA must address by advancing
this rulemaking initiative.’’
The Antique Airplane Association
suggested the FAA consider ‘‘the
formation of an industry run
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6889
organization to effect and enhance these
type operations.’’ AFA and The
Lightship Group recommended the FAA
establish an Aviation Rulemaking
Committee or an Aviation Rulemaking
Advisory Committee to assist in drafting
a rule taking the aviation community’s
concerns into account.
We declined to establish a rulemaking
committee to develop national air tour
standards. The FAA already developed
an NPRM for National Air Tour Safety
Standards, had a 240-day comment
period, and conducted an Internet
meeting and two public meetings. We
received over 2,300 comments in the
docket. We do not believe a rulemaking
committee would provide any
additional information. Accordingly, we
have developed this final rule based on
the comments already submitted.
D. Accident Data Does Not Support
Change
A number of commenters questioned
the accident data used by the FAA to
justify the proposed rule changes. Most
of these commenters questioned the
basis for requiring operation under part
135 since a high number of the cited
accidents involved aircraft operating
under part 135 at the time of the
accident. Collings said, ‘‘Since many of
the accidents involve part 135 operators,
it should be clear that part 135 is not the
answer.’’ The Seaplane Pilots
Association stated, ‘‘Of the 12 accidents
cited as exemplary of the need for this
change, 83% were conducted under part
135.’’ Similarly, the Tennessee
Department of Transportation stated,
‘‘Part 135 air tours resulted in almost
twice as many deaths as their part 91
counterparts.’’
The Minnesota Department of
Transportation (MDOT) raised questions
about the statistics cited in the NPRM
and asserted that they did ‘‘not bolster
the argument that part 135 operations
are safer.’’ MDOT said that there was no
data that would allow the reader to put
the cited numbers in context. MDOT
asked, ‘‘Did the 75 accidents stem from
1,000 or 10,000 or 100,000 total
operations?’’
The Professional Airways Systems
Specialists (PASS) questioned the
FAA’s use of the August 24, 1997, crash
off Ocean City, MD, as one of the
reasons for changing the rules. The
NTSB report indicated that the aircraft
stalled and crashed because the pilot
began an aerobic maneuver at an
altitude of approximately 300 feet AGL.
PASS asked, ‘‘Since the aircraft was
already in violation of a FAR, how is
making the pilot meet part 119 and part
135 going to keep this kind of accident
from happening?’’ The Seaplane Pilots
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Association also asserted, ‘‘Many of the
accidents profiled resulted from actions
that are prohibited under both part 91
and part 135, and part 135 status
appeared to have little effect on the
safety of the flights profiled in the
NPRM.’’ TOPS said, ‘‘Safety statistics do
not justify special regulations for
helicopter tours conducted by
commercial operators under part 135 (as
differentiated from ‘‘sight-seeing’’ flights
conducted on an ad hoc basis under part
91).’’ It continued, ‘‘TOPS operators
during calendar year 2003 experienced
1.13 accidents per 100,000 air tour
hours, compared with 998 accidents per
100,000 flying hours for the civil
helicopter fleet at large.’’
Kenmore Air Harbor questioned the
use of accidents in Hawaii (particularly
helicopter accidents) to justify the
proposed rule. Kenmore stated,
‘‘Needed regulations, which address
safety deficiencies in Hawaii should not
nor need not apply to other geographical
areas.’’ HAI, NorthStar Trekking
(NorthStar), and other commenters also
questioned the use of Hawaii accidents
to justify the proposed rule changes. In
a similar vein, AFA stated that the
accidents cited as justification for the
NPRM are mostly helicopter operations
over water in Hawaii and do not reflect
the ‘‘superb safety record of part 91
fixed wing operators* * *’’
The NTSB argued that better reporting
requirements could lead to the
development of better data. It stated,
‘‘national air tour safety standards
should include a provision that is
similar to 14 CFR 121.693(e), which
requires the certificate holder to include
a list of passengers’ names on the load
manifest or to secure this information by
another means.’’
The FAA acknowledges that the data
on part 91 accidents is less than ideal.
Thus, comparing a list of part 135
accidents against a list of part 91
accidents is not productive. Only a few
of the total number of part 91 accidents
researched were listed in the NPRM.
The official NTSB accident reports we
researched didn’t specify whether the
flight was ‘‘sightseeing.’’ Some reports
said ‘‘sightseeing’’ in the narrative, but
most only noted the flight as part 91.
Because of these limitations in the data,
the FAA cannot assume that part 91
flights are, in fact, safer than part 135
flights. An accident during a part 91
operation at a traditional sightseeing
spot like the Grand Canyon, Niagara
Falls, or at a water fall in Hawaii is
normally expected to be a sightseeing
flight, but it might not be. An accident
report that doesn’t say ‘‘sightseeing’’ or
‘‘air tour’’ is not necessarily a definitive
report that sightseeing did not take
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place, or that the flight would not be
considered an air tour. The data on part
135 operations is more robust. A part
135 sightseeing accident is normally
listed that way; as a sightseeing
accident. The part 135 operators
conducting sightseeing flights are well
known and their accidents are usually
newsworthy. Most part 135 sightseeing
operators conduct sightseeing flights all
day, every day (although some are
seasonal) providing more data points.
In other words, the accident data
presented in the NPRM may have given
the impression that there were more
part 135 accidents than part 91, but that
is not necessarily true, particularly as a
percentage of total sightseeing
operations. As we discussed in the
NPRM, we have definitive data between
1993 and 2000 that there were 75 part
91 commercial air tour accidents, and
53 part 135 commercial air tour
accidents. While the data is simply not
accurate enough for us to conclude an
exact number of part 91 flights that
include sightseeing and how many of
those have had an accident, the
captured part 91 flights need new
standards for their operation. MDOT
makes a good point in its comment that
the number of accidents listed is hard to
put into perspective unless it is known
how many part 91 and part 135
commercial air tour flights took place in
that time. The first step in gathering
enough information to calculate an
accurate accident rate will be the
establishment of the database supported
by the application and approval of
LOAs, as required in § 91.147. Since we
are not requiring part 91 operators to
report flight hours in this final rule, we
still will not be able to calculate an
accident rate when this rule is
published. However, part of the safety
improvements in this rule include
increased FAA oversight of these
operations. Through the LOA, we will
now have geographic oversight of
operations on which we previously did
not have information. In response to the
NTSB comment and recommendation to
include a provision similar to 14 CFR
§ 121.693(e) in the rule, which would
have required operators to list passenger
names on load manifests, that
recommendation is outside the scope of
this rulemaking. However, we anticipate
that the database based on LOA
applications will generate useful data
for future analysis.
The FAA does not agree with the
commenters who believe rulemaking to
improve regulatory safety is not justified
unless an actual accident is experienced
by a particular operator, group of
operators, type of operator, or
foundation. Such an approach would
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result in an impracticable regulatory
scheme and would inevitably result in
the FAA failing to adequately assure the
safety of the flying public. When the
NTSB and FAA investigate an accident,
the recommendations are applied to the
broad category of operators or persons
who conduct the same type of operation
and who might have the same potential
risk of a similar accident. For instance,
if particular operators using 30passenger turboprop airplanes crash on
approach due to preventable crew
errors, the FAA would not regulate only
those particular crew members. The
FAA would regulate all operators and
crews using the same equipment. In this
final rule the FAA is regulating the air
tour industry, not just those air tour
operators experiencing an accident.
E. Increased Noise and Other Impacts
on National Parks
The USATA believed the proposed
lower altitudes for multi-engine
helicopters provided an incentive to
convert to noisier twin-engine
helicopters. The commenter believed
this was in conflict with the National
Parks Air Tour Management Act of
2000, which mandates incentives for
quiet technology aircraft. USATA stated,
‘‘This mixed message is confused and
shows a lack of policy coherence and
initiative. Which way does the FAA
want the helicopter air tour industry to
go? The FAA should have a well
reasoned, coherent and coordinated
plan that addresses both public safety
and noise abatement for the air tour
industry.’’
NorthStar commented that the
proposed altitude restrictions would be
less safe and would result in more noise
impact. NorthStar also commented that
the FAA had not included any noise
data or analysis as a part of this NPRM
and had therefore not provided an
adequate opportunity for comment on
what appears to be the rationale behind
the change in minimum altitudes.
The National Park Service (NPS) was
particularly concerned about the
potential for adverse effects on wildlife
resources as a result of the proposed
altitude restrictions. The NPS was
concerned that the proposed minimum
standard of 1,000 feet AGL over ‘‘raw
terrain’’ may affect sensitive park
resources or visitor experience. Of
special concern to NPS were the
proposed special deviations that would
have allowed the FAA to approve a
lower minimum altitude of not less than
500 feet AGL for single engine
helicopters, and not less than 300 feet
AGL for multi-engine helicopters. The
NPS commented that the scientific
community had studied the effects of
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aircraft flight on wildlife for many years
and provided details on studies that
showed negative impacts to wildlife due
to low-level aircraft. NPS concluded,
‘‘The NPS appreciates the concerns of
the NTSB and the FAA that minimum
flight standards could create a
compressed flight environment,
particularly over areas of high interest.
However, no analysis of alternatives has
been presented for the suggested AGL
and therefore, without additional
information, it is not possible to
determine if there is an option that
affords greater protection to park
resources while also allowing for a safe,
high quality air tour.’’
NPS also stated that it was a
cooperating agency and cosignatory
with the FAA and they together are
responsible for implementation of the
National Parks Air Tour Management
Act of 2000. Accordingly, the NPS had
some concern regarding the potential
impact this rulemaking process will
have on the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) analyses and
resultant air tour management plans
(ATMPs). NPS stated that the National
Parks Air Tour Management Act also
outlines appropriate alternative actions
that may be considered in an ATMP.
These actions, NPS commented, may
include the prohibition of air tours over
a national park, in whole or in part, and
may establish conditions for the
conduct of commercial air tours. The
operations may include commercial air
tour routes, maximum or minimum
altitudes, time of day restrictions and
maximum number of flights per a unit
of time. NPS stated that two of these
actions, commercial air tour routes and
maximum or minimum altitudes, are
identical to the type of actions
identified in the proposed rule.
We did not propose any commercial
air tour routes, time of day restrictions,
or maximum number of flights per unit
of time in the NPRM, because this rule
is limited to addressing the safety of air
tours, not their impact on the
environment. As noted by NPS, those
concerns are more appropriately
handled as part of the ATMPs. In regard
to altitudes, we did not adopt any of the
proposed altitude changes, and the longstanding altitude restrictions continue
unchanged. Accordingly, the FAA does
not believe that this rule changes the
ATMP analysis in this regard.
The FAA does not agree that this rule
will circumvent the goal of the Act and
its promotion of quieter aircraft. The
FAA anticipates ATMPs will address
NPS’s concerns for the national parks by
establishing tour routes, altitude limits,
incentives for quiet aircraft technology,
and other requirements where
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necessary. Since many of the air tour
operators fly inside and outside national
parks, the conversion to quiet
technology will have a broader benefit
than just inside national parks. In any
event, this final rule does not change
any of the altitude minimums already in
place. Those altitudes are safety-driven.
Any future ATMP final rule that
changes altitude minimums must meet
established safety standards.
With regard to the NPS’s specific
concern about allowing airplanes to
descend to 1,000 feet AGL and
helicopters to 500 feet AGL or 300 feet
AGL, the FAA notes that current part
135 Visual Flight Rule (VFR) minimum
altitudes are established in § 135.203 at
500 feet above the surface during
daytime for airplanes, and 300 feet
above the surface for helicopters
operating over congested areas. There is
no listed minimum for helicopters over
other-than-congested areas. In otherthan-congested areas, helicopters may
go below 300 feet AGL. FAA Advisory
Circular 91–36D, Visual Flight Rules
(VFR) Flight Near Noise-Sensitive Areas
(as amended, September 17, 2004),
recommends a 2,000 feet AGL limit over
‘‘noise sensitive areas.’’ This is a
voluntary limit that is based on general
environmental concerns and not the
safety concerns that are the identified
purpose of this final rule.
The FAA has more restrictive altitude
standards for air tours in Grand Canyon
National Park and Hawaii because of the
large number of commercial air tour
flights in a relatively small amount of
airspace and the demonstrated hazards.
In view of many of the comments and
our reassessment of the relative safety
risks, the FAA decided not to change
minimum altitudes in other portions of
the country. For the same reasons, we
decided not to adopt the proposed
visibility, cloud clearance, and standoff
distance restrictions for other portions
of the country. Any ATMP supplements
this final rule.
V. Comments on Part 135 Certification
A. Against Part 135 Certification
Some commenters stated that the
requirement to be certificated under part
119 and obtain approval to operate
under part 135 would be difficult or
impossible for certain types of aircraft
and operations. Sopwith Ltd., used as
an example the Ford TriMotor aircraft it
operates, and stated, ‘‘While the Ford is
a type-certificated design and holds a
standard airworthiness certificate, the
Ford cannot be operated under part 135,
because it cannot meet all the
requirements of part 135.’’ Similarly,
AFA commented that many vintage ex-
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6891
military aircraft and foreign typecertificated aircraft do not hold standard
airworthiness certificates and cannot
qualify under part 135. EB Air asked
how operators of such aircraft would
address and conform to the many part
135 requirements regarding time life
items such as engine and propeller total
times, engine accessory service life, and
replacement of parts.
Bar Harbor Aviation commented that
the additional paperwork, bookkeeping,
manual writing, equipment, time, and
money required to become a part 135
operation would not make the operation
any safer, just more complex and
expensive to operate. Waldo Wright’s
Flying Service commented that,
‘‘Because of the increased regulatory
standards and certification costs of a
multi-pilot part 135 certificate, I would
have no choice but to split my company
up and apply for a one aircraft-one
operator part 135 certificate for each
aircraft.’’ Waldo Wright also commented
on the difficulty and expense of
obtaining insurance for operations
conducted under part 135, compared to
part 91. USATA believed a ‘‘one-sizefits-all’’ approach was not the most
prudent way to approach the issue.
USATA stated that the FAA failed to
take into consideration the uniqueness
of full-time commercial air tour
operations and the considerable
experience of current part 135 and 121
commercial air tour operators in
publishing the NPRM, and would
impose additional new requirements
with too broad a regulatory brush.
USATA stated, ‘‘Evidence of that is
clear since nearly every operational
regulatory provision contained in this
NPRM also contains a way in which the
FAA Administrator may grant
exceptions. If nearly all of these
proposed requirements are
‘exceptionable,’ then the justification for
imposing them in the first place must be
suspect.’’ AFA stated that there is no
statistical data that can lead one to
conclude that the affected operations
would be any safer if required to
become certificated and operated under
part 135.
AOPA stated that ‘‘It is important to
note that the primary reason for
eliminating the part 91 exemption under
the National Parks Air Tour
Management final rule was not because
of safety, but was a regulatory means to
control these operations for purposes of
conducting air tours over national
parks.’’ Similar comments were made
during public face-to-face meetings and
the Internet meeting.
In the National Park Air Tour
Management final rule, certification
under part 119 was required for all
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operators with limited exceptions. The
FAA issued the final rule for the
National Parks requiring certification for
many reasons, including improved
safety and oversight, and to meet
requirements contained in legislation.
Many of these part 91 operators
compete with part 135 commercial air
tour operators, and have chosen to
operate under the exception provided in
§ 119.1(e)(2). In making this choice, the
operator does not have the flexibility
provided to an air carrier but can
significantly lower operational costs
while receiving compensation for the
flight. The FAA recognizes that many of
the commenters could meet the
requirements to operate under part 135,
but only at a significant increase in
overall cost of operation.
Aircraft with an airworthiness
certificate that is other than ‘‘standard’’
(e.g., ‘‘Restricted Category,’’ ‘‘Limited
Category,’’ or ‘‘Experimental Category’’)
cannot be used to carry people for
compensation or hire.6 (14 CFR 91.313,
91.315, 91.317, and 91.319.) An
‘‘Experimental Category’’ certificate
does not allow carrying passengers at
all. Most, if not all, of the military and
many vintage airplanes have restricted
airworthiness certificates. Thus, the
operators of such aircraft can only carry
persons for compensation or hire if they
have an exemption. Many of the
commenters said they do not fit into
part 135, but it is evident that some of
those same commenters also may not fit
into part 91 when carrying passengers
for compensation or hire. The FAA
recognizes that some of the aircraft with
other than standard airworthiness
certificates could meet standard
airworthiness certificate requirements.
Operators of these aircraft could apply
for a standard airworthiness certificate,
which would relieve them of any
obligations to operate under an
exemption.
In response to many of these
comments, the FAA will allow operators
currently conducting air tours under
part 91 to remain in part 91. The 25mile exception in § 119.1(e)(2) will not
be eliminated as proposed. Since these
operations tend to be similar to
commercial air tour operations (i.e.,
day-time VFR, low-level, single pilot,
short-term, non-stop flights over varying
types of terrain), we will require these
flights to comply with the safety
provisions of part 136 subpart A.
The 25-mile exception is for
passenger-carrying compensation or hire
flights in airplanes (of a certain size)
and helicopters (of a certain size)
operating within 25-statute miles of the
6 See
14 CFR 91.313, 91.315, 91.317, and 91.319.
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departure airport, and the flight must
return to that same airport. As has
always been the case, the exception
does not apply to point-to-point
transportation landing at a second
airport. Passenger-carrying flights
operated for compensation or hire
outside the exception must be
conducted in accordance with the
operating provisions of parts 121 or 135
as appropriate, or under an exemption.
We added the requirement to
§ 91.147, Passenger carrying flights for
compensation or hire (Not otherwise
covered by § 91.146), for operators to
apply for and operate in accordance
with a Letter of Authorization (LOA).
LOAs are legal documents required by
rule to be in writing and under which
the operator must provide certain
information concerning how it conducts
its business. This provision addresses
the concerns voiced in NTSB
Recommendation A–95–58, where the
NTSB expressed concern that the FAA
did not have any way of overseeing
these operators, because FAA didn’t
know who they were and where they
operated. This LOA requirement
provides us with basic information on
the operator and its business that is less
extensive than the information and
numerous other requirements needed to
become an air carrier, but greater than
what we have under the existing
regulations. The LOA merely adds some
data elements to the registration
requirements already applicable to these
operators under the FAA’s drug and
alcohol testing regulations. We have
determined that the LOA is significantly
less burdensome than obtaining a part
119 certificate for operations under 135.
Because the LOA requirement provides
a relationship between the FAA and the
§ 91.147 operator, as well as the
information the FAA needs for tracking
the operator, we believe it satisfies the
substance of the NTSB’s
recommendation.
B. ‘‘Sightseeing’’ vs. ‘‘Commercial Air
Tours’’
EAA maintained there should be a
regulatory distinction between ‘‘air tour
operators’’ and ‘‘sightseeing’’ flight
operations. EAA saw air tour operators
as being fairly substantial commercial
ventures operating a fleet of aircraft in
continuous (perhaps seasonal) service
over recognized public attractions such
as national parks and monuments.
However, EAA believed operators
conducting more casual ‘‘sightseeing’’
flights using a single aircraft and more
random general interest routing should
not be held to the same standards as ‘‘air
tour operators.’’ In this regard, EAA
believed the existing exception for
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‘‘sightseeing flights’’ from parts 119 and
135 is appropriate. EAA provided
suggested rule language to clarify the
definition of ‘‘commercial air tour’’ and
to make other changes.
PASS stated that the FAA’s proposed
response to the NTSB’s
recommendation number A–95–58 is
flawed and unworkable because it failed
to recognize the differences between
operators providing public air
transportation in the full sense of the
word (i.e. a certificated air carrier), and
those providing a lesser service. PASS
stated that Congress intended the FAA
to provide only a sensible ‘‘minimum
level of safety standard’’ for other air
commerce operations when they
enacted the FAA Act of 1958, and again
when they re-codified the law at 49
U.S.C. 44701. In the FAA’s set of
proposals, PASS stated, the FAA did not
adequately consider the differences
between public transportation of an air
carrier, and the unique type of
‘‘sightseeing event’’ this segment of air
commerce provides to the public.
The General Aviation Manufacturers
Association (GAMA) commented that
‘‘The air tour industry is rich in its
diversity with companies ranging from
individuals that offer rides in single
airplanes to organizations specializing
in vintage flying to helicopter and fixed
wing operators with large fleets
operating in the nation’s national
parks.’’ According to GAMA, the NPRM
did not properly accommodate the range
of operations performed by these
different entities.
HAI also commented that a
distinction should be drawn and
recognized by the FAA between
commercial air tours and sightseeing
operations. According to HAI,
commercial air tours, for the most part,
are conducted under part 135 where the
operator realizes a major part of its
income is from air tours and advertises,
either seasonally or annually, for air
tours over specific and recognizable
scenic features. Sightseeing, on the
other hand, tends to fall under part 91,
where less specific, more generalized
flights are conducted over different and
varying routes. HAI commented that
there are significant numbers of
operators who safely conduct thousands
of sightseeing flights under part 91. HAI
stated the FAA did not produce any
compelling evidence indicating that the
relatively small percentage of
passengers choose to sightsee via part 91
operations do so at an increased risk.
Similarly, Sopwith, Ltd., stated that
the FAA had lost sight of what is, and
what is not, a ‘‘commercial air tour.’’
The problem, according to Sopwith, is
confusion over the word ‘‘sightseeing.’’
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Sopwith believes local flights flown as
introductory rides or as barnstorming
rides in vintage aircraft may be
characterized as ‘‘sightseeing’’, but they
are not a ‘‘commercial air tour’’ activity.
Sundance Helicopters, Columbia
Seaplane Pilots Association, Papillon
Airways, Inc., U.S. Parachute
Association, and the Collings
Foundation made similar comments.
Offering a different view, NATA
believed ‘‘there is sufficient cause to
maintain local sightseeing in part 91,’’
and ‘‘FAA could take steps to identify
the population and implement any
necessary safety standards within part
91, should they be necessary.’’
We have listened to the comments
and decided not to force any part 91
operators to move into part 135 as long
as they adhere to the conditions of the
25-mile exception. Many operators in
part 91 now operate a business similar
to an air carrier that is limited to
conducting commercial air tours. They
advertise for hire and carry more
passengers than many air carriers. Their
Websites are replete with advertising,
and many operate every day and move
from airport to airport seasonally.
HAI commented that there are
thousands of part 91 flights conducted
in a single aircraft, with a single pilot.
We know there are many operators who
conduct flights under part 91 (single
pilot, compensation or hire flights in an
on-demand environment), under the
existing 25-mile exception. Some of
these operators go to a different airport
each weekend and conduct flights under
the 25-mile exception at that new
airport. These operators have been
conducting flights with little oversight
by the FAA since they have no fixed
base of operation and no assigned Flight
Standards District Office (FSDO). This
rule captures these part 91 operations by
requiring the operators to report to the
local FSDO or through an LOA stored in
an FAA database.
One purpose of this rule is to raise the
existing level of safety specifically for
current part 91 air tour operators. In
view of several comments, we believe
that if we eliminated the 25-mile
exception, many operators who now
operate under that exception would go
out of business. The FAA believes there
are other alternatives to achieve
satisfactory safety goals, minimize
impact on the industry, and still
increase the level of safety, rather than
eliminating the 25-mile exception. We
are imposing the safety requirements
found in part 136 subpart A on all
commercial air tour operators, including
those operating under the 25-mile
exception. We set forth our justification
for the part 136 subpart A safety
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requirements further in the document.
In addition, we are adopting the data
collection provisions that would have
been included had these operators been
required to comply with part 135 (see
new § 91.147). The data that we collect
will assist the FAA in monitoring these
operations, which will result in greater
oversight of the industry and the ability
to measure the safety benefits of the
rule.
Before this final rule, § 119.1(e)(2)
applied to certain ‘‘sightseeing’’ flights
for compensation or hire conducted
within 25 miles of the takeoff airport
and return to the same airport (not
point-to-point transportation). In this
final rule, we have deleted the word
‘‘sightseeing’’ from the 25-mile
exception and inserted the phrase
‘‘commercial air tour’’ in its place. (See
new § 119.1(e)(2)) It is important to note
that commercial air tours are defined as
flights of which one purpose is
sightseeing. Sightseeing is one of the
several factors the FAA considers when
assessing whether or not a flight is an
air tour operation. (See ‘‘commercial air
tour’’ definition new sections 136.1 and
119.3).
C. Antique/Vintage Civil and Military
Aircraft
Many commenters addressed the
applicability of the proposals to classic
and vintage military aircraft used for
‘‘barnstorming’’ rides. The AFA stated
that the result of implementing the
NPRM ‘‘would be the elimination of
‘barnstorming’ as we know it. In the
process tens of thousands of people will
be deprived each year of the
opportunity to experience golden age,
classic and vintage military aircraft by
riding in such aircraft at air shows,
county fairs or just for the fun of going
to a local airport where such rides are
offered.’’ GAMA did not believe that the
air tour rules should address
‘‘barnstorming,’’ stating, ‘‘there is no
accident record indicating that this type
of operation is at risk. These airplanes
are maintained by enthusiasts who are
highly safety conscious and well
equipped at properly managing the risk
of that type of flight operation.’’
AFA also commented that virtually no
historic or vintage aircraft can meet part
135 regulations, and the burden on the
owner/operator of such aircraft to write
manuals, become certified, keep
records, and operate under part 135
rules would impose a severe economic
burden that few would chose to meet
even if the aircraft qualified under part
135. NATA commented that many
businesses are built around the concept
of ‘‘seeing the sights’’ in an antique or
vintage aircraft. NATA conducted a
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survey on the NPRM and found that
those who reported sightseeing rides
were their primary business also
reported that they did not believe their
aircraft could meet part 135
requirements.
Commenters stated that the main
obstacle to part 135-certification would
be meeting the airworthiness
requirements. Waldo Wright’s Flying
Service listed some types of aircraft
used for barnstorming, such as the
Travel Air 4000, the New Standard D–
25, the Brunner Winkel Bird, the Boeing
Stearman, the Waco UPF and YKS
models, and stated, ‘‘While some of the
above aircraft manufactured in the
1940’s may have Pilot Operating
Handbooks, Maintenance and Parts
Manuals, the aircraft vintage 1929–1939
have no such luxury; they are operated
in accordance with markings, placards
and operations limitations. To bring
aircraft like these into conformity with
FAR Part 135 would be very costly to
small operators, if not impossible.’’
They suggest that, instead of requiring
certification under part 119, part 91
operators be required to submit a
Written Statement of Operation that
states who will do what flights, where,
when, and in what equipment. This
statement could be renewed annually
along with the submission of a flight
hour summary and completion of a
survey. The FAA could then monitor
the industry and collect reliable and
accurate data that could then be used for
future comparison and study.
Alaska Seaplanes suggested that part
91 operators be registered with their
local FSDO, which would help the FAA
develop statistics and enforce the
current rules. Alaska Seaplanes also
suggested leaving part 91 as it is but
with the addition of §§ 135.117
(briefing), 135.183 (over water), and
§§ 135.203 and 135.205 (altitude and
visibility) for these compensation and
hire flights.
Various commenters suggested ways
to limit the applicability of the proposed
rule. Waldo Wright’s Flying Service
suggested the FAA impose the floats
requirement or restrict overwater flights
in helicopters, but leave other operators
alone. Sopwith Ltd. suggested adding
barnstorming flights and introductory
rides to the list of excluded operations
in proposed § 119.1. Similarly, Belle Air
Tours suggested that vintage aircraft be
added to the list of aircraft excluded
from these rules, such as balloons,
gliders, warbirds, and aerobatic and air
combat simulation flights. The Collings
Foundation suggested excluding nonprofit organizations, currently operating
safely under exemption letters, from this
rule. EB Air commented that this
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segment of aviation is most often
operated by small one or two plane
operations constrained by the high cost
of aircraft ownership, maintenance,
rising fuel costs, and seasonal weather.
PartAir, Inc., stated that the NPRM is
‘‘an ill-considered and misplaced effort
at improving ‘safety’ through
elimination-by-regulation of a
significant area of aviation.’’
Barnstorming Adventures, Ltd.,
commented that sightseeing and air tour
operations could be made safer;
however it strongly recommended to the
FAA that a layer of regulation is not the
answer. This commenter provided an
extensive summary of its sightseeing
operations and the economics of the
industry. Barnstorming Adventures, Ltd.
suggested that some oversight of the
industry would be acceptable compared
to the proposed certification as a part
135 air carrier. The commenter
suggested that certification, as proposed
in the NPRM, would be costly and
unjustified.
There are many terms for the types of
aircraft considered in these comments.
The terms include: barnstorming,
vintage, military, warbirds, antique, and
classic. The FAA recognizes that this
type of operation is often a ‘‘business’’
traveling from airport to airport offering
rides for a fee, much like those aircraft
operators traveling from farm to farm
offering airplane rides in the early part
of the 20th century. Today,
‘‘barnstormers’’ travel from airport to
airport and offer rides in antique and
vintage airplanes, thus recreating the
experience of the past by using the same
airplanes used during that era. There is
no way to know which flights are only
‘‘introductory’’ flights. The FAA also
recognizes that in order for these
businesses to exist and collect money, a
means to allow compensation or hire
flights must be provided in the
regulations.
Prior to the FAA proposal, the only
exception provided from certification
under part 119 that effectively fit these
flights was the 25-mile sightseeing
exception in aircraft with standard
airworthiness certificates. Although
commenters have stated that sightseeing
is not always a purpose of the flight, the
FAA considers the overall character of
the flight to be sightseeing, even if a
primary purpose may be the experience
of flight in an historic aircraft. There are
hundreds of part 135 small one or twoplane operations that are also
constrained by high cost, aircraft
ownership, maintenance, rising fuel cost
and seasonal weather. In response, we
have decided to retain this 25-mile
exception with some minor revisions.
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• ‘‘Barnstorming’’ operators using
aircraft with standard airworthiness
certificates may continue to operate
under part 91, but if they desire to
continue to use the 25-mile exception,
they must comply with the process
provided by FAA in this final rule to
allow an operator to apply for and
receive an LOA. The LOA, obtained
through the operator’s FSDO, will
include information such as the
operator’s name, address, management,
maintenance responsibility, aircraft
information, and the operator’s drug and
alcohol prevention program. Sufficient
time is provided in the rule for
operators to apply for and receive the
approved LOA from the FAA. Once
received, operators must comply with
the provisions of the LOA when
operating under new § 91.147. The
operator must keep the information in
the LOA current. This will develop a
database as NTSB and Alaska Seaplanes
recommended.
• ‘‘Barnstorming’’ operators should
realize that the new § 91.147, which
allows them to operate under part 91
rather than part 135, continues to
require each aircraft have a standard
airworthiness certificate (not Limited,
Restricted, or Experimental Categories).
We know that many of the aircraft used
in these types of experience flights can
never have standard airworthiness
certificates and operate under an
exemption today.7 These operators will
continue to need an exemption from the
standard airworthiness requirement for
all compensation or hire aircraft
operations.
VI. Comments on Part 91 Operations
A. Charity, Nonprofit, and Community
Events
Before discussing the specific
comments about part 91 operations, we
believe it is beneficial to the reader and
those affected by this rule to explain
some of our terms up front. It became
apparent, especially during the Internet
meeting, that many affected by this final
rule were confused about certain terms
we use.
1. What is the difference between an
exception, an exemption, and a
deviation?
Many comments indicated confusion
with the terms ‘‘exception’’ and
‘‘exemption.’’ An exemption is
permission the FAA grants pursuant to
14 CFR part 11 to a specific party to
7 Today, the FAA issues exemptions for World
War II era airplanes with Experimental and
Restricted Category airworthiness certificates that
include extensive maintenance and operational
requirements.
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allow that party to operate outside the
regulations. The party requesting the
exemption must show unique
circumstances why a particular
regulation, or portions of that
regulation, should not apply to it. The
party must also demonstrate that
granting an exemption will not
adversely impact safety. Grants of
exemption generally have conditions
and limitations specific to the request
made by the petitioner. The exemption
applies only to the person(s) or
company it is issued to, and has a
specific exemption number assigned to
it. Exemptions are designed to address
unique circumstances not contemplated
by existing regulations and are not
applicable to a significant portion of the
regulated entities. A familiar type of
exemption granted by the FAA are those
to sponsors and pilots conducting
certain flights for charitable
organizations that allow them to operate
without drug and alcohol testing.
An exception is written into the
regulation with the word ‘‘except’’ and
is available to everyone. An operator
does not have to apply for an exception.
If an operator meets the conditions for
the exception, the general rule no longer
applies for the operator. For example, a
rule might read: ‘‘Except in the cases
described in paragraphs (d) through (g)
of this section, all aircraft must be
painted red before takeoff.’’ The
exceptions to red paint would be found
in paragraphs (d), (e), (f), and (g).
A deviation is provided in regulatory
language when the FAA foresees
circumstances under which the general
rule language shall not apply. A
deviation is different from an exception
in that a deviation requires specific
approval from the Administrator.
However, unlike an exemption (which
also requires Administrator approval),
deviations can be approved at the local
level whenever good cause is shown. It
is not necessary to demonstrate unique
circumstances. For example, proposed
§ 136.7, Visibility, had a two statute
mile visibility requirement during the
day in paragraph (a), but paragraph (b)
allowed for authorization by the
Administrator to operate a helicopter
during the day in visibility of at least
one statute mile in accordance with the
deviation procedures of § 136.21. The
proposed Visibility and Deviation
authority have been deleted in this final
rule in response to public comments.
By reading the thousands of
comments, the FAA found that many
different types of operators use the ‘‘25mile exception.’’ This exception relieves
the operator from holding a part 119 air
carrier certificate and permits it to
operate under part 91. Some operators
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don’t know they use the 25-mile
exception, but they would need to hold
a part 119 air carrier certificate for their
operations without it. Many of these
commenters said they are not offering
‘‘sightseeing’’ flights, and that they just
let the passengers ‘‘experience’’
something—e.g., aviation history,
military history, or freedom. What some
commenters misunderstood is that the
general rule requires that someone
carrying people or property for
compensation or hire must comply with
air carrier rules. While there are
exceptions to this general rule (such as
those found in 119.1(e)), there is no
exception for ‘‘experience’’ flights. We
believe many of these operators not only
give the passengers an ‘‘experience,’’ but
also do some form of sightseeing and
thus fall within the 25-mile exception.
The same set of safety standards will
apply to these flights regardless of how
the operator chooses to describe them.
In § 136.1, we define a commercial air
tour and list what we will consider in
determining what kind of operation is
considered a commercial air tour.
Sightseeing is described in the
definition. Therefore, if you are offering
sightseeing as part of one of these
‘‘experience’’ flights, you might fall
within the 25-mile exception, but you
would be subject to the safety
provisions of part 136 subpart A.
In addition, many pilots appear not to
know the conditions and limitations of
the exemption they operate under.
During the FAA’s Internet meeting, one
private pilot said that he had already
conducted certain flights for a couple of
years and didn’t have 200 hours yet.
The sponsor for whom this pilot flew
clearly requires 200 hours of total time
for private pilots.8 Either the sponsor
holding the exemption did not brief that
particular pilot, or the pilot did not
know he was operating under an
exemption at all. The conditions and
limitations of an exemption are specific
and require the sponsor (to whom the
exemption was issued) to brief the pilots
about the exemption prior to each event.
This discussion continues under the
private pilot hour requirement heading
below.
Also during the FAA’s Internet
meeting, it became clear some pilots
don’t know the FAA’s drug and alcohol
testing requirements apply to them.
Some commenters openly admit they
advertise for customers, charge for
flights, pay their workers, and otherwise
operate as a business. They are clearly
not flying for charity, and are not
8 The operation was subject to EAA’s Exemption
No. 7830 for ‘‘Young Eagles’’ and is discussed in
more detail later in this preamble.
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operating under any exemption. These
operations are for compensation or hire
and are subject to the drug and alcohol
testing requirements.
In this final rule, the FAA gives relief
for drug and alcohol testing for the
limited operations in § 91.146 in the
interest of charity. Section 91.147 may
be used by those not willing to be
limited to a certain number of events in
a calendar year. Section 91.147 requires
drug and alcohol testing compliance.
2. What are charitable, nonprofit, and
community events?
For the purposes of our rule, we have
categorized organizations and
operations that operate for ‘‘free’’ or
solely for the benefit of others in three
different ways. These events are either
sponsored by a ‘‘charitable’’ or
‘‘nonprofit’’ organization, or qualify as a
‘‘community event.’’
A charitable event is an event that
raises funds for a charitable organization
recognized as such by the U.S.
Department of the Treasury under 26
U.S.C. section 170 (Internal Revenue
Code). Sponsoring pilots and donors
may deduct contributions that raise
funds for the benefit of a charitable
organization. An example of a charitable
organization event is a pancake
breakfast at which passengers make a
contribution to an organization, such as
the American Cancer Society, in
exchange for breakfast and a flight over
their town. A nonprofit event is an
event that raises funds for a nonprofit
entity organized under State or Federal
law, with one of the entity’s purposes
being the promotion of aviation safety.
The sponsor or the pilot(s) of nonprofit
event flights would not deduct
contributions under section 170 of the
Internal Revenue Code. For example,
aviation museums conduct flights to
raise funds to keep the museum in
operation and preserve the aircraft in
their possession. A community event is
a flight flown for a good or worthy cause
and occurs only once in a calendar year,
January 1–December 31. The sponsor or
pilot of community event flights would
not deduct contributions under section
170 of the Internal Revenue Code. An
example of a community event is flights
to raise money to assist a family whose
home was destroyed by fire. Another
example is a raffle for a free flight; the
money raised from the raffle goes to
purchase new computers at the youth
center.
The operating limitations and
regulations for charitable, nonprofit, and
community events are found in this rule
under §§ 91.146 and 91.147. Those
sections provide the total duration
(three days) allowed under each
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designation (charitable, nonprofit,
community event) and describe who is
eligible to conduct such events. Part 91
operators who want to continue in part
91 and operate charity flights may do so
under § 91.146. Part 91 operators who
are uncomfortable with the limitations
in § 91.146 and wish to continue flights
benefiting charities, nonprofit
organizations, and individuals or
organizations supporting a community
event may use § 91.147. Charities or
nonprofits also have the option of
becoming a part 135 operator.
While the FAA has clarified the
regulatory language in the final rule, the
comments to the NPRM disclosed
several misconceptions about the
differences between charitable,
nonprofit, and community events.
One major misconception relates to
the difference between a flight that is
‘‘free’’ and one flown for compensation
or hire. Several charities receive
compensation through ‘‘donations.’’
Some passengers donate money to a
charity and expect a flight in return for
donating money. Another popular
‘‘free’’ flight is one given at an event that
charges a fee for attendance and each
person paying the fee receives a ‘‘free’’
aircraft ride during the event. The FAA
considers these flights to be operated for
compensation or hire.
It is often hard to determine whether
a pilot is working for ‘‘free,’’ or is being
compensated in some manner. In the
interest of charity, the FAA has allowed
certain forms of compensation or hire,
such as the ability to log pilot time and
the ability to accept payment for aircraft
fuel and oil. Some pilots own or borrow
the aircraft used and aren’t paid for their
pilot time. Some pilots rent an aircraft
and are reimbursed by the sponsor.
Some pilots are reimbursed for aircraft
rental but provide their time for free.
Some pilots who own the aircraft they
fly are able to ‘‘write-off’’ some
ownership expenses. Some pilots are
paid to fly.
A pilot who flies his or her own
aircraft every weekend of the year and
receives compensation each weekend is
not working for ‘‘charity’’ when a
portion of the proceeds is given to the
airport manager the last day of the
event. At best, that is a gift to the airport
manager and is often given to guarantee
an invitation to the next event. Other
pilots and mechanics are retired or
wealthy and really do work for free, a
true gift to charity.
Some charities have full-time pilots
and mechanics on their payroll and
maintain expensive aircraft and
facilities. These organizations need
money for employees of the
organization and for maintaining their
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facilities, but that does not exclude
them from the list of charity, nonprofit,
or community event operators. The
aircraft used for charity, nonprofit, and
community event flights must be
maintained and that money must come
from somewhere. All of the flights by
these museums and charities involve
‘‘compensation,’’ but in the interest of
public good and charity, the FAA has
allowed them to operate outside of part
135 requirements. In this final rule,
operators of these kinds of flights will
continue to be allowed to operate
outside of part 135 requirements, even
though the FAA considers the
operations to be for compensation or
hire. However, there are certain new
requirements they must abide by, and
those are found in §§ 91.146 and 91.147.
3. The Four-Event Limit for Charitable
and Non-Profit Organizations and the
One-Event Limit for Community Events
AFA and Sopwith Ltd. objected to the
proposed condition in § 119.1(e)(11)
limiting charitable rides conducted
under part 91 to four events per
organization per year with each event
lasting no longer than 3 days. The
commenters thought the proposed
restriction is not justified and is
unnecessary.
The Collings Foundation went further
by commenting that many of the
proposed restrictions, including the
requirements for a standard
airworthiness certificate and a limit of
four or fewer events per calendar year
per organization or pilot without a
clearly defined exemption, would
totally eliminate the capability of
nonprofit organizations to fly historic
aircraft. Organizations such as the EAA,
Commemorative Air Force, Collings
Foundation, National Warplane
Museum, and Yankee Air Force, fly
historic aircraft at many locations
around the country. Collings argued that
these organizations would no longer be
able to function. Also, many nonprofit
aviation organizations could not survive
without donations associated with a
flight experience or special donations to
keep certain aircraft flying. The Collings
Foundation cited estimates that more
than one-half of all B–17s and all of the
B–24s and B–29s flying today would be
grounded by the proposed rule.
EAA stated that its organization and
its network of nearly 1,000 chapters is
one of the largest sponsors of charitable
and community flight operations in the
world. EAA stated that its success rate
and safety record are unparalleled and
are supported by strenuous training and
oversight programs sponsored by the
association. EAA stated that it and
several other organizations also conduct
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aircraft demonstration flights all over
North America, giving the public an
unmatched opportunity to experience
firsthand the history of aviation in such
aircraft as the Ford Tri-Motor, a Boeing
B–17 bomber, and a replica of the
famous Spirit of St. Louis. EAA opposed
inclusion of additional requirements on
these operations in the strongest terms.
The Owls Head Transportation
Museum commented that the proposed
rules would affect not only the Museum,
but also many other nonprofit
organizations in the mid-coast Maine
area. The museum stated that it has high
standards placed on its aircraft,
maintenance, and pilots. The museum
also boasted that, although it has given
more than 3,000 rides, it has maintained
a perfect safety record, incurring neither
accident nor incident. The Museum also
donates a number of rides to other
nonprofit organizations so that they may
raffle the rides to raise funds. The Owls
Head Transportation Museum stated
that these are the groups that will suffer
the most in mid-coast Maine if the 25mile exception is eliminated in the final
rule.
AFA objected to the proposal that
restricts charitable flights to only four
events per calendar year, per
organization, lasting no longer than 3
days each. AFA suggests that this
restriction is nonsensical and that by
adopting this limit, the FAA is
convinced that these flights are too
dangerous to be flown often. AFA
commented that by the FAA’s logic,
these flights should be completely
eliminated. AFA asks if it is safe to
operate charitable flights in four events
per year, why is it not safe to operate
them 365 days each year?
In summary, commenters believed
that the rule, if adopted as it was
proposed, would result in an end to
charity and community event flights for
various foundations. They also believed
the rule is not justified based on safety,
nor is needed to improve safety. Some
commenters stated they are against any
limitations on charity and community
events while others are against the
elimination of the 25-mile exception.
Determining that certain comments
have merit, we made some revisions to
the final rule. The intent of the proposal
is maintained in this final rule. All
flights on behalf of charitable or nonprofit organizations, as defined in the
rule, may continue in part 91, and a
limited number are allowed without
meeting the drug and alcohol rules that
would otherwise apply. Flights
sponsored by charitable and non-profit
organizations are limited to four events
per year. Local chapters of national
charities or non-profit organizations are
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considered separately for this rule, with
each chapter entitled to four events per
year. The AFA comment with regard to
the four-event limitation has merit, but
suggests the commenter does not
understand why this limit should be
imposed. As stated above, charitable,
nonprofit, and community event flights
are events for compensation or hire.
However, we recognize these events are
a tremendous benefit to the public and
deserve some exceptions from the
normal regulations necessary for part 91
compensation or hire flights. Therefore,
we created a rule (§ 91.146) that allows
sponsors of charitable, nonprofit, and
community event flights to employ
pilots, often as volunteers, to give rides
to the public without meeting drug and
alcohol requirements normally imposed
on a part 91 compensation or hire flight,
and without having a certificate under
part 119.
The four-event limit is the current
limit imposed through exemptions.9
This limit is not new; nor is it based on
safety concerns. Rather, the concern is
with the nature of these flights. To
maintain the charitable nature of these
flights, it is necessary to place some
restrictions on them. If the interest of
charity were taken out of the equation
and all else were equal, operations of
this kind would be required to be part
135, and thus be subject to more
stringent regulation and oversight. The
regulatory standards applied to part 135
flights would likely turn charitable
organizations away from their practice,
which is not the FAA’s intent with this
rulemaking. The FAA has historically
chosen four events per year as a
reasonable balance that separates a
charitable event from an event run by an
air carrier. The one event per year
limitation on community events
recognizes that the primary interest of
the operator is more likely to be
business-oriented than a charitable or
non-profit organization. If an operator is
unhappy with the limit, it may fly more
than four events per calendar year, but
it must comply with the requirements in
§ 91.147. Those requirements include
implementing a drug and alcohol testing
program in accordance with 14 CFR part
121, appendices I and J. An operator
complying with § 91.147 would also not
be able to use private pilots. The
operator has a choice of which
regulation to follow, and operators
currently conducting flights under an
exemption should not find the four9 Exemption No. 7112, held by AOPA, contains
this event limitation. That exemption, along with
others, is the basis for the event limitation in this
final rule.
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event limitation to be new or
unexpected.
Many of the commenters who operate
antique aircraft seem to believe that if
they operate in accordance with an
exemption, the FAA will cancel the
exemption once this final rule is
published. Because the rule
encapsulates current exemptions to
charitable or non-profit organizations
from drug and alcohol testing, as long as
participation is limited to four events
per year, charitable or non-profit
organizations will no longer need these
exemptions. Any exemptions issued
because a commercial air tour operator
does not have a standard airworthiness
certificate for its airplane will need to
continue. When the expiration date on
the exemption arrives, the petitioner
may re-apply for renewal. At that point,
the FAA may grant, deny, or change the
exemptions. This rule does not change
that policy.
The FAA has determined that the
conditions and limitations included in
the exemptions should also be included
in this final rule. Since commenters
failed to provide any rational basis to
not include certain proposed limitations
for ‘‘charitable, nonprofit, or community
events,’’ the FAA has incorporated those
limits in new § 91.146. In creating the
new § 91.146 for charitable, nonprofit,
and community events, we have
attempted to strike a careful balance
between the recognition of the public
benefits of such fundraising activities
and the need to set aviation safety
standards. Community events are
limited to only one per sponsor in a
calendar year, as proposed in the
NPRM. This limit is not specifically
derived from community event
exemptions, but was proposed so that a
community event sponsor would not
have to go through the extra effort of
applying for and receiving an IRS
classification.
This final rule will continue current
FAA policy. Current exemptions allow
for a pilot to fly only four events per
year for a charity, nonprofit, or
community event. As stated above, this
limit is not new, and has been included
in exemptions issued for years. For
example, Exemption 7112C,10 issued to
AOPA on May 20, 2004 states in
condition and limitation #11:
participated in more than four similar events
in a calendar year.
The event sponsor may conduct no more
than four events in a calendar year. Each
person operating under this exemption must
provide AOPA with a statement on behalf of
the event sponsor, indicating that neither the
event sponsor nor any participating pilot has
4. Private Pilots and the 500-Flight Hour
Requirement
Most of the commenters on the issue
of private pilots objected to the
proposed increase in pilot flight time
from 200 to 500 hours. AOPA, NATA,
AFA, PASS, and EAA commented that
the FAA did not provide any safety data
10 Exemption No. 7112 was originally issued to
AOPA on February 3, 2000.
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The event limitations were also
explained in the NPRM.
For operators choosing to exceed the
four-event minimum, we have
incorporated a new § 91.147 in this final
rule to provide relief from the need to
certify as an air carrier. It does not
provide exclusion from the existing
‘‘drug and alcohol’’ testing
requirements. The new § 91.147 does
not place any limitation on the number
of events as long as the operator
registers with the FAA as required in
the rule. For example, Owls Head
Transportation Museum may continue
its operations in accordance with
§ 91.146, if its raffle flights are grouped
to fit into the requirement of no more
than four events per year. If that doesn’t
work, they may operate in accordance
with § 91.147. If their aircraft do not
have standard airworthiness certificates,
the museum will continue to need an
exemption.
There may be cases where a sponsor
could qualify for all three categories. A
sponsor with separate chapters is
allowed four events for each chapter.
So, the 1,000 chapters of EAA may each
sponsor four, three-day events each
year. Each pilot is limited to a
maximum of 12 calendar days of flying
per year (four events, three days per
event). Each event (charitable,
nonprofit, or community) may be up to
three days in duration. Each situation
counts as one event for that pilot. In this
final rule we do not limit the number of
flights conducted during each event,
although a normally prudent pilot and
event sponsor would consider pilot
fatigue.
In the NPRM, we proposed limiting
both the sponsor and the pilot to four
events per calendar year. We have kept
that limitation in the final rule.
Commenters questioned the source and
reasoning for the limit. The source is
existing exemptions, and its reasons are
the public policy considerations
separating charitable, nonprofit, and
community events from events run
solely for profit or business. Operators
who do not wish to comply with the
limitations of § 91.146 may operate in
accordance with § 91.147. Operators of
either part may also become air carriers
in accordance with parts 119 and 135.
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or statistics to support this change. EAA
believed it is irresponsible for the FAA
to create additional regulatory burdens
on the general public when no
information has been presented to
indicate that there is currently a safety
concern, or that any significant increase
in safety would result from the change.
AFA stated that the proposal would
shrink the pool of pilots able to help
local charities and will drive hundreds
of small sightseeing operations out of
business. AFA also asked what the logic
was behind the 500-hour limit. AFA
also suggested there should be a cutoff
date for when the 500 hours was
accumulated so that most of it was not
done too far in the past, such as 50
years. AOPA cited its own study, which
found that 22 percent of pilots surveyed
provide charity sightseeing flights and
would no longer be eligible if the higher
hour requirement were implemented.
AOPA also stated that charities predict
annual losses of nearly $200,000 if the
500-hour requirement is imposed.
AOPA stated that organizations
benefiting from these flights include
Vietnam Veterans of America, Visiting
Nurses Association, Wings of Mercy
(medical flights), Volunteer Fire
Departments, and local technical
schools.
We discussed the 500-hour
requirement for private pilots flying
charitable, nonprofit, and community
events at length during the public
meetings (including the Internet
meeting). Over the years, we have
issued exemptions with the 500-hour
private pilot requirement with
breakdowns of what the 500 hours must
include. The hourly breakdown
required for Exemption No. 7830, issued
to EAA, is found below. Although it is
required in the exemption, we did not
propose, nor do we adopt, a specific
breakdown of the required hours
necessary to conduct a flight described
in § 91.146. The 500-hour requirement
for private pilots who wish to fly in a
charitable, nonprofit, or community
event is not a new requirement for
many; it has simply never been written
into regulation.
Commenters stated that many flights
would be grounded by the 500-hour
flight time requirement proposed for
private pilots. It is likely some of these
commenters were operating under a
500-hour condition and limitation for
private pilots in an exemption today.
For example, Exemption No. 7830 was
issued to EAA for ‘‘Young Eagles’’
flights. In that exemption, we stated
that:
‘‘A higher safety standard of 500 hours of
flight time for private pilots is proposed for
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charitable and community events because
these events typically involve a larger
number of passengers, are held over a period
of one to three days, and are generally a
pleasure activity for the passenger.’’
The conditions and limitations in
Exemption No. 7830 are more restrictive
than the proposal or this final rule.
Below is condition and limitation #2
from Exemption No. 7830:
2. Each pilot who conducts flights
under this exemption must—
a. Hold at least a private pilot
certificate with the appropriate category,
class, and type rating, if necessary, for
the aircraft to be used under this
exemption in accordance with
§ 61.31(a), (d), (e), (f), (h), (i), and part
61, subpart E.
b. Have a minimum of 500 hours total
flight time.
c. Have a minimum of 200 hours in
the category of aircraft to be flown.
d. Have a minimum of 50 hours in the
class of aircraft to be flown.
e. Meet the currency requirements in
§ 61.56 for a flight review and § 61.57
for takeoffs and landings.
f. Hold a current third-class medical
certificate in accordance with
§ 61.23(a)(3).
g. Meet the requirements of
§ 61.113(d).
h. Have a logbook entry for each event
in which he or she participates.
Exemption No. 7830 was extended in
2004 and applies to all private pilots
flying ‘‘Young Eagles’’ flights. Therefore,
we are surprised to receive comments
from EAA regarding the 500-hour
minimum for private pilots conducting
charitable flights. EAA is the holder of
Exemption No. 7830, which clearly
states a 500-hour minimum for private
pilots as discussed above. We received
some comments from pilots conducting
operations under this exemption who
are completely unaware of the
limitation. During the Internet public
meeting in 2004, we received one
comment from a private pilot who
stated:
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
‘‘I’ve flown a dozen or so Cub Scouts and
Boy Scouts, and have flown 4 ‘Young Eagles’
since earning my Private Pilot’s license in
2000. Why does the FAA suddenly feel I am
unqualified simply because I only have 150
hours in my logbook? I’m either qualified to
fly or I am not.’’
The commenter was obviously
unaware of the 500-hour requirement in
the exemption under which he was
operating, as well as the 200-hour
requirement in § 61.113. Some
exemptions issued in the past have
required private pilots to have only 200
hours to fly these charitable, nonprofit,
or community events. We have decided
to adopt the more stringent criteria set
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Jkt 211001
forth in Exemption No. 7830, which
requires 500 hours. We are not
amending exemptions with this final
rule, but we are amending § 61.113(d).
While AOPA commented in
opposition to the 500-hour private pilot
requirement, its own findings indicate
that pilots with 500 hours of total time
are involved in fewer accidents than
those with fewer hours. Safety support
for setting 500 hours as a minimum
requirement is found in the 2005 AOPA
Air Safety Foundation’s Nall Report
(page 9 of 19). The report shows that
pilots with fewer than 500 hours of total
time accounted for 34% of all accidents
(28% of all fatal). The report states
specifically that ‘‘The first 500 hours of
a pilot’s flying career are the most
critical, with 34.4 percent of the total
and 28.7 percent of fatal accidents
occurring then.’’
The 500-hour requirement is also
consistent with the part 135 rules
regarding single pilot-in-command
flying visual flight rules. We believe 500
hours is a more appropriate limit,
because each event that can last up to
three days and can carry numerous
passengers on what is essentially a
pleasure ride for hire. The existing
§ 135.243, Pilot in Command
Qualifications, requires a minimum
pilot qualification to conduct part 135
operations. It involves the most noncomplex part 135 flight: single engine,
day, VFR, single pilot. § 135.243
includes the requirements that a pilot:
—Hold at least a commercial pilot
certificate with appropriate
category, class, and type ratings
—Have at least 500 hours time as a
pilot, including:
—At least 100 hours cross-country;
—At least 25 hours at night; and
—An instrument rating.
—At least a 2nd class pilot medical
certificate
—Pass oral and practical examinations
at least once a year.
Lastly, the Antique Airplane
Association commented that § 61.129
requires only 250 hours flying
experience to hold a commercial pilot’s
certificate, yet the proposed rule would
not allow commercial pilots to conduct
flights for charity until they meet the
500 hour requirement. The 500-hour
requirement is only for private pilots. A
Commercial or Airline Transport Pilot is
not limited to any number of flight
hours and is eligible to fly in a
charitable, nonprofit, or community
event by virtue of holding the
certificate. Some might wonder why this
is the case.
It may seem incongruous that the
FAA would require more of private
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pilots than of commercial pilots.
However, the FAA has substantially
more oversight over the quality and type
of hours required for a commercial
certificate. In order to advance to the
commercial certificate, a pilot’s training
demands 100 hours in powered aircraft,
100 hours as pilot-in-command, and at
least 50 hours in cross-country flight,
among other more detailed
requirements. A private pilot can have
200 hours of flight time that includes
none of this experience. In other words,
because of approved curriculum, we
know a commercial pilot with 200 hours
will have the experience we demand to
conduct an air tour flight. We have no
such assurances for a private pilot, but
have determined that the additional
hours should be sufficient to adequately
protect the flying public.
5. Reporting Requirements
EAA strongly opposed the proposed
§ 91.147(a)(2), which requires that event
sponsors track and document the
participation of pilots and operators in
all prior events, including those not
under the purview of the current event
sponsor. According to EAA, it is
unreasonable for it to track and
document pilots flying charitable flights
for other sponsors throughout the year.
If anything, it should only be required
to track and document flights that it
sponsors. EAA stated that this provision
creates a significant increase in time
spent on needless paperwork and
unnecessarily burdens the FAA’s field
inspector workforce. EAA’s exemption
(Exemption No. 7111 as amended)
currently requires the sponsor to
provide the FAA with an annual report
of all persons who have conducted
operations under the exemption. The
report must include the date of the
event, the event sponsor, the pilot’s
name and certificate number, and the
charitable or community event for
which funds are being raised. That
exemption is the origin for the
requirement we proposed; however, we
inadvertently exceeded the exemption’s
reporting requirement.
The proposal (§ 91.147(a)(2))
mandated documentation of ‘‘all prior
events participated in by the sponsor(s),
pilot(s) or operator(s).’’ We agree with
EAA that it is unnecessarily
burdensome to require documentation
beyond the current calendar year. We
never intended to have a sponsor report
all previous activity. We have revised
the final rule language (§ 91.146(e) (1)
and (3)) so that the sponsor reports prior
events in which the sponsor
participated for only the current
calendar year. Additionally, the pilot
must certify his or her own statement of
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prior events in which he or she
participated for the current calendar
year. EAA is not responsible for keeping
track of the flying their pilots do for
other sponsors. Rather, their pilots are
responsible for giving EAA a signed
statement of prior events participated in
during the current calendar year
regardless of which sponsor they flew
for. EAA must include that statement
when reporting to the FSDO in
accordance with § 91.146(e). The 1,000
chapters of EAA may each qualify as a
sponsor.11
6. Life Flights, Angel Flights, and
‘‘Emergency or Medical Service’’
We proposed amending § 61.113(d)(1)
through (d)(7) in the NPRM to create
two new sections numbered
§ 61.113(d)(1) and § 61.113(d)(2). These
sections were specific in that paragraph
(d)(1) referred to emergency or medical
services and did not refer to nonstop
flights being conducted from the same
airport (the 25-mile exception).
Paragraph (d)(2) was developed for the
25-mile exception. The purpose of the
amended language was to eliminate
confusion with the term ‘‘passengercarrying airlift’’ in § 61.113(d) that
applied only to private pilots. The
unintended result was confusion of a
different kind. As discussed above, this
final rule has been rewritten to continue
private pilot flights for charitable
activities and to define the three kinds
of charities (§ 61.113 and § 91.146).
In addition, the FAA erred when
writing the NPRM. In the NPRM, we
presented § 61.113 and proposed
allowing private pilots to fly point-topoint and beyond 25 miles from the
departure airport (in proposed
§ 61.113(d)(1)), carrying passengers for
compensation or hire.
Flights previously conducted under
the provisions of § 61.113(d) always
were restricted to nonstop flights
originating and landing at the same
airport, never going beyond 25 miles
from that airport. The use of the term
‘‘airlift’’ in the current regulation is
unfortunate because it is misleading.
The purpose for the ‘‘airlift’’ exception
in § 61.113, as interpreted, has always
been to raise money for an IRSrecognized charity. The ‘‘airlift’’
exception was never intended to
authorize point-to-point transportation
for compensation or hire of sick or
injured people, or their families.
Moreover, even if such transportation
was done under the auspices of a
charitable organization, if any
compensation was given to that
organization to transport sick or injured
11 It
is possible for a pilot to be a sponsor.
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17:10 Feb 12, 2007
Jkt 211001
people, or their families, the FAA has
required that operation to be done by a
certificated air carrier. The FAA
believes, in general, that the operations
should be conducted by certificated ondemand air carriers, including air
ambulances. In the past, some charitable
organizations have tried to persuade the
FAA that when a third-party pays the
organization to transport a sick or
injured person (or family member) in
point-to-point service, that
transportation should not be recognized
as compensation or hire. The FAA has
consistently rejected those arguments. If
an aircraft operator is paid by a
passenger or a third party to transport
the sick or injured person, or family
member, from point A to B, the operator
must be certificated.
It is worthwhile to give some
examples of what has been permitted
under the rules and what will continue
to be permitted under the regulations, as
amended in this final rule. Some
organizations such as Angel Flights
make arrangements with corporate
aircraft operators to take sick or injured
people, or family members, from pointto-point without the corporate aircraft
operator being compensated by the
passenger or by Angel Flights. Such
flights are permitted. Additionally,
nothing in the old rules and nothing in
this new rule prohibits a private pilot
from taking a sick or injured person
from point to point as long as it is not
for compensation or hire. By
longstanding enforcement policy, the
FAA has allowed aircraft operators who
take a charitable tax deduction to
transport a sick or injured person
without that operator having an air
carrier certificate. No other form of
compensation may be received.
If an organization has used § 61.113 to
operate flights from point-to-point with
private pilots, that organization is put
on notice that operations like that are
not covered by § 61.113. We have
dropped the term ‘‘airlift’’ to reduce any
further confusion. Additionally, the
term ‘‘emergency or medical service’’
has not been adopted because it was
confusing. We are adopting the
requirement for 500 hours, as proposed
in the NPRM and discussed earlier in
this document.
It is unlikely that the ‘‘transportation
needs of persons with medical and
financial need’’ would have ever
complied with the 25-mile exception.
Returning such passengers to the
departure airport would serve no
purpose. If organizations have used
§ 61.113 for ‘‘life flights’’ or ‘‘angel
flights,’’ (carrying sick or injured
passengers, or a family member) for
compensation or hire, they have been
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6899
doing so against FAA policy. They will
need to comply with this final rule, or
apply for and receive a grant of
exemption to conduct any future flights
of this kind. Section 61.113 now refers
private pilots to § 91.146 and clearly
states that all operations must be
nonstop, takeoff and land from the same
airport, and be flown within a 25-mile
radius of that airport.
B. Other Flights for Compensation or
Hire
During the Internet meeting, we
explored the possibility of part 91
commercial air tour operators remaining
in part 91 and not requiring them to
comply with air carrier rules (part 121
or 135). Air carrier certificate holders
operating under parts 121 or 135
automatically need Operations
Specifications. In this final rule, the
FAA does not require certain part 91
commercial air tour operators to become
air carriers, but we will create an FAA
database with information similar to
Operations Specifications. We adopted
§ 91.147 to require such part 91
operators to send us the appropriate
information in an LOA.
1. What’s the difference between an
Operations Specification and a Letter of
Authorization?
Operations Specifications (OpSpecs)
are a set of documents required by
regulations that, among other things, set
forth how a certificated operator will
conduct all its operations. An OpSpec
specific to air tour operations is
appropriate for those operators
conducting operations in accordance
with part 121 or 135. If all commercial
air tour operators had been moved into
part 135 (or 121), all air tour operators
would have been required to have an
OpSpec specific to air tour operations
included in its set of OpSpecs.
A Letter of Authorization (LOA) is an
authorizing document required by
regulation for a specific kind of
operation conducted under part 91. One
intended outcome of this rulemaking is
to be able to identify all air tour
operations in a national database. The
seven items listed in section 91.147(c)
are considered to be the minimum
amount of information needed in the
national database for the issuance of the
air tour LOA to the part 91 operator to
conduct air tour operations.
All standard OpSpec and LOA
templates are developed at FAA
Headquarters and are maintained in the
same document management system.
FAA Headquarters, FAA FSDOs, and
the operators may have electronic access
to the OpSpec and the LOA templates.
Part 91 operators may have LOAs
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2. Where are the FAA’s drug and
alcohol testing requirements and who
has to comply with them?
The FAA’s drug and alcohol testing
requirements are set forth in 14 CFR
part 121, appendices I and J. The drug
and alcohol testing regulations provide
a comprehensive listing of specific drug
and alcohol testing provisions contained
in 14 CFR parts 61, 63, 65, 67, 91, 121,
and 135.
Commercial air tour operators under
part 121 or 135 must comply with drug
and alcohol testing requirements.
Flights conducted in accordance with
§ 91.147 (Passenger carrying flights for
compensation or hire (Not otherwise
covered by § 91.146)) formerly referred
to as 135.1(c) operations, will continue
to be required to comply with the drug
and alcohol testing requirements.
Flights conducted in accordance with
§ 91.146 (Passenger carrying flights for
the benefit of a charitable, nonprofit, or
community event) do not need to
comply with drug and alcohol testing
requirements.
In this final rule, if a charity or
community event operator goes beyond
the limits established in § 91.146 (e.g.,
four charity events, one community
event, use of private pilots, etc.), then
that operator is conducting operations
for compensation or hire and will
operate under § 91.147. These
operations must comply with those drug
and alcohol testing requirements that
apply to all compensation or hire
operations.
These drug and alcohol requirements
are not new for charity events. Prior to
this final rule, previously granted
exemptions had similar conditions and
limitations and relieved the charity
flights from drug and alcohol testing
requirements. This new rule language
includes appropriate conditions and
limitations in § 91.146 so that
exemptions are not needed.
type of operator. The result of this final
rule deletion is that the operators will
continue to use the standards they used
prior to this rule. For example, a part 91
operator who used § 91.119 for
minimum altitudes and standoff
distances will continue to do so. A part
135 operator who used § 135.203 or
Operation Specifications for minimum
altitudes and standoff distances will
continue to do so. We needed to retain
the minimums for Hawaii listed in
SFAR 71, but move those Hawaii air
tour rules into part 136. SFAR 71,
Section 6 entitled, Minimum Flight
Altitudes, is accordingly incorporated
into the final rule as § 136.5,
‘‘Additional Requirements for Hawaii.’’
We have removed the separate section
for Helicopter operating limits
(proposed § 136.19). We maintain the
intent of the section by including the
language, ‘‘Except for the approach to
and transition from a hover for the
purpose of takeoff and landing, or
during takeoff and landing, the pilot in
command must make a reasonable plan
to operate the helicopter outside of the
caution/warning/avoid area of the
limiting height/velocity or height/speed
diagram’’ to the rule language of
Helicopter performance plan and
operations (final rule § 136.13).
We completely eliminated the
proposal in the NPRM for Deviation
Procedures (proposed § 136.21) since we
are not adopting the standoff, altitude
and cloud clearance minima proposed
in the NPRM.
In summary, four sections (§§ 136.3–
136.9) were deleted; section (§ 136.3)
has been added; section (§ 136.5) has
been added for operations in Hawaii
only; the section for helicopter
performance plan (§ 136.17) and
helicopter operating limitations
(§ 136.19) have been merged into one
section (§ 136.13); and one section for
deviations (§ 136.21) has been deleted.
We also added a new paragraph (e) to
§ 136.1 to permit pilot deviation from
part 136, subpart A in the event of an
in-flight emergency.
VII. Comments on Part 136 Operating
Requirements
This final rule removes the proposed
Minimum Altitudes (136.3), Standoff
Distance (136.5), Visibility (136.7), and
Cloud Clearance (136.9), based on
comments. Several commenters stated
that the proposal would promote
compression (mixing of airplanes and
helicopters at the same altitudes) and
perhaps increase noise. We attempted to
have one national standard for these
items, but it became too difficult with so
many variables present. There were
always disadvantages for a particular
A. Applicability and Definitions
(§ 136.1)
EAA objected to the proposed
mandate for part 91 flights for charity or
community events be conducted in
accordance with the operational rules
for commercial air tour flights in part
136, subpart A. EAA stated, ‘‘The FAA
has presented no data that would
suggest a need to place charitable and
community fundraising operations
under the provisions of the proposed
part 136. EAA maintains that the FAA
is required to at least identify and
substantiate the existence of a safety
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issued, including but not limited to, an
LOA authorizing special airspace
operations.
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concern before drafting regulations that
would impose additional restrictions on
an activity that has been safely
conducted for at least 50 years under the
existing regulations.’’ EAA asserted that
a ‘‘charity or community event is not an
‘air tour.’ ’’
Section 91.146 in this final rule
addresses passenger carrying flights for
charitable, nonprofit, and community
events. The section does not indicate
that such flights are air tours. It does,
however, require such flights be
conducted in accordance with the safety
provisions of part 136, subpart A.
Section 91.205(b)(12) requires, for
aircraft operated for hire over water and
beyond power-off gliding distance from
shore, approved floatation gear readily
available to each occupant and, unless
the aircraft is operating under part 121,
at least one pyrotechnic signaling
device. In general, part 91 doesn’t
require the pilot to brief the passengers
on how to use a life preserver or how
to exit the aircraft after a water ditching.
However, § 91.509, Survival Equipment
For Overwater Operations, applies to
flights more than 50 nautical miles
beyond the shoreline because subpart F,
Large and Turbine Powered Multiengine
Airplanes and Fractional Ownership
Program Aircraft, recognizes that special
requirements are appropriate for larger
airplanes that may not make sense for
the entire general aviation community.
The same rationale applies here.
Because charitable, nonprofit, and
community event flights involve
passengers who may be unfamiliar with
the risks of flight over water, these new
requirements assure an appropriate
level of safety when flying over water.
The requirement obviously does not
apply to those flights not conducted
over water. Hence, when EAA sponsors
flights conducted in small airplanes not
over water and not in Hawaii, the
passenger-briefing requirement (§ 136.7)
is the only safety provision applicable.
The Lightship Group stated that, as an
operator of airships, it is concerned its
industry will be included in the final
rule without regard to its clean safety
record, which is better than hot air
balloon and glider operations. The
Lightship Group commented that, since
the airship industry is very small due to
high operating costs, new regulations
requiring additional infrastructure
would pose a serious financial strain on
current operators. This commenter
works with the FAA on the Aviation
Rulemaking Committee (ARC) Airship
Work Group for the purpose of
clarifying regulations governing the
operation of airships, and suggests that
other issues be addressed within that
workgroup. The U.S. Parachute
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Association was also concerned about
the rule’s applicability to its operation.
The U.S. Parachute Association was
concerned with language proposed in
§ 136.1, when a flight for compensation
or hire has another purpose in addition
to sightseeing, that the flight is subject
to subpart A. Although this commenter
believes the FAA’s intent was to ensure
that part 136 applied to operators
attempting to mask sightseeing flights
behind other supposed purposes, it was
concerned the proposed language may
allow the converse. That is, it may allow
the FAA to ‘‘see’’ a sightseeing flight
when, in fact, the flight is truly made for
another purpose. The U.S. Parachute
Association recommended the language
be revised to make it clear that part 136
only applies to flights where the
primary purpose is sightseeing.
On the other hand, the Antique
Airplane Association questioned the
justification for excluding gliders and
hot air balloons.
Part 136 subpart A rules do not apply
to operations conducted under part 105
(parachutes), part 101 (balloons), nor do
they apply to operations conducted in
gliders (powered or unpowered). Gliders
and hot air balloons were not
considered when we published the
NPRM because they did not fit into the
NTSB recommendations that inspired
the proposal. Since they were not part
of the proposal, we are not including
them within the scope of this final rule.
Some commenters (Coastal
Helicopters, Inc., and Venture Travel,
LLC) questioned the need for part 136
at all. The Tennessee Department of
Transportation agreed that requiring
flotation devices for overwater flights
and mandatory passenger briefings
should be standard practice, but
suggested that those requirements be
within the existing regulatory
framework rather than the proposed
new part 136.
A goal of establishing part 136 is to
have one location for all air tour rules.
For the operators staying in part 91, life
preservers are not otherwise required
until an aircraft goes beyond 50 nautical
miles from shore, and part 91 doesn’t
address passenger briefings on exiting
the aircraft after a water ditching at all.
To put a new life preserver mandate in
part 91 would be more confusing than
the approach adopted here.
Part 136 was created in 2003 with the
codification of the National Park Air
Tour Management Act into FAA rules.
The FAA envisioned at that time that
part 136 would become the regulatory
part specific to air tour regulation.
Currently, air tour regulation is spread
throughout the FAA rules, with some
SFARs being attached to part 91, others
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attached to part 121, and a set of rules
covered under part 93. This only adds
to confusion among operators who are
trying to locate rules applicable to their
operations.
B. Letters of Authorization (§ 136.3)
Since the proposal would have moved
many commercial air tour operators
from part 91 into part 121 or 135, the
operators would have needed
Operations Specifications had we
adopted the final rule as proposed. Now
that the final rule allows these same part
91 operators to remain in part 91,
Operations Specifications will not be
issued to these commercial air tour
operators. The air carriers have
Operations Specifications while part 91
operators do not. The part 91 operators
will apply for, receive, and comply with
an LOA. This new section does not
impose new requirements, but modifies
the proposals in the NPRM.
As discussed above, one of the tasks
of this rulemaking is to develop a
database of air tour operators. We
discussed the need for a database during
our public meeting on the Internet.
During the meeting we explained items
that Operations Specifications include
and an air carrier participant explained
how Management Specifications work
in part 91 subpart K, Fractional
Ownership Operations. No participant
expressed objection to a database.
The Hawaii air tour operators using
SFAR 71 always have included part 91
operators. Those part 91 operators have
LOAs instead of Operations
Specifications. The LOAs are
maintained in the same electronic
database as Operations Specifications
but contain much less data. Operations
Specifications may be amended or
reconsidered through § 119.51. Section
136.3 now allows amendment and
reconsideration of LOAs through
§ 119.51 as well.
C. Minimum Altitudes, Standoff
Distances, Visibility, and Cloud
Clearance (§ 136.3–136.9 in the NPRM)
In this final rule, the four sections
proposed in the NPRM are eliminated
and a new § 136.5 addresses only
minimum altitudes and standoff
distances in the State of Hawaii taken
from the regulation formerly known as
SFAR 71. This approach allows us to
delete SFAR 71.
Commentators objected to many
aspects of the proposed rule, stating
that: (1) There was no FAA
consideration of geographic differences
throughout the country; (2) they
opposed minimum altitudes; (3)
helicopters and airplanes should not be
lumped together; (4) there was no FAA
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consideration of differences between
single and multiengine aircraft; (5)
standoff distances for air tour operators
should not be more restrictive than for
any other operator; (6) visibility
requirements were too restrictive; and
(6) cloud clearance distances were
impractical.
We find many of the comments have
merit. Developing safety standards for
all commercial air tour operators generic
enough for use by operators in part 91,
including those using private pilots, as
well as commercial air tour operators in
121 or 135, required consideration of
many disparate regulations found in
parts 1, 91, 93, 121, 135, 136, SFAR 50–
2, SFAR 71, park manuals, procedures
documents, exemptions, Operations
Specifications, and LOAs. In response to
commentators, we have chosen to return
to the regulatory regime that existed
before the NPRM.
The FAA recognizes that our various
offices, including Air Traffic and Flight
Standards, have established procedures
with operators necessary to resolve
certain local airspace safety issues.
These procedures may be established by
rule, on aviation charts, or by some form
of agreement with the operators.
We have eliminated the proposed
deviation authority based on comments.
We integrated what might have been
deviation approvals into rule language
as much as possible. Most commenters
supported the idea of standardized
language so they don’t have to apply for
and justify a deviation. As discussed
below, we have moved the substance of
SFAR 71 into new Appendix A to part
136. Those rules continue to have more
restrictive altitude and standoff
requirements than other operations, and
we retain a deviation provision in
Appendix A.
D. Effect of Final Rule on Grand Canyon
and Hawaiian Operations
This final rule does not replace SFAR
50–2 (Operations in Grand Canyon).
However, since the FAA envisions its
future location in a subpart of part 136,
we reserved a place for it and for part
93 subpart U (Special Flight Rules in the
Vicinity of Grand Canyon National Park,
AZ). The actual move does not occur in
this final rule. Accordingly, SFAR 50–
2 and part 93 subpart U will remain in
their present locations, but may be
moved in the future.
However, SFAR 71 has been moved
into part 136 as Appendix A. Placement
of SFAR 71 into part 136 is not a
substantive change. Accordingly,
commercial air tour operators in Hawaii
may continue to operate in accordance
with their FAA-approved training
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programs, procedures documents,
Operations Specifications, and LOAs.
More specifically, this final rule does
not change the established routes or
altitudes for the Grand Canyon Special
Flight Rules Area. The Grand Canyon
manual and route/map or allocations
structure approved by FAA
Headquarters and the Las Vegas FSDO
are not canceled by this rule. Grand
Canyon operators may continue to
operate commercial air tours in
accordance with FAA-approved training
programs; the provisions and limitations
of their manual; 12 the FAA-developed
Grand Canyon Route Map; and FAAissued Operations Specifications. Grand
Canyon commercial air tour operators
will continue to use the altitudes and
standoff distances approved for them by
the FAA and contained in their manual
maintained at the Las Vegas FSDO. The
effect on Grand Canyon air tour
operations will be felt through the safety
rules in subpart A of part 136.
Specifically, commercial air tour
operators operating at the Grand Canyon
will now have a more detailed
helicopter performance plan, and be
required to either outfit their aircraft
with helicopter floats, or have
passengers don life preservers while
traveling over water (Lake Mead the
most likely), dependent upon the ability
to glide to beyond the shoreline in the
event of engine failure. The safety rules
in subpart A of part 136 are applicable
to Grand Canyon air tour operations.
E. Passenger Briefings (§ 136.7)
Coastal Helicopters and Air Vegas
Airlines commented that the passenger
briefing should be addressed in part 135
and should not be required for
operations not flying over water. Air
Vegas Airlines commented that briefing
passengers on water ditching
procedures is unnecessary for
operations covered by SFAR 50–2
because the duration of flight over water
is so short and chances of landing in
water are minimal. GAMA believed the
NTSB recommendation on passenger
briefings is appropriate and justified
because of specific accidents where
passenger briefings were perceived by
the NTSB to constitute a problem.
In the NPRM, we proposed to move
certain part 91 operators into part 135,
forcing these air tour operators to meet
the passenger-briefing requirements in
part 135. Because we are keeping the 25mile exception, those operators will not
be covered by the passenger briefing
requirements of part 135. However, as
12 The ‘‘manual’’ is FAA Order 1380.2A, Las
Vegas FSDO Grand Canyon National Park Special
Flight Rules Area Procedures Manual.
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proposed, we are requiring all
commercial air tour operators (including
those allowed to continue to operate
under part 91, including SFAR 50–2) to
complete passenger safety briefings.
That requirement is now found in part
136 subpart A. Overwater briefings are
required for flights traveling over water
beyond the shoreline only. Those not
traveling over water do not need to
abide by the overwater equipment or
overwater briefing requirements in this
rule. Our additional passenger briefing
requirement in part 136 specifies
overwater operations and the need for
operators to brief passengers before
takeoff on procedures for water
ditching, use of required life preservers,
and emergency exit procedures in the
event of a water landing. We understand
Air Vegas Airlines is concerned about
having to brief passengers on overwater
procedures even though these
passengers travel only briefly over Lake
Mead. Although it may be unlikely that
Air Vegas Airlines will have to attempt
a landing on the water, it is possible and
passengers should be briefed for that
possibility. Thus, if the operator is
flying over Lake Mead or the Colorado
River at any point during the flight, they
need to brief passengers on overwater
procedures before takeoff.
We added three requirements for
passenger briefings proposed in the
NPRM under the assumption that a part
91 operator would have complied with
part 135. Since part 91 operators are not
moving to part 135, we need to include
some requirements for passenger
briefings in part 136. Required briefings
now include:
(1) Procedures for fastening and
unfastening seatbelts;
(2) Prohibition on smoking; and
(3) Procedures for opening exits and
exiting the aircraft.
Part 135 operators already have
briefing rules and the above three
briefing requirements are no more
stringent than those existing rules. All
operators need to consider that some
passengers may not understand English.
This final rule does not discuss seat
pocket cards, videos, recordings,
pictures, or personally ‘‘showing’’ a
passenger how to comply. Rather, it
establishes a performance standard that
an operator may meet through various
means.
F. Overwater Operations
Under this final rule, if you do not
operate a commercial air tour over water
beyond the shoreline, you do not need
to brief for overwater evacuation
procedures or have overwater life
preservers or helicopter floats. If you do
operate a commercial air tour over
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water, this final rule requires a
passenger briefing before takeoff. This
final rule also specifies when life
preservers for each occupant are
required to be available on the aircraft,
and when those life preservers are
required to be worn by all occupants.
Life preservers discussed in this rule
apply to both airplanes and helicopters.
Floats discussed in this rule apply only
to helicopters. Each helicopter required
to have floats is also required to have
life preservers. If you fly an airplane or
helicopter over water beyond the
shoreline, you must brief the passengers
and comply with the life preserver
requirements, regardless of whether you
have floats.
1. Passenger Briefings for Overwater
(§ 136.7)
If you intend a flight over water
beyond the shoreline, passenger
briefings are mandatory. Passengers on
a commercial air tour who travel over
water must be briefed before takeoff on
the appropriate requirement for life
preservers. If the life preserver is
required to be worn during the flight,
the operator must brief passengers on
when to inflate it in the event of an
emergency evacuation. Properly
instructing passengers to don life
preservers when already in an
emergency situation is difficult since
the aircraft may be unstable and taking
on water and panic sets in. Since most
of these ditched flights are flown by a
single pilot, the pilot must concentrate
on managing the emergency, not on
individual passengers. Thus, it is
important that, prior to flight overwater,
passengers understand how to don life
preservers or be required to wear them.
They must also know how to open exits
and exit the aircraft. Each of these steps
is covered in the passenger briefing
before takeoff.
The Department of Transportation’s
Office of Inspector General completed
an audit report entitled Oversight of the
Air Tour Industry, May 28, 1999
(Control # AV–1999–099). ‘‘Crashes into
water’’ are described on page 8 of that
report. One accident in Hawaii resulted
in three fatalities after all seven people
aboard a helicopter survived ditching,
since the occupants were unable to use
life preservers ‘‘still located in their
containers beneath each seat.’’ The
report may be found at https://
www.oig.dot.gov/
item_details.php?item=235.
2. Life Preservers (§ 136.9)
In this final rule, we define ‘‘Life
Preserver’’ and ‘‘shoreline’’ in § 136.1
for the purposes of part 136 subpart A.
We prefer commercial air tour operators
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outfit their aircraft with the pouch type
inflatable life preserver, but we do not
require that specific type. When donned
by the passenger, an inflatable life
preserver must stay in an uninflated
state until after exiting the aircraft in an
emergency. It is easier for occupants to
keep the life preserver on from before
takeoff until after landing if they are
wearing the pouch type life preserver.
These life preservers could be issued
and re-collected while on the ground
with less wear on the preserver and
fewer passengers keeping them as a
souvenir. The pouch type life preservers
are not bulky or uncomfortably hot
when flying in high temperatures, so
they may be more suitable for
commercial air tours in hot climates.
During the development of this rule, we
considered mandating the pouch type of
life preserver. As long as individuals
can safely exit the aircraft, there is no
need to mandate a pouch, or even an
inflatable design. Because of comfort,
wear, and replacement concerns, we
expect most operators will use the
pouch type preserver. Accordingly, our
definition also permits life preservers
that are not inflatable, provided the
commercial air tour operator
demonstrates to the FAA that such a
preserver can be used during an
evacuation and will allow all passengers
to exit the aircraft without blocking the
exit.
Scenic Airlines and Sundance
Helicopters stated that the FAA has
exceeded the NTSB’s recommendation
in this area by proposing that occupants
must wear life preservers for the entire
flight (even over land) in twin-engine
airplanes and twin-engine helicopters,
even if they can reach the shoreline in
the event of a single engine failure. Air
Vegas Airlines, Papillon, Seaplane
Pilots Association, and NATA agreed
that the proposal went beyond the
NTSB recommendations with respect to
power-off glide to land. Belle Air Tours
and Waldo Wright’s Flying Service
believed that the overwater
requirements should apply only when a
flight is being operated outside gliding
distance to shore. Commenters
specifically argued that the proposal
was contradictory to NTSB
Recommendation A–99–57, which
provided an exception if the airplane or
single-engine helicopter ‘‘is operated at
an altitude that allows it to reach a
suitable landing area in the case of an
engine failure.’’ Consistent with our
authority, we proposed a requirement
that exceeded the NTSB
recommendation. Based on comments,
we have rewritten § 136.9 to consider
aircraft with floats and aircraft operating
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within power-off gliding distance of the
shoreline. This change does not,
however, relieve operators from the
requirement to have life preservers
readily available and accessible to all
occupants, or to brief occupants on the
use of those life preservers. All affected
aircraft, including those with floats,
must have life preservers.
Coastal Helicopters and Bar Harbor
Aviation stated that wearing life
preservers could actually make the
operation less safe. Coastal stated that
excited passengers who inflate the
preserver before exiting the aircraft will
be buoyed to the top and not be able to
exit the aircraft. Bar Harbor feared that
in the cramped quarters of small
aircraft, life preservers can get entangled
in the aircraft controls as passengers
attempt to exit.
Seaplane Pilots Association stated
that life preservers worn continuously
in commercial service will be subject to
wear and tear far in excess of that
experienced by traditional one-time-use
life preservers, which would
significantly increase operating costs
and may render the life preserver
inoperative when it is actually needed.
Seaplane also cited case studies
showing that it was the lack of
instruction on the use of life preservers,
not the location of the life preservers,
that had the most significant impact on
survivability. Kenmore commented that
passengers asked to wear life preservers
and passengers observing others
wearing them prior to boarding would
feel a sense of anxiety about the
impending flight. Kenmore claimed
training for pilots and a thorough
passenger briefing can improve chances
for underwater egress. It recommended
allowing operators to choose between
the use of inflatable life jackets and
accessible floatation cushions.
Merely briefing passengers on
emergency exit procedures does not
adequately assure the safety of
occupants. Likewise, the risk of a life
preserver inflating inside the aircraft, or
some lines getting tangled in cramped
quarters, does not outweigh the need to
have occupants wear the life preservers
or know where they are and how to use
them. Life preservers worn every flight
do indeed wear out faster than life
preservers tucked away in sealed heavy
plastic, and we leave it up to operators
to find the best way to maintain them.
As discussed below, the life preserver
requirement also provides an alternative
in which the life preserver must only be
available and accessible to each
occupant and not physically worn for
the duration of each flight. Thus, we
will permit the life preservers to be
stored in containers as long as
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passengers can easily open them. The
FAA does not find a floating cushion to
be acceptable as a life preserver for the
purposes of part 136 subpart A. Unlike
life preservers, seat cushions have no
follow-on inspection requirement.
Floating cushions do not replace life
preservers.
Sundance Helicopters recommended
that the FAA should significantly
modify the proposed requirement to
address only the specific geographic
locations and operators to whom these
requirements should apply. Sundance
Helicopters commented that the
proposed rules are based on SFAR–71,
which imposed certain requirements for
life preservers and floatation devices on
helicopters, because many of the
Hawaiian operations were conducted
over large bodies of water. It stated that,
‘‘* * *to impose those same
requirements in a national rule on
commercial air tour companies which
typically fly over deserts or frozen
tundra is ludicrous and shows just how
little thought the FAA has put into these
proposed regulations.’’ Echoing this
sentiment, Kenmore Air Harbor argued
against the life preserver proposal
because water conditions in Hawaii are
rough, unlike the conditions in other
parts of the country where air tours are
conducted. Kenmore recommended
applying the rule on a regional basis
only.
The NTSB recommended that we
establish one set of standards for all air
tour operations (NTSB Rec. A–95–58).
With respect to life preserver
requirements, we created one set of
standards for all commercial air tours.
However, we disagree with comments to
follow the NTSB recommendation (A–
95–59) that suggested we accommodate
localized airspace restrictions. That
recommendation (A–95–59) is not
suitable for this safety provision,
because the risk of drowning is present
any time an aircraft goes down over
water.
In the life preserver requirements, you
will see that we have provided relief in
some instances from the requirement
that each occupant must wear a life
preserver. Occupants onboard certain
aircraft only need to have the life
preservers readily available and
accessible. If the airplane is floatequipped or can power-off glide to the
shoreline, a life preserver must only be
available and accessible to each
occupant and need not be worn by each
occupant. If a helicopter is floatequipped, life preservers must only be
available and accessible to each
occupant but need not be worn by each
occupant.
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It is important for those required to
wear life preservers to do so even if the
flight is operated within power-off
gliding distance of the shoreline. In an
emergency, the pilot might not
maneuver to get to an acceptable
landing area beyond the shoreline. Also,
the pilot might know the power-off glide
distance, but might err in estimating the
actual distance to shore. In other words,
pilots of both helicopters and airplanes
may overestimate gliding capability.
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3. Helicopter Floats (§ 136.11)
The FAA inadvertently proposed in
the NPRM that all helicopters be
equipped with floats even if they are not
operated over water. This was not the
FAA’s intention. Under this rule,
helicopter floats for commercial air
tours only apply if a portion of the flight
is over water, except if that portion is
during takeoff or landing only.
We have rewritten the ‘‘Helicopter
Floats’’ section in this final rule
(§ 136.11) to address the ability of a
helicopter to power-off glide to beyond
the shoreline. If the helicopter operator
knows the performance 13 of the
helicopter (as published by the
manufacturer) would allow the
helicopter to glide (autorotate) beyond
the water to a landing spot, the operator
may not need helicopter floats.
Operators must make sure that the
ability to glide (autorotate) to land when
the engine fails will include the ability
to put the aircraft down safely in an area
beyond the shoreline. We define
shoreline in part 136 subpart A, and it
excludes areas that are intermittently
under water at the time of the flight, or
areas that are otherwise unsuitable for
landing such as a vertical cliff. The
burden is on the operator to know the
power-off gliding distance for existing
conditions at the time of flight. Thus,
the operator must determine how far
over the water they may go.
A helicopter need not be equipped
with floats if each occupant is wearing
a life preserver while the helicopter is
within power-off gliding distance of the
shoreline. The life preserver must be
worn from before take-off until the flight
is no longer over water. If the helicopter
goes beyond power-off gliding distance,
floats are required for all single-engine
helicopters and multi-engine helicopters
described in § 136.11(a)(2). The multiengine helicopters described in that
section don’t have the performance to
operate on one engine and must comply
with the same requirements as a single
13 Knowledge of performance applies to each
make and model helicopter and under conditions
of each flight to include density, altitude, and
handling characteristics.
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engine helicopter. We have allowed
operators 18 months to equip their
helicopters with floats, which is
consistent with the proposal.
Papillon Airways commented that
adding helicopter floats for its
operations would not increase the safety
of operators, but rather decrease it,
when these operations are compared to
conducting all operations within gliding
distance of the shore. Papillon also
provided details on the expected costs
of installing floats, including purchase
costs, maintenance costs, and added
weight that it asserted would reduce the
passenger load by one person per trip.
Papillon estimated that the cost of floats
alone could amount to over $1 million
a year when the costs of added flight
hours, reduced passenger loads, and all
other factors are considered. In addition,
USATA obtained several equipment
cost estimates from its members. These
estimates mostly reflected three major
cost elements: (1) The cost of obtaining
the new equipment; (2) The cost of
installing and maintaining the new
equipment; and (3) lost revenue,
because the added weight of the new
equipment would cause a reduction of
one passenger per flight.
The float requirement is relaxed in
this final rule to allow for power-off
glide to land beyond the shoreline.
Therefore the burden on operators is
reduced from what was initially
proposed in the NPRM. A full
evaluation of the costs associated with
adding floats to the affected helicopters
can be found in the final regulatory
evaluation that accompanies this rule.
We received several comments
regarding Grand Canyon operations that
traverse Lake Mead. We recognize the
burden of requiring overwater
equipment for operators who fly over
hot desert most of the time. However,
we also realize that Lake Mead is a
large, deep body of water that is too big
to go around readily. While we have not
had an incident of a Grand Canyon tour
operator ditching in Lake Mead, that
doesn’t mean there couldn’t be an
incident in the future.
If operations into the Grand Canyon
are in helicopters described in
§ 136.11(a), then floats will be required
if the helicopters operate over Lake
Mead and beyond the power off glide
distance to shore. For operations within
the power off glide distance for the
entire time the helicopter flies over
water, floats are not required if
passengers are wearing life preservers.
Lake Mead is outside Grand Canyon
National Park and outside the airspace
of SFAR 50–2. The FAA has worked
with the Grand Canyon operators for
nearly 20 years and the Las Vegas FSDO
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has oversight. The operators have
manuals, an FAA issued map, and FAA
issued routes that apply inside the
SFAR.
The Hawaii operators’ history of
helicopter floats is well established, and
they hardly commented about the issue.
We believe there will be no reduction in
safety because the helicopter float final
rule language requires the available
shoreline to be suitable for landing once
the glide is completed. Although this
section includes power-off gliding
distance, which SFAR 71 did not, it still
requires the landing to be done at a
location beyond the shoreline. While
there is a great deal of land that may be
within power-off gliding distance in
Hawaii, the terrain is often dangerous
and a landing would be nearly
impossible on such terrain.
This final rule does not provide an
exception for Alaska, because the safety
risks associated with a water ditching in
Alaska are at least as grave as safety
risks associated with a water ditching
elsewhere.
G. Helicopter Performance Plan and
Operations (§ 136.13)
The Helicopter performance plan
(proposed § 136.17) and Helicopter
Operating Limitations (proposed
§ 136.19) are combined in the final rule
in § 136.13, Helicopter performance
plan and operations.
Various terms are used to describe
helicopter performance. One of these
terms is the height/velocity diagram.
However, the FAA has used similar
terms in other parts of the regulations.
For example, 14 CFR part 27 (§ 27.79)
uses the term ‘‘height-speed envelope.’’
14 CFR part 29 uses the terms ‘‘heightvelocity envelope’’ (§ 29.87), and
‘‘height-speed envelope’’ (§ 29.1517).
For the purposes of this rule, both terms
are synonymous and are presented as
the height/velocity diagram (H/V
diagram) used in Rotorcraft Flight
Manuals (RFM). The terms ‘‘curve’’,
‘‘chart,’’ and ‘‘diagram,’’ when used in
describing the H/V diagram, should be
considered the same in this rule. The
‘‘avoid’’ area, ‘‘warning’’ area, and
‘‘caution’’ area of the height/velocity
diagram are also used synonymously.
For the purposes of this discussion, this
area is called the ‘‘avoid area.’’ The
H/V diagram typically shows
combinations of airspeeds and heights
above the surface in which safe oneengine inoperative (autorotation in the
case of single-engine helicopter)
landings have not been demonstrated
during certification.
The final rule language in § 136.13
uses the term ‘‘height/velocity
information.’’ This information includes
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not on the ‘‘H/V diagram,’’ but also a
consideration of gross weight and
density altitude and their effect on the
diagram. (See Rotorcraft Flying
Handbook, FAA–H–8083–21, published
in 2000).
Papillon Airways commented that
requiring a plan before each flight is not
practical since tour flights occur on a
regularly specified route throughout the
day. The operators take into
consideration weight and balance, gross
weight, duration of flight, fuel and route
of flight in ever-changing meteorological
condition’s, according to Papillon. Since
these conditions change, often after
departure, the pilot must maintain the
flexibility of making decisions in flight
as climatic conditions change. Operators
in Hawaii made a similar comment
during the Internet Public Meeting.
Liberty Helicopters stated that all of its
New York City operations, except for
takeoff and landings, are outside the
height/velocity envelope and that it
currently monitors the gross weight and
center of gravity of all flights. Liberty
Helicopters commented that the
requirement to produce a performance
plan for each flight, however, would
impose an onerous amount of
paperwork for each 11-minute flight and
jeopardize its ability to continue
operations.
HAI and several helicopter air tour
operators (Coastal Helicopter, Papillon,
Sundance Helicopters, and NorthStar)
strongly opposed proposed § 136.19
regarding the height/velocity diagram.
HAI stated that our proposal was
inconsistent with previously published
FAA guidance on the use of the height/
velocity diagram. Papillon agreed and
stated that the proposal would prohibit
it from operating at its current facility.
Similarly, Sundance Helicopters stated,
‘‘This section is probably the most
problematic and troubling part of this
new rule. If adopted it would make
present helicopter tour operations
nearly obsolete in any but airport
operations.’’
Sundance Helicopters asked if the
goal is to provide a high level of safety,
why this proposal would not be
imposed on all helicopter passenger
operations, such as for offshore workers,
fire fighters, and air ambulance patients,
not just sightseeing passenger flights?
NorthStar Trekking made a similar
comment.
Commenters noted that the height/
velocity diagram is used to advise a
helicopter operator and is not meant to
be a limitation. As long as the flight
plan supports avoiding the caution/
warning/avoid area of the height/
velocity diagram, commenters believed
there should be no violation of the rule.
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Commercial air tour operators in
Hawaii under Section 5 of SFAR 71
have been required to operate
helicopters at a combination of height
and forward speed (including hover)
that would permit a safe landing in the
event of an engine power loss, in
accordance with the height/speed
envelope for that helicopter under
current weight and aircraft altitude.
This requirement is retained under
section five of Appendix A to part 136.
Thus, in Hawaii, it would be a violation
of the safety rules if the helicopter
operator merely planned, but failed, to
operate the aircraft in the manner
described above (except when necessary
for approach to and transition from a
hover, or where necessary for safety of
flight). The FAA did not propose to
reduce any of the requirements or
restrictions for commercial air tour
operations in Hawaii.
As to commercial air tours in the rest
of the country, the FAA can and has
placed limitations on the operation of
certain aircraft in the operating
limitations of the RFM, as well as other
places. Commenters’ arguments that the
only place the Agency could put an
additional limitation would be in the
operating limitations in the RFM, and
that the Agency should not require
helicopter operators to operate in
accordance with the height/velocity
diagram are in error. As outlined above,
SFAR 71 had a longstanding
requirement that helicopter operators
actually operate the aircraft in a manner
consistent with the height/velocity
diagram. In § 136.17 of the NPRM, we
proposed that operators develop a plan
and operate within that plan. In § 136.19
of the NPRM, we proposed that all
operators remain outside of the caution/
warning/avoid area of the height/
velocity diagram, except for takeoff and
landing. In § 136.13(b) of this final rule,
we require operators to make a
reasonable plan to operate the aircraft
outside the caution/warning/avoid area
of the height/velocity diagram. In
§ 136.13(c), we require operators to
operate the helicopter in accordance
with the plan, except when issues of
flight safety arise.
For the commercial air tour industry,
the FAA believes aviation safety
requires the operator to operate in
accordance with the plan. Unlike many
other commercial uses of helicopters
where the operator has a financial
incentive to get from point A to B as
efficiently as possible, part of the
business plan of a commercial air tour
operator is to give the passengers
opportunities to see certain sites on the
surface by flying lower, slower, and
incorporating in-flight delays at certain
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6905
scenic areas. Commercial air tour
operation business plans may result in
operations within the ‘‘avoid’’ portion of
the height/velocity diagram as a routine
operating environment. Extended
operation within the ‘‘avoid’’ portion of
the height/velocity diagram increases
the exposure to the risk of not being able
to execute successfully an autorotation
landing in the event of an engine failure,
or in the case of multiengine
helicopters, a safe one-engineinoperative landing. Therefore, aviation
safety requires that commercial air tour
operators not only plan, but also operate
in accordance with the plan. It is likely
that with each new tour, the passenger
weights will be different, temperature
will be different, and altitude will vary.
Those differences can have a significant
impact on the performance plan
required in § 136.13. However, operators
can develop performance plans in
advance, which identify maximum
weights, highest temperatures and
lowest altitudes for planned tours and
load the aircraft accordingly to comply
with this requirement. Paragraph (c) of
the Helicopter performance plan and
operations requires the pilot in
command to comply with the plan, and
any operation within the caution/
warning/avoid area should be limited to
maneuvering necessary only for takeoff
and landing, or safety of flight.
Liberty commented that the
requirement to produce a performance
plan for each flight would jeopardize its
ability to continue operations. The
performance plans may be predeveloped by the operator for standard
conditions. The pilot in command
would add any adjustments for actual
conditions. This is no different than the
current practice of using pre-developed
flight plans. The operator develops the
flight plans and the pilot in command
adds any differences at the time of the
flight if necessary. From the
descriptions the commenters have made
they are already doing performance
plans without any documentation.
In conclusion, regarding the
requirements for a performance plan,
the FAA believes it is not onerous or
unusual for the pilots-in-command to be
aware of the gross weight, power
requirements, and center of gravity
limits of their aircraft, and that the
planned operation will be conducted
safely within those limits. Much of this
data can be preplanned through the use
of tabular performance data,
computation of potential maximum
loading, expected ‘‘worst case’’ weather
conditions, etc.
The FAA, in response to commenters,
acknowledges that the height/velocity
diagram is not a limitation per se. The
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rule language was amended from the
NPRM proposal. Now the operator must
be aware of and familiar with the H/V
diagram, and consider that information
during the operation. Because accidents
have occurred while the aircraft
remained in the caution/warning/avoid
area of the H/V diagram, it is essential
to highlight the significance and
potential hazard of these operations for
the commercial air tour operators.
The FAA does not see the
considerations of the elements of
performance plans or the knowledge of
the H/V diagram as additional
requirements, but merely considerations
in preflight planning and essential
operational knowledge of the aircraft
being flown in commercial, passengercarrying operations.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
VIII. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
Economic Assessment, Regulatory
Flexibility Determination, Trade Impact
Assessment, and Unfunded Mandates
Assessment
Proposed changes to Federal
regulations must undergo several
economic analyses. First, Executive
Order 12866 directs each Federal agency
to propose or adopt a regulation only
upon a reasoned determination that the
benefits of the intended regulation
justify its costs. Second, the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980 requires agencies
to analyze the economic impact of
regulatory changes on small entities.
Third, the Trade Agreements Act (19
U.S.C. 2531–2533) prohibits agencies
from setting standards that create
unnecessary obstacles to the foreign
commerce of the United States. In
developing U.S. standards, this Trade
Act also requires agencies to consider
international standards and, where
appropriate, use them as the basis of
U.S. standards. Fourth, the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Public
Law 104–4) requires agencies to prepare
a written assessment of the costs,
benefits, and other effects of proposed
or final rules that include a Federal
mandate likely to result in the
expenditure by State, local, or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
annually (adjusted for inflation.)
In conducting these analyses, FAA
has determined this rule has benefits
that justify its costs, and is a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ as defined in section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866 because it
raises novel policy issues contemplated
under that executive order, the proposal
of which generated significant public
comment. Accordingly, this rule has
been reviewed by OMB. The rule is also
‘‘significant’’ as defined in DOT’s
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Regulatory Policies and Procedures. The
rule will have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities, but it will not reduce barriers
to international trade and does not
impose an unfunded mandate on state,
local, or tribal governments, or on the
private sector. These analyses, available
in the final regulatory evaluation
supporting today’s rule, are summarized
below.
Final Regulatory Evaluation Summary
of Cost and Benefits
The quantified potential benefits are
estimated in this final regulatory
evaluation at $54.1 million or $38
million, present value, and the costs are
estimated at $29 million or $20.7
million, present value. The potential
benefits are based on avoiding 17
fatalities and eight serious injuries, and
damage or destruction of the aircraft
involved over the next 10 years,
discounted at 7 percent. Part 135
commercial air tour operators will incur
82 percent of the costs of the rule while
part 91 operators will incur 18 percent
of the costs. Ninety-nine percent of costs
to part 135 operators are associated with
equipping their helicopters with float
systems and preparing helicopter
performance plans before each flight.
The cost-benefit ratio is greater than 1.0
for each major cost center as well as by
type of operation. However, the
substantial number of part 91 and part
135 helicopter operators that have to
equip their helicopters with floats to
operate over water beyond the shoreline
will experience a significant economic
impact.
Final Regulatory Flexibility
Determination
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(RFA) establishes ‘‘as a principle of
regulatory issuance that agencies shall
endeavor, consistent with the objective
of the rule and of applicable statutes, to
fit regulatory and informational
requirements to the scale of the
business, organizations, and
governmental jurisdictions subject to
regulation.’’ To achieve that principle,
the RFA requires agencies to solicit and
consider flexible regulatory proposals
and to explain the rationale for their
actions. The RFA covers a wide range of
small entities, including small
businesses, not-for-profit organizations,
and small governmental jurisdictions.
Agencies must perform a review to
determine whether a proposed or final
rule will have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. If the agency determines that it
will, the agency must prepare a
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regulatory flexibility analysis as
described in the RFA.
However, if an agency determines that
a proposed or final rule is not expected
to have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities, section 605(b) of the RFA
provides that the head of the agency
may so certify, and a regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required. The
certification must include a statement
providing the factual basis for this
determination, and the reasoning should
be clear.
The FAA conducted the required
review of this final rule and determined
that it will have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Accordingly, pursuant to
Section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act, the Federal Aviation
Administration has prepared the
following final regulatory flexibility
analysis.
Reasons Why Agency Action Is Being
Taken
The FAA is adopting these national
safety standards to govern commercial
air tours as a result of accidents and
incidents involving commercial air tour
operators directly linked to the major
provisions of the rule and NTSB
recommendations made in response to
air tour and sightseeing accidents and
incidents. The rationale for each of the
major provisions of the final rule are
summarized below:
Briefing provision. A basic tenet of
aviation safety is that passengers know
procedures for opening exits and exiting
the aircraft and, for flight segments over
water beyond the shoreline, procedures
for water ditching and use of life
preservers. The FAA believes that
passenger briefings will improve the
chances of survival in the event of an
accident.
Safety provisions addressing the risks
of overwater operations. Based on an
analysis of the risks of overwater
operations and NTSB recommendations,
the FAA concludes that the benefits of
these provisions justify the costs and
potential inconvenience to passengers.
Airplane occupants will also benefit
from the requirement for life preservers
when air tours are conducted over
water. Based on survivors’ testimony,
life preservers alone are insufficient in
preventing loss of life in helicopter
accidents over water. Without floats,
helicopters sink quickly upon impact,
giving occupants little time to exit the
aircraft. The FAA believes that
helicopter floats, in conjunction with
life preservers, will significantly
improve the chances of survival.
Therefore, this final rule will require life
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Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and
Other Compliance Requirements
preservers for both airplanes and
helicopters and floats for helicopters
that operate overwater beyond the
shoreline without gliding capability.
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Statement of Objectives and Legal Basis
The objective of this proposal is to
provide a higher and uniform level of
safety for all commercial air tours.
Under the United States Code, the
FAA Administrator is required to
consider the following matter, among
others, as being in the public interest:
assigning, maintaining, and enhancing
safety and security as the highest
priorities in air commerce [see 49 U.S.C.
§ 40101(d)(1)]. Additionally, it is the
FAA Administrator’s statutory duty to
carry out her responsibilities ‘‘in a way
that best tends to reduce or eliminate
the possibility or recurrence of
accidents in air transportation.’’ [see 49
U.S.C. § 44701(c)]. Accordingly, this
notice proposes to amend Title 14 of the
Code of Federal Regulations to provide
definitions for commercial air tours, and
establish new safety requirements for
such operations.
Description of Small Entities Affected
The FAA concludes that virtually all
of the entities affected by the proposed
amendments are small according to
thresholds established by the Small
Business Administration.
An estimated 645 part 91 operators
will be affected by the rule. This rule
will impose annualized costs per
Section 91.147 operator of: (1) $115 to
provide passenger briefings and
paperwork; (2) an additional $45 to
operators of airplanes whose occupants
must wear life preservers for a total of
$160; (3) $3,290 to helicopter operators
to complete performance plans and
provide briefings; and (4) $9,300 to
helicopter operators who have to
provide life preservers and equip their
aircraft with floats in addition to
completing performance plans and
providing briefings for a total cost of
$12,600. An estimated 90 part 121/135
operators will be affected by the rule.
This rule will impose annualized costs
per part 135 operator conducting
commercial air tours of: (1) $110 to
provide passenger briefings and
paperwork; (2) an additional $205 to
operators of airplanes whose occupants
must wear life preservers for a total of
$315; (3) $27,800 to helicopter operators
to complete performance plans and
provide briefings; and (4) $88,400 to
helicopter operators whose occupants
must wear life preservers and equip
their aircraft with floats in addition to
completing performance plans and
providing briefings, at a cost of $27,800,
for a total cost of $116,200.
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Pilots flying for charitable, non-profit,
or community events must provide a
signed statement that the pilot has not
flown more than three previous events
covered by section 91.146 during the
current calendar year at a cost of $7 per
statement. Operators conducting flights
under section 91.147 must apply for and
receive a Letter of Authorization from
the FAA at a cost of approximately $24
per operator. Section 136.13 requires
each operator to complete a
performance plan before each helicopter
flight by a commercial air tour operator
or a flight operated under Sections
91.146 or 91.147. The pilot must review
for accuracy at a cost of approximately
$2 per flight.
Overlapping, Duplicative, or Conflicting
Federal Rules
The final rule will not overlap,
duplicate, or conflict with existing
Federal Rules. The Small Business
Administration commented that the
requirements of the proposed rule are
duplicative with the National Parks Air
Tour Management requirements. The
FAA does not agree with this comment
since this final rule addresses how
commercial air tour flights are to be
conducted, rather than where such
flights may be conducted. This is a
safety rule. Under the National Parks
Air Tour Management requirements,
each park will determine specific park
rules as they see fit. Each park may be
different.
Analysis of Alternatives
Alternative 1: Lengthen the
compliance period: The final rule will
require full compliance within six
months from the date of issuance with
complete phase-in of the helicopter
floats within 18 months of the effective
date. The FAA issued the NPRM in
October 2003 alerting the public to the
proposal. In view of the more than 2,000
comments received and the holding of
public and Internet meetings, the FAA
believes that the compliance times
provided are adequate. Lengthening the
compliance period to 10 years, for
example, would save some compliance
costs on aircraft due to be removed from
service within the 10-year period. The
FAA believes, however, that the
sightseeing/air tour accident history
justifies FAA action in the near term.
Between 1996 and 2005, there were 17
fatalities and eight serious injuries
involving part 91 sightseeing flights and
part 135 air tours. The FAA believes,
therefore, that the higher standards
should be implemented expeditiously
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6907
and has chosen not to adopt this
alternative.
Alternative 2: Require helicopter
floats for all operations beyond the
shoreline: The NPRM required each
helicopter to be equipped with a
floatation system for a flight over water
except if the overwater portion of the
flight was only necessary for take-off or
landing. The final rule will only require
floats if the overwater operations are
beyond the helicopter’s power-off
gliding distance of the shoreline. This
change from the NPRM reduces the
scope of this provision and reduces the
associated costs.
The FAA believes that the safety
objectives will be met through this
alternative. The FAA believes that
helicopter floats alone are insufficient to
prevent loss of life. The rule requires
helicopters with floats to have life
preservers for all occupants. Based on
survivors’ descriptions, the FAA
believes that life preservers alone are
insufficient in preventing loss of life in
helicopter accidents over water.
Helicopter floats, in conjunction with
life preservers, would significantly
improve the chances of survival. For
this reason, the FAA has chosen to
adopt this alternative.
Alternative 3: Grandfather part 91
operators: The final rule continues to
allow flights for compensation or hire to
operate under part 91, with certain
provisions. The NPRM would have
required part 91 sightseeing operators to
obtain part 135 certification. Adoption
of this alternative reduces the cost of the
rule to part 91 operators from about
$150 million over 10 years, to $5.8
million over the same period.
Affordability Analysis
The FAA lacks specific revenue and
profit data for most of the entities
affected by this rule. The United States
Census Bureau data for 2002 provides
annual receipt information for Scenic
and Sightseeing Transportation, Other
(NAICS 4879) which includes airplane
and helicopter operators.14 The receipt
information is grouped into five
categories. The FAA has reviewed this
information and found that the 20
largest firms had average revenues of
$5.6 million and includes some firms
with receipts that exceed the SBA
threshold. The average annual receipts
excluding the 20 largest firms was
$333,357; the average annual receipts
excluding the 50 largest firms was
$181,230. The FAA believes it is
appropriate to assess the impact of the
final rule’s costs on Section 91.147
operators using the $181,230 average
14 See
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jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
and the $333,357 amount for most part
135 operators.
The FAA determines the $160
annualized cost to part 91 airplane
operators is not a significant cost to the
operator with average revenues of
$181,230. The annualized cost to 33
helicopter operators to complete
performance plans and provide briefings
is a significant cost as it accounts for
approximately 1.8 percent of annual
receipts. Requiring helicopter occupants
to wear life preservers and installing
floats increases the annualized costs of
17 operators to approximately 6.9
percent of annual receipts.
The FAA determines the $315
annualized cost to airplane operators is
not a significant cost to the part 135
operator with average revenues of
$333,357. The annualized cost to 38
helicopter operators to complete
performance plans and provide briefings
is a significant cost as it accounts for
approximately 8.3 percent of annual
receipts. Requiring helicopter occupants
to wear life preservers and installing
floats increases the annualized costs of
15 operators to approximately 35
percent of annual receipts. The FAA
believes, however, that the helicopter
float costs will apply to the larger, more
financially viable part 135 entities with
receipts exceeding the average revenues
used. As noted above the Census data
indicates that the 20 largest firms had
average revenues of $5.6 million; using
this average revenue lowers the
annualized cost to 2.1 percent.
While there are significant costs to
helicopter operators, there are a number
of options the operators may exercise to
avoid or minimize these costs. If air
tours do not constitute a significant
share of an operator’s net revenues, an
operator may elect not to continue to
provide air tours. Other operators may
alter the air tour route to avoid the
compliance costs, but this may
adversely affect tour revenues. Some
operators, depending on the volume of
their commercial air tour operations,
may elect to only equip part of their
fleet to ensure the affordability to their
business. The FAA concludes these
operators will be able to afford to
comply with the final rule and remain
in business.
Business Closure Analysis
The FAA will allow operators
conducting flights for compensation or
hire under part 91 to remain under part
91. This change will allow the part 91
operators currently providing
sightseeing flights to continue to
provide their service. The requirement
for helicopter floats will impose
significant costs on operators who opt to
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continue flying over water beyond the
shoreline. These operators have 18
months to determine whether to equip
all their helicopters, formulate financial
plans to meet the initial capital float
cost, or devise alternate routing to avoid
the expense. The FAA concludes that
these operators would remain in
business, although we have added
operator relief for ability to glide to
beyond the shoreline.
Disproportionality Analysis
Almost all entities in the commercial
air tour/sightseeing market are small
(annual receipts of $6 million or less).
Accordingly, the costs imposed by this
rule will be borne almost entirely by
small businesses. Helicopter operators
will incur much higher costs than
airplane operators due to the
requirement to equip their aircraft with
floats if they conduct operations
overwater and the requirement to
prepare helicopter performance plans.
The FAA believes that the only way to
accomplish the commercial air tour
safety needs for helicopter operations is
to impose these higher standards on
these entities.
Key Assumptions Analysis
The FAA has made several
conservative assumptions in this
analysis, which may have resulted in an
overestimate of the costs of the final
rule. For example, the FAA assumes
that all helicopters in commercial air
tour service in areas that require floats
will equip all their helicopters with
floats. It is highly possible that the
number will be lower because some
operators already have floats to comply
with 14 CFR 135.183 and SFAR 71 for
Hawaii, some operators do not use all
the helicopters in their fleet for
commercial air tours, and others who
currently operate marginally over water
may change their flight plans to remain
over land. Also, the helicopter life
preserver costs may be overestimated
since there is a voluntary industry
standard that requires occupants to wear
a life preserver provided by the tour
operator. To the extent this is a current
practice for some operators, it is not a
cost of this rule. We have estimated that
the pilot may complete the helicopter
performance plans although the rule
permits the plan to be calculated by a
lower paid employee as long as the pilot
reviews it for accuracy.
International Trade Impact Assessment
The Trade Agreements Act of 1979
prohibits Federal agencies from
establishing any standards or engaging
in related activities that create
unnecessary obstacles to the foreign
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commerce of the United States.
Legitimate domestic objectives, such as
safety, are not considered unnecessary
obstacles. The statute also requires
Federal agencies to consider
international standards and, where
appropriate, use the foreign standards as
the basis for U.S. standards. In
accordance with the above statute, the
FAA has assessed the potential effect of
this final rule and determined that it
would have only a domestic impact and
therefore no affect on any tradesensitive activity.
Unfunded Mandates Assessment
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Public Law 104–4) is intended,
among other things, to curb the practice
of imposing unfunded Federal mandates
on State, local, and tribal governments.
Title II of the Act requires each Federal
agency to prepare a written statement
assessing the effects of any Federal
mandate in a proposed or final agency
rule that may result in the expenditure
of $100 million or more (adjusted
annually for inflation with the base year
1995) in any one year by State, local,
and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector; such a mandate
is deemed to be a ‘‘significant regulatory
action.’’ The FAA currently uses an
inflation-adjusted value of $128.1
million in lieu of $100 million.
This final rule does not contain such
a mandate. Therefore, the requirements
of Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 do not apply.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains the following
new information collection
requirements subject to review by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)).
Organizations and individuals desiring
to submit comments on the information,
billing, and collection requirements
should direct them to the U.S.
Department of Transportation Dockets at
the address listed in the ADDRESSES
section of this document. The FAA can
only roughly estimate the effect of this
final rule on air tour operators because
accurate and complete data on the
number of operators, tours, and aircraft
is not yet available. One purpose of this
rule is to establish a definition of
Commercial Air Tour that may be used
to subsequently collect data on the air
tour industry.
Section 91.146(d) will require each
pilot to certify in a signed statement that
the pilot has not flown more than three
previous events covered by this section
during the current calendar year. Pilots
currently must provide sponsors with
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their pilot and medical certificates and
log book under Section 61.113(d)(1).
Some sponsors have also had to submit
the latter information because of the
exemptions they hold and would simply
add the certification statement For the
first year, this will require 2,200 pilot ×
10 minutes each × $41.66 hourly = 366.7
hours and $15,277.
Initial hours = 366.7
Initial cost = $15,277
Recurring hours = 3,300
Recurring cost = $137,493
Total Hours = 3,667,7
Total Cost = $152,770
Section 91.147 requires that operators
apply for, receive and comply with a
Letter of Authorization from the FAA to
conduct nonstop passenger-carrying
flights for compensation or hire. These
operators are already subject to the
FAA’s drug and alcohol requirements
(and thus not a part of this rule) and
most of the information that must be
submitted under this section is the same
general business information (addresses,
names of personnel) provided for those
programs, plus aircraft information.
Initially, 645 operators will apply and
thereafter, 16 new operators will register
each year. The application will take
each operator 20 minutes to complete
the process. Initial hours and cost = 645
operators × 20 minutes each × $73.77
hourly = 215 hours and $15,860.
Initial hours = 215
Initial cost = $15,860
Recurring hours = 48
Recurring cost = $3,510
Total Hours = 263
Total Cost = $19,370
Section 136.7 requires air tour
operators to provide passenger briefings.
There are numerous options for
presenting the required information
given the current state of electronics.
Nation-wide charitable and non-profit
organizations could produce videos and
distribute to local chapters at very little
cost. Commercial air tour operators are
also likely to use videos as some already
do. Some 935 videos (200 by charitable
and non-profit groups, 645 by Section
91.147 operators and 90 by part 135
operators) are estimated to be produced
at an initial cost of $500 each and be
replaced over a 10-year period.
Presenting the information by video is
less costly than oral briefings because
the cost of producing the video can be
amortized over 10 years which results in
lower per briefing cost. While the
automated methods are available to
individuals providing local community
flights, it is more likely the pilot will
orally transmit this information to
passengers because videos would not be
cost-effective. Pilot briefings are
estimated to take 3 minutes at a cost of
$2.08 per briefing.
Initial videos will take 5 hours to
produce at a cost of $100 per hour or a
total of 4,675 hours and a cost of
$467,500. Initial oral briefings are
estimated to take 3 minutes each at a
cost of $2.08 per briefing and given
before 1,000 flights.
Initial hours = 4,725 (4,675 for video
productions + 50 hours for oral
briefings)
Initial cost = $469,580 ($467,500 for
videos + $2,080 for oral briefings)
Recurring hours = 4,657.5 (4,207.5 for
video productions + 450 hours for
oral briefings)
Recurring cost = $439,470 ($420,750 for
videos + $18,720 for oral briefings)
Total Hours = 9,382.5 (8,882.5 for video
productions + 500 hours for oral
briefings)
Total Cost = $909,050 ($888,250 for
videos + $20,800 for oral briefings)
Section 136.13 will require each
operator to complete a performance plan
before each helicopter flight by a
commercial air tour operator. These
estimates include all of the helicopters
in the operator’s fleet although the
entire fleet may not be used for
commercial air tours. Pilots will take 3
minutes to review the performance plan
before each flight at a cost of $2.08 per
review. The total number of charity and
non-profit helicopter flights per year are
estimated at 9,600. The number of
Section 91.147 flights is based on 42
helicopters conducting 400 air tour
flight hours per year and performing 3
tours per flight hour (42 × 400 × 3 =
50,400). The number of part 135
commercial air tour flights are a
combination of two categories of
operations: (1) Air tour hours for
operations of 134 AS 350 helicopters at
1,253 hours per year per aircraft and (2)
that the average flight takes 45 minutes
(134 × 1253 × (60/45) = 223,869).
Commercial air tours by 169 other
helicopters used by part 135 operators
are based on 556 air tour hours per
aircraft and performing 3 tours per flight
hour (169 × 556 × 3 = 281,892). The total
number of affected part 135 helicopter
flights is about 505,800.
Initial hours = 28,290 (9,600 + 50,400 +
505,800 = 565,800 flight × 3 minutes
per flight = 1,697,400 minutes / 60
minutes per hour = 28,290 hours)
Initial cost = $1,176,864 (565,800 flights
× $2.08 per flight)
Recurring hours = 2,636,010
Recurring cost = $10,591,776
Total Hours = 282,900
Total Cost = $11,768,640
SUMMARY OF INITIAL AND TOTAL PAPERWORK HOURS AND COSTS
Category
Initial hours
Initial cost
Ten year
hours
Ten year
costs
366.7
215
4,725
28,290
$15,277
15,860
469,580
1,176,864
3,667.7
263
9,382.5
282,900
$152,770
19,370
909,050
11,768,640
Total ......................................................................................................................
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Pilot certification ...........................................................................................................
Letter of Authorization .................................................................................................
Passenger briefings .....................................................................................................
Performance plans .......................................................................................................
33,596.7
1,677,581
296,213.2
12,849,830
Note: Section 136.5, Minimums for Hawaii,
contains paperwork items that have already
been addressed in the paperwork package for
SFAR 71. Section 136.7, Passenger Briefings
is partially covered in paperwork packages
for part 91 and for part 135.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor and a person is not required to
respond to a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
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Jkt 211001
Control Number. As required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3507(d)), the FAA submitted a
copy of the new information collection
requirements(s) in this final rule to
OMB for its review. OMB is still
reviewing the submission and will
provide an OMB Control Number when
the review is complete. That Control
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Number will then be published
separately in the Federal Register.
International Compatibility
In keeping with U.S. obligations
under the Convention on International
Civil Aviation, it is FAA policy to
comply with International Civil
Aviation Organization (ICAO) Standards
and Recommended Practices to the
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maximum extent practicable. The FAA
has determined that there are no ICAO
Standards and Recommended Practices
that correspond to these regulations.
Executive Order 13132, Federalism
The FAA has analyzed this final rule
under the principles and criteria of
Executive Order 13132, Federalism. We
determined that this action would not
have a substantial direct effect on the
States, on the relationship between the
national Government and the States, or
on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, and therefore
would not have federalism implications.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
Regulations Affecting Intrastate
Aviation in Alaska
Section 1205 of the FAA
Reauthorization Act of 1996 (110 Stat.
3213) requires the FAA, when
modifying its regulations in a manner
affecting intrastate aviation in Alaska, to
consider the extent to which Alaska is
not served by transportation modes
other than aviation, and to establish
appropriate regulatory distinctions. In
the NPRM, we requested comments on
whether the proposed rule should apply
differently to intrastate operations in
Alaska. We received comments that
specifically related to intrastate aviation
in Alaska and the section we received
comments about (minimum altitudes in
part 136) has been deleted in the final
rule. The comments by NorthStar are
addressed in the preamble above.
Environmental Analysis
In accordance with FAA Order
1050.1E, the FAA has determined that
this amendment is categorically
excluded from environmental review
under section 102(2)(C) of the National
Environmental Policy Act. In 1994 the
original SFAR 71 established
procedural, operational, and equipment
safety requirements for air tour aircraft
in the state of Hawaii. This final rule
maintains those requirements. Neither
SFAR 71 nor this final rule involves any
significant impacts to the human
environment and the FAA has
determined that there are no
extraordinary circumstances. This rule
does not change the existing
environment and is not likely to effect
listed, endangered or threatened
species. Comments requesting that the
FAA ban overflights from critical habitat
are beyond the scope of this rule. The
National Park Service commented about
our proposed minimum altitude
changes but they have not been adopted
in this final rule. A more detailed
response to those issues is included in
the discussion of comments above.
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Regulations that Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
The FAA has analyzed this final rule
under Executive Order 13211, Actions
Concerning Regulations that
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use (May 18, 2001). We
have determined that it is not a
‘‘significant energy action’’ under the
executive order because it is not a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under
Executive Order 12866, and it is not
likely to have a significant adverse effect
on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy.
List of Subjects
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 40113, 44701–
44703, 44707, 44709–44711, 45102–45103,
45301–45302.
2. Amend § 61.113 by revising
paragraph (d) to read as follows:
I
§ 61.113 Private pilot privileges and
limitations: Pilot in command.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) A private pilot may act as pilot in
command of a charitable, nonprofit, or
community event flight described in
§ 91.146, if the sponsor and pilot
comply with the requirements of
§ 91.146.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 91—GENERAL OPERATING AND
FLIGHT RULES
14 CFR Part 61
Aircraft, Airmen, Aviation safety,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
14 CFR Part 91
Aircraft, Airmen, Air traffic control,
Aviation safety, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
14 CFR Part 119
3. The authority citation for part 91
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 1155, 40103,
40113, 40120, 44101, 44111, 44701, 44709,
44711, 44712, 44715, 44716, 44717, 44722,
46306, 46315, 46316, 46504, 46506–46507,
47122, 47508, 47528–47531, articles 12 and
29 of the Convention on International Civil
Aviation (61 stat.1180).
Administrative practice and
procedures, Air carriers, Aircraft,
Aviation safety, Charter flights,
Commuter operations, On demand
operations, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Special Federal Aviation Regulation
No. 71—Special Operating Rules for
Air Tour Operators in the State of
Hawaii
14 CFR Part 121
§ 91.146 Passenger-carrying flights for the
benefit of a charitable, nonprofit, or
community event.
Air carriers, Aircraft, Airmen, Alcohol
abuse, Aviation safety, Charter flights,
Drug abuse, Drug testing, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Safety.
14 CFR Part 135
Aircraft, Alcohol abuse, Aviation
safety, drug abuse, drug testing,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
14 CFR Part 136
Air transportation, Aircraft,
Airplanes, Air tours, Air safety,
Aviation safety, Commercial air tours,
Helicopters, National Parks, Recreation
and recreation areas, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
The Amendment
For the reasons set forth above, the
Federal Aviation Administration is
amending Title 14 of the Code of
Federal Regulations parts 61, 91, 119,
121, 135 and 136 as follows:
I
PART 61—CERTIFICATION: PILOTS,
FLIGHT INSTRUCTORS, AND GROUND
INSTRUCTORS
1. The authority citation for part 61
continues to read as follows:
I
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I
I
4. Remove SFAR No. 71 from part 91.
5. Add § 91.146 to read as follows:
(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section, the following definitions apply:
Charitable event means an event that
raises funds for the benefit of a
charitable organization recognized by
the Department of the Treasury whose
donors may deduct contributions under
section 170 of the Internal Revenue
Code (26 U.S.C. Section 170).
Community event means an event that
raises funds for the benefit of any local
or community cause that is not a
charitable event or non-profit event.
Non-profit event means an event that
raises funds for the benefit of a nonprofit organization recognized under
State or Federal law, as long as one of
the organization’s purposes is the
promotion of aviation safety.
(b) Passenger carrying flights for the
benefit of a charitable, nonprofit, or
community event identified in
paragraph (c) of this section are not
subject to the certification requirements
of part 119 or the drug and alcohol
testing requirements in part 121,
appendices I and J, of this chapter,
provided the following conditions are
satisfied and the limitations in
paragraphs (c) and (d) are not exceeded:
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(1) The flight is nonstop and begins
and ends at the same airport and is
conducted within a 25-statute mile
radius of that airport;
(2) The flight is conducted from a
public airport that is adequate for the
airplane or helicopter used, or from
another location the FAA approves for
the operation;
(3) The airplane or helicopter has a
maximum of 30 seats, excluding each
crewmember seat, and a maximum
payload capacity of 7,500 pounds;
(4) The flight is not an aerobatic or a
formation flight;
(5) Each airplane or helicopter holds
a standard airworthiness certificate, is
airworthy, and is operated in
compliance with the applicable
requirements of subpart E of this part;
(6) Each flight is made during day
VFR conditions;
(7) Reimbursement of the operator of
the airplane or helicopter is limited to
that portion of the passenger payment
for the flight that does not exceed the
pro rata cost of owning, operating, and
maintaining the aircraft for that flight,
which may include fuel, oil, airport
expenditures, and rental fees;
(8) The beneficiary of the funds raised
is not in the business of transportation
by air;
(9) A private pilot acting as pilot in
command has at least 500 hours of flight
time;
(10) Each flight is conducted in
accordance with the safety provisions of
part 136, subpart A of this chapter; and
(11) Flights are not conducted over a
national park, unit of a national park, or
abutting tribal lands, unless the operator
has secured a letter of agreement from
the FAA, as specified under subpart B
of part 136 of this chapter, and is
operating in accordance with that
agreement during the flights.
(c) (1) Passenger-carrying flights or
series of flights are limited to a total of
four charitable events or non-profit
events per year, with no event lasting
more than three consecutive days.
(2) Passenger-carrying flights or series
of flights are limited to one community
event per year, with no event lasting
more than three consecutive days.
(d) Pilots and sponsors of events
described in this section are limited to
no more than 4 events per calendar year.
(e) At least seven days before the
event, each sponsor of an event
described in this section must furnish to
the FAA Flight Standards District Office
with jurisdiction over the geographical
area where the event is scheduled:
(1) A signed letter detailing the name
of the sponsor, the purpose of the event,
the date and time of the event, the
location of the event, all prior events
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17:10 Feb 12, 2007
Jkt 211001
under this section participated in by the
sponsor in the current calendar year;
(2) A photocopy of each pilot in
command’s pilot certificate, medical
certificate, and logbook entries that
show the pilot is current in accordance
with §§ 61.56 and 61.57 of this chapter
and that any private pilot has at least
500 hours of flight time; and
(3) A signed statement from each pilot
that lists all prior events under this
section in which the pilot has
participated during the current calendar
year.
I
6. Add § 91.147 to read as follows:
§ 91.147 Passenger carrying flights for
compensation or hire.
Each Operator conducting passengercarrying flights for compensation or hire
must meet the following requirements
unless all flights are conducted under
§ 91.146.
(a) For the purposes of this section
and for drug and alcohol testing,
Operator means any person conducting
nonstop passenger-carrying flights in an
airplane or helicopter for compensation
or hire in accordance with
§§ 119.1(e)(2), 135.1(a)(5), or 121.1(d), of
this chapter that begin and end at the
same airport and are conducted within
a 25-statute mile radius of that airport.
(b) An Operator must comply with the
safety provisions of part 136, subpart A
of this chapter, and apply for and
receive a Letter of Authorization from
the Flight Standards District Office
nearest to its principal place of business
by September 11, 2007.
(c) Each application for a Letter of
Authorization must include the
following information:
(1) Name of Operator, agent, and any
d/b/a (doing-business-as) under which
that Operator does business;
(2) Principal business address and
mailing address;
(3) Principal place of business (if
different from business address);
(4) Name of person responsible for
management of the business;
(5) Name of person responsible for
aircraft maintenance;
(6) Type of aircraft, registration
number(s), and make/model/series; and
(7) An Antidrug and Alcohol Misuse
Prevention Program registration.
(d) The Operator must register and
implement its drug and alcohol testing
programs in accordance with part 121,
appendices I and J, of this chapter.
(e) The Operator must comply with
the provisions of the Letter of
Authorization received.
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6911
PART 119—CERTIFICATION: AIR
CARRIERS AND COMMERCIAL
OPERATORS
7. The authority citation for part 119
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 1153, 40101,
40102, 40103, 40113, 44105, 44106, 44111,
44701–44717, 44722, 44901, 44903, 44904,
44906, 44912, 44914, 44936, 44938, 46103,
46105.
8. Effective September 11, 2007,
amend § 119.1 by revising paragraph
(e)(2) to read as follows:
I
§ 119.1
Applicability.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(2) Nonstop Commercial Air Tours
conducted after September 11, 2007, in
an airplane or helicopter having a
standard airworthiness certificate and
passenger-seat configuration of 30 seats
or fewer and a maximum payload
capacity of 7,500 pounds or less that
begin and end at the same airport, and
are conducted within a 25-statute mile
radius of that airport, in compliance
with the Letter of Authorization issued
under § 91.147 of this chapter. For
nonstop Commercial Air Tours
conducted in accordance with part 136,
subpart B of this chapter, National Parks
Air Tour Management, the requirements
of part 119 of this chapter apply unless
excepted in § 136.37(g)(2). For Nonstop
Commercial Air Tours conducted in the
vicinity of the Grand Canyon National
Park, Arizona, the requirements of
SFAR 50–2, part 93, subpart U, and part
119 of this chapter, as applicable, apply.
*
*
*
*
*
I 9. Amend § 119.3 by adding the
following definition:
§ 119.3
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Commercial air tour means a flight
conducted for compensation or hire in
an airplane or helicopter where a
purpose of the flight is sightseeing. The
FAA may consider the following factors
in determining whether a flight is a
commercial air tour:
(1) Whether there was a holding out
to the public of willingness to conduct
a sightseeing flight for compensation or
hire;
(2) Whether the person offering the
flight provided a narrative that referred
to areas or points of interest on the
surface below the route of the flight;
(3) The area of operation;
(4) How often the person offering the
flight conducts such flights;
(5) The route of flight;
(6) The inclusion of sightseeing flights
as part of any travel arrangement
package;
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(7) Whether the flight in question
would have been canceled based on
poor visibility of the surface below the
route of the flight; and
(8) Any other factors that the FAA
considers appropriate.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 121—OPERATING
REQUIREMENTS: DOMESTIC, FLAG,
AND SUPPLEMENTAL OPERATIONS
10. The authority citation for part 121
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 40113, 40119,
41706, 44101, 44701–44702, 44705, 44709–
44711, 44713, 44716–44717, 44722, 44901,
44903–44904, 44912, 45101–45105, 46105.
11. Effective September 11, 2007,
amend § 121.1 by revising paragraph (d)
introductory text to read as follows:
I
§ 121.1
Applicability.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Nonstop Commercial Air Tours
conducted for compensation or hire in
accordance with § 119.1(e)(2) of this
chapter must comply with drug and
alcohol requirements in §§ 121.455,
121.457, 121.458 and 121.459, and with
the provisions of part 136, subpart A of
this chapter by September 11, 2007. An
operator who does not hold an air
carrier certificate or an operating
certificate is permitted to use a person
who is otherwise authorized to perform
aircraft maintenance or preventive
maintenance duties and who is not
subject to anti-drug and alcohol misuse
prevention programs to perform—
*
*
*
*
*
PART 135—OPERATING
REQUIREMENTS: COMMUTER AND
ON-DEMAND OPERATIONS
12. The authority citation for part 135
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 40113, 44701–
44702, 44705, 44709, 44711–44713, 44715–
44717, 44722.
13. Effective September 11, 2007,
amend § 135.1 by revising paragraph
(a)(5) and adding a new paragraph (a)(8)
to read as follows:
I
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
§ 135.1
17:10 Feb 12, 2007
I
§ 135.1
(a) This subpart applies to each
person operating or intending to operate
a commercial air tour in an airplane or
helicopter and, when applicable, to all
occupants of the airplane or helicopter
engaged in a commercial air tour. When
any requirement of this subpart is more
stringent than any other requirement of
this chapter, the person operating the
commercial air tour must comply with
the requirement in this subpart.
(b) As of September 11, 2007, this
subpart is applicable to:
(1) Part 121 or 135 operators
conducting a commercial air tour and
holding a part 119 certificate;
(2) Part 91 operators conducting
flights as described in § 119.1(e)(2); and
(3) Part 91 operators conducting
flights as described in 14 CFR 91.146
(c) This subpart is not applicable to
operations conducted in balloons,
gliders (powered or un-powered),
parachutes (powered or un-powered),
gyroplanes, or airships.
(d) For the purposes of this subpart
the following definitions apply:
Commercial Air Tour means a flight
conducted for compensation or hire in
an airplane or helicopter where a
purpose of the flight is sightseeing. The
FAA may consider the following factors
in determining whether a flight is a
commercial air tour for purposes of this
subpart:
(1) Whether there was a holding out
to the public of willingness to conduct
a sightseeing flight for compensation or
hire;
(2) Whether the person offering the
flight provided a narrative that referred
to areas or points of interest on the
surface below the route of the flight;
(3) The area of operation;
(4) How often the person offering the
flight conducts such flights;
(5) The route of the flight;
(6) The inclusion of sightseeing flights
as part of any travel arrangement
package;
(7) Whether the flight in question
would have been canceled based on
Applicability.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) An operator who does not hold a
part 119 certificate and who operates
under the provisions of § 91.147 of this
chapter is permitted to use a person
who is otherwise authorized to perform
aircraft maintenance or preventive
maintenance duties and who is not
subject to anti-drug and alcohol misuse
prevent programs to perform—
*
*
*
*
*
PART 136—COMMERCIAL AIR TOURS
AND NATIONAL PARKS AIR TOUR
MANAGEMENT
15. The authority citation for part 136
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 40113, 40119,
44101, 44701, 44701–44702, 44705, 44709–
44711, 44713, 44716–44717, 44722, 44901,
44903–44904, 44912, 46105.
16. Revise the heading of part 136 to
read as set forth above.
I 17. Redesignate existing §§ 136.1,
136.3, 136.5, 136.7, 136.9, and 136.11 as
new subpart B consisting of §§ 136.31,
136.33, 136.35, 136.37, 136.39, and
136.41, respectively, and reserve
§§ 136.43 through 136.49.
I 18. Add a heading for new subpart B
of part 136 consisting of newly
designated §§ 136.31, 136.33, 136.35,
136.37, 136.39, and 136.41 to read as
follows:
I
Subpart B—National Parks Air Tour
Management
19. In new subpart B of part 136,
remove the words ‘‘this part’’ and
replace with the words ‘‘this subpart’’ in
the following paragraphs: 136.31(a),
136.31(b), 136.31(b)(2), 136.31(c),
introductory text in 136.33,
136.33(d)(2), 136.37(d), and 136.37(e).
I
Applicability.
(a) * * *
(5) Nonstop Commercial Air Tour
flights conducted for compensation or
hire in accordance with § 119.1(e)(2) of
this chapter that begin and end at the
same airport and are conducted within
a 25-statute-mile radius of that airport;
provided further that these operations
must comply only with the drug and
alcohol testing requirements in
§§ 135.249, 135.251, 135.253, 135.255,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
and 135.353; and with the provisions of
part 136, subpart A, and § 91.147 of this
chapter by September 11, 2007.
*
*
*
*
*
(8) Commercial Air tours conducted
by holders of operations specifications
issued under this part must comply
with the provisions of part 136, Subpart
A of this chapter by September 11, 2007.
*
*
*
*
*
I 14. Amend § 135.1 by removing
paragraph (c), redesignating paragraph
(d) as paragraph (c), and revising new
paragraph (c) introductory text to read
as follows:
Jkt 211001
Subpart C [Added]
20. Add new Subpart C, titled ‘‘Grand
Canyon National Park,’’ and reserve
sections 136.51 through 136.69.
I
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21. Add new subpart A to read as
follows:
Subpart A—National Air Tour Safety
Standards
Sec.
136.1 Applicability and definitions.
136.3 Letters of Authorization.
136.5 Additional requirements for Hawaii.
136.7 Passenger briefings.
136.9 Life preservers for over water.
136.11 Helicopter floats for over water.
136.13 Helicopter performance plan and
operations.
136.15–136.29 [Reserved]
§ 136.1
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Applicability and definitions.
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 29 / Tuesday, February 13, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
poor visibility of the surface below the
route of the flight; and
(8) Any other factors that the FAA
considers appropriate.
Commercial Air Tour operator means
any person who conducts a commercial
air tour.
Life preserver means a flotation device
used by an aircraft occupant if the
aircraft ditches in water. If an inflatable
device, it must be un-inflated and ready
for its intended use once inflated. In
evaluating whether a non-inflatable life
preserver is acceptable to the FAA, the
operator must demonstrate to the FAA
that such a preserver can be used during
an evacuation and will allow all
passengers to exit the aircraft without
blocking the exit. Each occupant must
have the physical capacity to wear and
inflate the type of device used once
briefed by the commercial air tour
operator. Seat cushions do not meet this
definition.
Raw terrain means any area on the
surface, including water, devoid of any
person, structure, vehicle, or vessel.
Shoreline means that area of the land
adjacent to the water of an ocean, sea,
lake, pond, river or tidal basin that is
above the high water mark and excludes
land areas unsuitable for landing such
as vertical cliffs or land intermittently
under water during the particular flight.
Suitable landing area for helicopters
means an area that provides the operator
reasonable capability to land without
damage to equipment or injury to
persons. Suitable landing areas must be
site-specific, designated by the operator,
and accepted by the FAA. These sitespecific areas would provide an
emergency landing area for a singleengine helicopter or a multiengine
helicopter that does not have the
capability to reach a safe landing area
after an engine power loss.
(e) In an in-flight emergency requiring
immediate action, the pilot in command
may deviate from any rule of this
subpart to the extent required to meet
that emergency.
§ 136.3
Letters of Authorization.
Operators subject to this subpart who
have Letters of Authorization may use
the procedures described in 14 CFR
119.51 to amend or have the FAA
reconsider those Letters of
Authorization.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
§ 136.5 Additional requirements for
Hawaii.
No person may conduct a commercial
air tour in the State of Hawaii unless
they comply with the additional
requirements and restrictions in
appendix A to part 136.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:10 Feb 12, 2007
Jkt 211001
§ 136.7
Passenger briefings.
(a) Before takeoff each pilot in
command shall ensure that each
passenger has been briefed on the
following:
(1) Procedures for fastening and
unfastening seatbelts;
(2) Prohibition on smoking; and
(3) Procedures for opening exits and
exiting the aircraft.
(b) For flight segments over water
beyond the shoreline, briefings must
also include:
(1) Procedures for water ditching;
(2) Use of required life preservers; and
(3) Procedures for emergency exit
from the aircraft in the event of a water
landing.
§ 136.9
Life preservers for over water.
(a) Except as provided in paragraphs
(b) or (c) of this section, the operator
and pilot in command of commercial air
tours over water beyond the shoreline
must ensure that each occupant is
wearing a life preserver from before
takeoff until flight is no longer over
water.
(b) The operator and pilot in
command of a commercial air tour over
water beyond the shoreline must ensure
that a life preserver is readily available
for its intended use and easily
accessible to each occupant if:
(1) The aircraft is equipped with
floats; or
(2)The airplane is within power-off
gliding distance to the shoreline for the
duration of the time that the flight is
over water.
(3)The aircraft is a multi engine that
can be operated with the critical engine
inoperative at a weight that will allow
it to climb, at least 50 feet a minute, at
an altitude of 1,000 feet above the
surface, as provided in the Airplane
Flight Manual or the Rotorcraft Flight
Manual, as appropriate.
(c) No life preserver is required if the
overwater operation is necessary only
for takeoff or landing.
§ 136.11
Helicopter floats for over water.
(a) A helicopter used in commercial
air tours over water beyond the
shoreline must be equipped with fixed
floats or an inflatable flotation system
adequate to accomplish a safe
emergency ditching, if—
(1) It is a single-engine helicopter; or
(2) It is a multi-engine helicopter that
cannot be operated with the critical
engine inoperative at a weight that will
allow it to climb, at least 50 feet a
minute, at an altitude of 1,000 feet
above the surface, as provided in the
Rotorcraft Flight Manual (RFM).
(b) Each helicopter that is required to
be equipped with an inflatable flotation
system must have:
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
6913
(1) The activation switch for the
flotation system on one of the primary
flight controls, and
(2) The flotation system armed when
the helicopter is over water and is flying
at a speed that does not exceed the
maximum speed prescribed in the
Rotorcraft Flight Manual for flying with
the flotation system armed.
(c) Fixed floats or an inflatable
flotation system is not required for a
helicopter under this section if:
(1) The helicopter is over water only
during the takeoff or landing portion of
the flight, or
(2) The helicopter is operated within
power-off gliding distance to the
shoreline for the duration of the flight
and each occupant is wearing a life
preserver from before takeoff until the
aircraft is no longer over water.
(d) Air tour operators required to
comply with paragraphs (a) and/or (b) of
this section must meet these
requirements on or before September 5,
2008.
§ 136.13 Helicopter performance plan and
operations.
(a) Each operator must complete a
performance plan before each helicopter
commercial air tour, or flight operated
under 14 CFR 91.146 or 91.147. The
pilot in command must review for
accuracy and comply with the
performance plan on the day the flight
is flown. The performance plan must be
based on the information in the
Rotorcraft Flight Manual (RFM) for that
helicopter, taking into consideration the
maximum density altitude for which the
operation is planned, in order to
determine:
(1) Maximum gross weight and center
of gravity (CG) limitations for hovering
in ground effect;
(2) Maximum gross weight and CG
limitations for hovering out of ground
effect; and
(3) Maximum combination of weight,
altitude, and temperature for which
height/velocity information in the RFM
is valid.
(b) Except for the approach to and
transition from a hover for the purpose
of takeoff and landing, or during takeoff
and landing, the pilot in command must
make a reasonable plan to operate the
helicopter outside of the caution/
warning/avoid area of the limiting
height/velocity diagram.
(c) Except for the approach to and
transition from a hover for the purpose
of takeoff and landing, during takeoff
and landing, or when necessary for
safety of flight, the pilot in command
must operate the helicopter in
compliance with the plan described in
paragraph (b) of this section.
E:\FR\FM\13FER3.SGM
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§§ 136.15–136.29
[Reserved]
22. Add new appendix A to part 136
as follows:
I
Appendix A to Part 136—Special
Operating Rules for Air Tour Operators
in the State of Hawaii
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES3
Section 1. Applicability. This appendix
prescribes operating rules for airplane and
helicopter visual flight rules air tour flights
conducted in the State of Hawaii under 14
CFR parts 91, 121, and 135. This appendix
does not apply to:
(a) Operations conducted under 14 CFR
part 121 in airplanes with a passenger seating
configuration of more than 30 seats or a
payload capacity of more than 7,500 pounds.
(b) Flights conducted in gliders or hot air
balloons.
Section 2. Definitions. For the purposes of
this appendix:
‘‘Air tour’’ means any sightseeing flight
conducted under visual flight rules in an
airplane or helicopter for compensation or
hire.
‘‘Air tour operator’’ means any person who
conducts an air tour.
Section 3. Helicopter flotation equipment.
No person may conduct an air tour in Hawaii
in a single-engine helicopter beyond the
shore of any island, regardless of whether the
helicopter is within gliding distance of the
shore, unless:
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:10 Feb 12, 2007
Jkt 211001
(a) The helicopter is amphibious or is
equipped with floats adequate to accomplish
a safe emergency ditching and approved
flotation gear is easily accessible for each
occupant; or
(b) Each person on board the helicopter is
wearing approved flotation gear.
Section 4. Helicopter performance plan.
Each operator must complete a performance
plan before each helicopter air tour flight.
The performance plan must be based on the
information in the Rotorcraft Flight Manual
(RFM), considering the maximum density
altitude for which the operation is planned
for the flight to determine the following:
(a) Maximum gross weight and center of
gravity (CG) limitations for hovering in
ground effect;
(b) Maximum gross weight and CG
limitations for hovering out of ground effect;
and,
(c) Maximum combination of weight,
altitude, and temperature for which heightvelocity information in the RFM is valid.
The pilot in command (PIC) must comply
with the performance plan.
Section 5. Helicopter Operating
Limitations. Except for approach to and
transition from a hover, and except for the
purpose of takeoff and landing, the PIC shall
operate the helicopter at a combination of
height and forward speed (including hover)
that would permit a safe landing in event of
engine power loss, in accordance with the
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
height-speed envelope for that helicopter
under current weight and aircraft altitude.
Section 6. Minimum flight altitudes. Except
when necessary for takeoff and landing, or
operating in compliance with an air traffic
control clearance, or as otherwise authorized
by the Administrator, no person may conduct
an air tour in Hawaii:
(a) Below an altitude of 1,500 feet above
the surface over all areas of the State of
Hawaii, and,
(b) Closer than 1,500 feet to any person or
property; or,
(c) Below any altitude prescribed by
federal statute or regulation.
Section 7. Passenger briefing. Before
takeoff, each PIC of an air tour flight of
Hawaii with a flight segment beyond the
ocean shore of any island shall ensure that
each passenger has been briefed on the
following, in addition to requirements set
forth in 14 CFR 91.107, 121.571, or 135.117:
(a) Water ditching procedures;
(b) Use of required flotation equipment;
and
(c) Emergency egress from the aircraft in
event of a water landing.
Issued in Washington, DC, on December
22, 2006.
Marion C. Blakey,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 07–580 Filed 2–8–07; 11:42 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 29 (Tuesday, February 13, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 6884-6914]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 07-580]
[[Page 6883]]
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Part V
Department of Transportation
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Federal Aviation Administration
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14 CFR Parts 61, 91, 119, 121, 135, and 136
National Air Tour Safety Standards; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 29 / Tuesday, February 13, 2007 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 6884]]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Parts 61, 91, 119, 121, 135, and 136
[Docket No.: FAA-1998-4521; Amendment Nos. 61-115, 91-295, 121-328,
135-107, 136-1]
RIN 2120--AF07
National Air Tour Safety Standards
AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule sets safety and oversight rules for a broad
variety of sightseeing and commercial air tour flights. The rule
responds to National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)
recommendations, Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports, and
Department of Transportation Inspector General Reports that recommend
better oversight of the sightseeing and commercial air tour industry.
The intended effect of this final rule is to standardize requirements
for air tour operators and consolidate air tour safety standards within
part 136.
DATES: This final rule is effective March 15, 2007, except for
amendments to Sec. Sec. 119.1(e)(2), 121.1, and 135.1(a)(5) and
(a)(8), which are effective September 11, 2007. Also, affected parties
do not have to comply with the information collection requirements in
Sec. Sec. 91.146, 91.147, 136.7, and 136.13 until the FAA publishes in
the Federal Register the control number assigned by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for this information collection
requirement. Publication of the control number notifies the public that
OMB has approved this information collection requirement under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Alberta Brown, Air Transportation
Division, AFS-200, Federal Aviation Administration, 800 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20591; telephone: (202) 267-8166;
facsimile: (202) 267-8229; e-mail: alberta.brown@faa.gov. For legal
information, contact: Bruce Glendening, Operations Law Branch, Federal
Aviation Administration, 800 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC
20591; telephone: (202) 267-8011; facsimile: (202) 267-7971; e-mail:
bruce.glendening@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Availability of Rulemaking Documents
You can get an electronic copy using the Internet by taking the
following steps:
(1) Go to the search function of the Department of Transportation's
electronic Docket Management System (DMS) Web page (https://dms.dot.gov/
search).
(2) On the search page, type in the last four digits of the Docket
number shown at the beginning of this document (4521). Click on search.
(3) On the next page, which contains the Docket summary information
for the Docket you selected, click on the item you wish to view.
You can also get an electronic copy using the Internet through the
FAA's web page at or the Government Printing Office's Web page at:
https://www.access.gpo.gov/sudocs/aces/acrs140.htm. You can also get a
copy of this final rule by mail by submitting a request to the Federal
Aviation Administration, Office of Rulemaking, 800 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20591, or by calling (202) 267-9680.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of
1996 requires FAA to comply with small entity requests for information
or advice about compliance with statutes and regulations within its
jurisdiction. You can find out more about SBREFA on the Internet at
https://www.faa.gov/avr/arm/sbrefa.cfm. All operators affected by this
final rule are ``small'' by definition.
Authority for This Rulemaking
The FAA's authority to issue rules regarding aviation safety is
found in Title 49 of the United States Code. This rule is issued under
the authority granted to the Administrator by Congress in 49 U.S.C.
section 40103. Under section 40103(b)(1), the Administrator is given
the authority to ``develop plans and policy for the use of the
navigable airspace and assign by regulation or order the use of the
airspace necessary to ensure the safety of aircraft * * *'' Section
40103(b)(2) grants the Administrator the authority to ``prescribe air
traffic regulations on the flight of aircraft including regulations on
safe altitudes for (A) navigating, protecting and identifying aircraft;
(B) protecting individuals and property on the ground; (C) using the
navigable airspace efficiently; and (D) preventing collision between
aircraft, between aircraft and land or water vehicles, and between
aircraft and airborne objects.''
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Summary of the Final Rule
A. Applicability
B. Changes From the NPRM
C. Compliance Dates
D. Before and After This Rule
III. Comment Summary
IV. General Comments on the Proposal
A. NTSB Recommendations
B. SFAR 71 Should Not Be the Model
C. Withdraw the NPRM and Establish an Advisory Committee
D. Accident Data Does Not Support the Change
E. Increased Noise and Other Impacts on National Parks
V. Comments on Part 135 Certification
A. Against Part 135 Certification
B. ``Sightseeing'' vs. ``Commercial Air Tour''
C. Antique/Vintage Civil and Military Aircraft
VI. Comments on Part 91 Operations
A. Charity, Nonprofit, and Community Events
1. What is the difference between an exception, an exemption and
a deviation?
2. What is a charitable organization, a non-profit, and a
community event?
3. The Four-Event Limit for Charitable and Non-Profit
Organizations and the One-Event Limit for Community Events
4. Private Pilots and the 500-Hour Requirement
5. Reporting Requirements
6. Life Flights, Angel Flights, and ``Emergency or Medical
Service''
B. Other Flights for Compensation or Hire
1. What Is the Difference Between an Operations Specification
and a Letter of Authorization?
2. Where Are the FAA's Drug and Alcohol Regulations and Who Has
To Comply With Them?
VII. Comments on Part 136 Operating Requirements
A. Applicability and Definitions
B. Letters of Authorization
C. Minimum Altitudes, Standoff Distances, Visibility, and Cloud
Clearance
D. Affect of the Final Rule on Grand Canyon and Hawaiian
Operations
E. Passenger Briefings
F. Overwater Operations
1. Passenger Briefing for Overwater Operations
2. Life Preservers
3. Helicopter Floats
G. Helicopter Performance Plan and Operations
VIII. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
IX. The Amendment--Final Rule Language
I. Background
Air Tour operations are conducted in all parts of the United States
over various types of terrain. This terrain includes, but is not
limited to, national parks, fairgrounds, and urban, coastal, and
mountainous areas that range from unpopulated to densely populated. The
operators conducting these flights as a regular part of their business
are
[[Page 6885]]
commonly known as air tour operators, and their operations are often
referred to as commercial air tours.
Commercial air tours vary in many ways, but certain characteristics
apply to nearly all: (1) A single pilot typically conducts the flight
during daylight hours in a single engine airplane or helicopter; (2)
flights are typically conducted in visual meteorological conditions,
often without radar coverage or traffic advisories from an air traffic
control facility; (3) flights may be conducted near popular scenic
areas geographically limited in size and in dense air traffic in which
the mix of airplanes and helicopters may have different flight
characteristics (e.g., speed and maneuverability). Because of all of
these factors and characteristics, a pilot must use heightened
vigilance and greater precision in navigation to conduct a commercial
air tour successfully and safely.
In addition, terrain is often a major factor considered in a safely
conducted flight. Many popular scenic areas are located in remote,
rugged terrain where the attraction is the natural beauty of the site.
To view the natural beauty, commercial air tours are normally conducted
at relatively low altitudes, between 500 and 1,500 feet above ground
level (AGL). Flights conducted at these altitudes may be close to
obstructions and often are alongside higher terrain. In addition, many
air tour operators conduct flights over water. When the terrain factor
is added to those discussed above, you have a unique industry needing
equally unique regulations to ensure a safe and pleasurable experience
for the passenger.
Currently, commercial air tours beyond 25 statute miles of the
departure airport, and most commercial air tours over a unit of the
national park system, must be conducted by someone certificated under
Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations (14 CFR) part 119,
Certification: Air Carriers and Commercial Operators. These commercial
air tours must operate in accordance with either part 121; Operating
Requirements: Domestic, Flag, and Supplemental Operations, or part 135;
Operating Requirements: Commuter and On Demand Operations and Rules
Governing Persons On Board Such Aircraft. Parts 121 and 135 contain
operational, safety, and training rules that are not limited to air
tour operations.
Part 91, General Operating and Flight Rules, applies to air tour
operators that takeoff and land at the same airport and stay within 25
miles of that airport using a ``25-mile exception'' in 14 CFR
119.1(e)(2), 121.1(d), and 135.1(a)(5).
In order to address the unique circumstances surrounding air tour
operations, the FAA published a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) in
the Federal Register on October 22, 2003 (68 FR 60572). The proposed
rule was modeled on Special Federal Aviation Regulation (SFAR) 71,
which currently governs the commercial air tour industry in Hawaii. In
the NPRM, we proposed to improve the overall safety of all commercial
air tours by requiring certification under part 119, except for certain
charitable, nonprofit, or community events. New safety standards in
part 136 were proposed in the NPRM for all air tour operators, and the
proposal would have resulted in renaming and expanding the entire part.
We proposed removing the 25-mile exception altogether. The proposals
presented in the NPRM have been dropped, revised, or adopted as
discussed in this final rule.
II. Summary of the Final Rule
A. Applicability
This final rule applies to commercial air tours conducted in
airplanes and helicopters only. It does not apply to gliders (powered
or unpowered), balloons, parachutes (powered or unpowered), gyroplanes,
or airships.\1\ In this final rule we address three groups of
commercial air tour operations in airplanes and helicopters:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The National Parks Air Tour Management Act of 2000 (49
U.S.C. 40128) (Act) is only peripherally implicated by this rule in
that the existing regulations are moved from part 136, subpart A to
part 136, subpart B. The Act applies to all powered aircraft, not
just airplanes and helicopters. To the extent an operator covered by
this rule flies within an area covered by the Act, it must meet all
requirements imposed either directly or by regulations implemented
under the Act. If not a helicopter or airplane, the requirements
imposed by this rule will not apply.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Group 1. Part 119 certificate holders with authority to conduct
commercial air tour flights in accordance with either part 121 or part
135;
Group 2. Part 91 operators conducting commercial air tour flights
in accordance with the exception contained in section 119.1(e)(2) (also
known as the 25-mile exception); and
Group 3. Part 91 operators conducting flights for certain
charitable, nonprofit, or community events in accordance with the
exception contained in Sec. 119.1(e)(2).
Group 1
This group of commercial air tour operators must be certificated
under 14 CFR 119, to operate in accordance with either part 121 or 135.
Part 121 and part 135 contain operational, safety, and training rules
for these operators. Additionally, this group must comply with the
safety provisions in part 136. This first group continues to be subject
to the drug and alcohol testing requirements of parts 121 and 135.
Group 2
This group consists of air tour operators that would have been
certificated as an air carrier like the first group if it weren't for
the 25-mile exception in Sec. Sec. 119.1(e)(2), 121.1(d), and
135.1(a)(5). Because of the exception, this group is allowed to conduct
flights under the operating rules of part 91. The exception will
continue, except for flights over the Grand Canyon National Park.\2\
Even though flights are not conducted under part 121 or part 135, this
second group of operators continues to be subject to drug and alcohol
testing requirements. The number of flights allowed is not limited,\3\
but private pilots may not be used. Each operator must apply for, and
operate in accordance with, a Letter of Authorization (LOA) issued by
the FAA. This group must comply with the safety requirements of part
136 subpart A (as mandated in Sec. 91.147).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The exception continues in a limited sense over all other
national parks, because the Act allows a total of five commercial
air tours per month by someone who does not hold a part 119
certificate. (See SFAR 50-2; part 93, subpart U; and part 136,
subpart B).
\3\ Other than at most national parks where flights are limited
to not more than five per month through Sec. 136.37.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Group 3
This last group of operators conducts commercial air tours for
certain charitable, nonprofit, and community events. The flights of
this group will be limited to the 25-mile exception. This final rule
establishes a new Sec. 91.146 for charitable, nonprofit, and community
event flights allowing them to continue operating in part 91.\4\
Section 61.113(d) is revised to delete the word ``airlift,'' and a
reference to the new Sec. 91.146 is added to allow private pilots to
fly such events, and it allows them to operate without drug and alcohol
testing. Private pilots must have at least 500 hours total flight time.
Sponsors and their pilots for charitable and nonprofit events are
limited to four events each
[[Page 6886]]
calendar year. Sponsors and their pilots for a community event are
limited to one event per calendar year. An ``event'' may involve
several flights but may not last more than three consecutive days. New
Sec. 91.146 defines three kinds of flights that can be operated under
part 91, and need not be operated under part 135. The operators of
these flights must comply with the safety requirements in part 136
subpart A, but are not required to conduct drug and alcohol testing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ The FAA finds that (1) logging flight time is a form of
compensation; (2) most charities are a business holding out to the
public through advertising and collection of fees directly through
payment of money much like an air carrier, or indirectly through
``donations'; and (3) private pilots normally may not fly for
compensation or hire. However, the FAA finds that it is in the
public interest to allow some charitable, nonprofit, and community
event flights to be conducted under part 91.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This group was previously allowed to operate without drug and
alcohol testing requirements through individual exemptions. The
language from those exemptions is incorporated into Sec. 91.146.
B. Changes From the NPRM
The final rule differs substantially from what was proposed in the
NPRM in several areas. Most of the changes are directly in response to
comments submitted by the public. Most of the significant changes are
listed here and the justification for the changes can be found under
the discussion of comments and FAA response that follows. The changes
include:
--Part 136 is divided into subparts. Subpart A is National Air Tour
Safety Standards. Subpart B is National Parks Air Tour Management
(previously the only thing in part 136). Subpart C is reserved for SFAR
50-2 and Part 93, subpart U (both addressing Grand Canyon flight
operations).
--The proposed elimination of the 25-statute mile exception in Sec.
119.1 will not be adopted. The 25-mile exception remains in Sec. Sec.
119.1(e)(2), 121.1(d), and 135.1(a)(5).
--Commercial air tour operators in parts 121 or 135 who also conduct
commercial air tours in part 91 must have both operations
specifications and a Letter of Authorization.
--SFAR 71 for Hawaii is removed and has been incorporated into the
final rule language as Appendix A to part 136.
--Section 135.1(c) is removed because certain references to drug and
alcohol testing have been rewritten.
--Proposed deviation authority in the NPRM is deleted.
--Proposed changes to minimum altitudes, standoff distances,
visibility, and cloud clearance in the NPRM are deleted.
--The final rule section for life preservers for overwater operations
(proposed Sec. 136.13, final Sec. 136.9) is modified to greatly
reduce the burden for operators for airplanes with floats, and to some
degree, the burden for helicopters with floats. ``Life preserver'' and
``shoreline'' are defined in Sec. 136.1.
--Helicopter performance plan (proposed Sec. 136.17) and Helicopter
operating limitations (proposed Sec. 136.19) are merged (final Sec.
136.13) and amended.
C. Compliance Dates
This final rule is effective thirty days after publication.
Operators must demonstrate compliance with the new requirements 180
days thereafter. The only exception is for helicopter floats. The FAA
recognizes that affected operators may need more than six months to
equip their helicopters with floats. Accordingly, we are allowing 18
months for operators who need to modify their helicopters to complete
those modifications.
D. Before and After this Rule
To further help readers understand the changes to commercial air
tour operations in this final rule, we include here a chart that
clearly illustrates which existing regulations this final rule affects
and what new requirements are included.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regulatory section Before this rule After this rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 61
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 61.113..................... Paragraph (d) of this Section 61.113 now directs the reader to
section provided for the 91.146.
use of private pilots
during charity flights.
The section contained
certain conditions and
limitations on how private
pilots could operate for
compensation or hire in
the interest of charity.
Some of those conditions
and limitations included
who was considered a
charity, how a sponsor
must notify the FAA of an
operation, what kind of
airport was acceptable for
such operations, the
airworthiness of the
aircraft in operation, and
the number of hours a
private pilot must have to
operate such flights.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 91
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 91.146..................... Did not exist.............. Many of the conditions and limitations from
61.113 are retained in this new section. They
are kept mostly intact with some revisions to
the private pilot hour requirement, what
information the FAA requests of the sponsor,
and the number of events a sponsor and pilot
may participate in each year \5\.
New requirements in this section include:
1. We define the terms charitable event, non-
profit event, and community event.
2. A private pilot operating a flight
described in this section must have 500
hours. This is increased from the previous
requirement for 200 hours.
3. Operations under this section are limited
for sponsors and pilots. No sponsor or pilot
may exceed 4 charitable or non-profit events
per calendar year, or exceed 1 community
event per calendar year.
4. All flights under this section must be non-
stop, beginning and ending at the same
airport, and flown within a 25-mile radius of
the airport. This has always been the case,
but not as easy to find.
[[Page 6887]]
5. Operators under this section must conduct
operations in airplanes or helicopters with a
standard airworthiness certificate.
6. Operators under this section must comply
with part 136, subpart A (National Air Tour
Safety Standards).
Section 91.147..................... Did not exist.............. This section applies to part 91 operations for
compensation or hire.
1. Operators under this section must apply for
and receive a Letter of Authorization (LOA).
This removes the burden of Operations
Specifications that come with full air
carrier status, yet allows the FAA to build a
database of part 91 compensation or hire
operators conducting air tour operations.
2. Operators under this section must comply
with drug and alcohol requirements. This is
not a new requirement, but some operators
have misunderstood the requirement. Certain
operators have received an exemption from
drug and alcohol testing requirements.
3. Operators under this section must comply
with part 136, subpart A (National Air Tour
Safety Standards).
4. Operators under this section must conduct
operations in airplanes or helicopters with a
standard airworthiness certificate. Some
Antique/Vintage civil and military aircraft
operating under this section will continue to
need exemptions from this requirement.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 119
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 119.1...................... This section prescribes Paragraph (e)(2) remains largely the same. The
Applicability, and differences in the final rule are:
paragraph (e)(2) describes 1. The paragraph used to refer to
the ``25-mile exception'' ``sightseeing flights,'' (undefined) and now
cited in the final rule. refers to ``Commercial Air Tours'' (defined
in 119.3 and part 136, subpart A).
2. The paragraph clarifies that operations in
this exception are for compensation or hire.
3. Operators using this exception must comply
with the LOA issued under 91.147.
4. Operations in this exception must be
conducted in airplanes or helicopters with a
standard airworthiness certificate.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 121
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 121.1...................... This section prescribes Paragraph (d) is amended to replace the term
Applicability for Part ``sightseeing'' with ``Commercial Air
121. Paragraph (d) Tours.'' This section also requires
addresses sightseeing compliance with part 136, subpart A (National
flights. Air Tour Safety Standards). We make a
technical correction in paragraph (d) to
include alcohol testing requirements in two
sections that were inadvertently removed in a
previous rulemaking (121.458 and 121.459).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 135
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 135.1...................... This section prescribes 1. Paragraph (a)(5) is amended to replace the
Applicability for Part term ``sightseeing'' with ``Commercial Air
135. Paragraph (a)(5) Tours.'' Also, the paragraph now makes
addresses sightseeing reference to 119.1, and requires compliance
flights, and paragraphs with part 136, subpart A (National Air Tour
(c) and (d) defined Safety Standards).
``operator'' and drug and
alcohol testing
requirements.
2. Paragraph (c) is amended. Previously,
paragraph (c) defined an ``Operator'' as it
pertains to the requirements for Part 135. We
now reference part 119 to provide the drug
and alcohol definition for ``Operator'' and
replace the testing old paragraph (c) with a
new one that is made up of the requirements
previously found in paragraph (d). Part 119
did not exist when 135.1(c) was written, so
this is a technical amendment.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 136
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart A (136.1-136.13)........... Did not exist.............. This Subpart contains the safety standards and
definitions applicable to Commercial Air
Tours.
Subpart B.......................... Did not exist.............. We moved the requirements that were previously
the whole of part 136 into new sections and
this new subpart, but didn't change any of
the substance. This subpart contains National
Parks Air Tour Management regulations.
Subpart C.......................... Did not exist.............. We created a Subpart C and reserved the space
for the possible movement of the Grand Canyon
air traffic rules (SFAR 50-2 and Part 93
Subpart U) so commercial air tour regulations
are in one location.
Appendix A......................... Did not exist.............. This Appendix holds all of the requirements
once found in SFAR 71--Operations in Hawaii.
These requirements were previously attached
to Part 91, but we moved them into this newly
created Appendix to have all Commercial Air
Tour regulations in one location: Part 136.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 6888]]
Miscellaneous Requirements
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SFAR 71............................ Was a separate rule located SFAR 71 has always been attached to Part 91.
in front of Part 91. We have taken all of SFAR 71 and inserted it
as Appendix A into Part 136. Now air tour
operators in Hawaii will find the same
conditions and limitations in SFAR 71 in this
new Appendix. We have not changed the text,
only the location.
SFAR 50-2 and Part 93, Subpart U... SFAR 50-2 is a separate These regulations pertaining to air traffic
SFAR located in front of routes and guidance in Grand Canyon National
Part 91, and Part 93, Park remain unchanged. We reserve ``Subpart
Subpart U is where it is. C'' in Part 136 for whenever we decide to co-
locate these regulations with other
Commercial Air Tour regulations.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Comment Summary
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ We have imported several conditions for private pilot
operations in support of charity, non-profit, and community event
flights from approximately 100 existing exemptions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We received more than 2,300 comments to this rule from individual
pilots, trade organizations, commercial air tour operators, charity
organizations, historic aircraft operators and others. At the request
of commenters, the FAA extended the comment period twice, allowing a
total of 240 days in which to comment. The FAA also convened two face-
to-face public meetings; one in Washington, D.C. on May 11, 2004, and
the other in Las Vegas, NV on May 21, 2004. In addition, the FAA
conducted a two-week Virtual Public Meeting on the Internet from
February 23 to March 5, 2004, that was further extended an additional
two weeks to March 19, 2004 due to the many comments received.
While some commenters supported the proposed rule, most notably the
National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), most commenters opposed
the NPRM on one or more of the following grounds:
1. FAA is attempting to impose a one-size-fits-all mentality.
2. FAA does not recognize the geographical and environmental
differences associated with different operations.
3. Part 91 operators will go out of business if forced into part
135.
4. Millions of Americans would be denied the opportunity to
experience flight at a grassroots level. This would ground vintage
aircraft, barnstorming, military history, and other areas of aviation
promotion and heritage.
5. The existing rules are more than adequate if obeyed by operators
and enforced by the FAA against operators who do not obey them.
6. The proposal is not supported by accident data. Since air tour
accidents are all in part 135, why does the FAA propose to place all
operators in part 135?
7. There is insufficient evidence to ensure that the proposed
rules, if adopted, would result in increased safety.
8. Flights operated for ``charity'' would be stopped.
9. Deviation authority should not be in the rule.
10. The proposed rule mixes helicopters and airplanes at one
altitude (compression).
11. Compliance with proposed minimum altitudes and standoff
distances result in an undesirable tour and thus would result in a loss
of business.
12. Many operators have agreements with air traffic to conduct
flights a certain way and this proposal conflicts with those specific
agreements.
Below we discuss and respond to the many suggestions and arguments
presented to us during the comment period. We broke our response to
comments into four major categories to make it easier to read. Within
those four categories, we have tried to address some general concerns
before providing any detailed response. For instance, it became obvious
when reading comments that many people did not understand the
difference between an ``exemption,'' an ``exception,'' and a
``deviation.'' Therefore, we answer that question before going into
specific comments under the ``part 91 operations'' section of comment
response. The four categories we've used to organize our response to
comments are:
1. General comments on the proposal;
2. Comments on extending part 135 certification for the entire
industry;
3. Comments on part 91 operations; and
4. Comments on part 136 operating requirements.
IV. General Comments on the Proposal
The comments addressed here were in opposition to the general
nature of the rule. Comments in opposition to specific parts of the
proposal are addressed in the sections two, three, and four of this
preamble.
A. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Recommendations
The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA) stated that the
``FAA has promulgated this NPRM in response to NTSB recommendations
concerning the safety of commercial air tours.'' AOPA argued that FAA
had already issued regulations to address most of the NTSB's concerns
through SFARs 50-2 (Grand Canyon) and 71 (Hawaii), and therefore, the
sole justification for the NPRM was NTSB recommendation A-95-58, which
recommended eliminating the 25-mile sightseeing exception in Sec.
119.1(e)(2). AOPA asserted that the FAA's accident data does not
support inclusion of sightseeing and charity flights,'' and contended
that ``the FAA is NOT compelled to adopt all NTSB recommendations and
has the authority and ability to close NTSB recommendations with
alternative or no action.'' AOPA cited a few specific examples from the
549 NTSB recommendations it found ``that were closed with no action
taken because the FAA either disagreed with the NTSB's recommendation
or failed to take action in a timely manner.''
The FAA agrees with AOPA that it is not compelled to adopt NTSB
recommendations. The NTSB is charged with issuing recommendations that
it believes will improve the safety of aviation without any
consideration of the costs of these recommendations. In this case, the
recommendations were based on a study of the entire air tour industry;
including operations conducted under the 25-mile exception. The FAA
decided during the NPRM stage of this rulemaking that the NTSB
recommendations had some validity and attempted to meet their intent
with proposed rule language.
In view of the comments, we have decided not to eliminate the 25-
mile exception as presented in the proposal. The cost associated with
placing all air tour operations into part 121 or part 135 far outweighs
any potential increase in safety. However, aviation safety requires
these commercial air tours comply with
[[Page 6889]]
some additional safety rules. The problems that resulted in the NTSB
recommendations are not limited to the Grand Canyon and Hawaii. They
are common to most commercial air tour flights conducted throughout the
U.S. Thus, many aspects the special aviation safety rules that apply to
commercial air tour operations in the Grand Canyon and Hawaii should
also apply to the rest of the country.
The NTSB, in its comments submitted to the NPRM, supported the
proposed rule and believed implementation of the requirements in the
proposal was long overdue. We have analyzed all comments received in
response to the NPRM and find that the regulatory action the FAA is
taking is an appropriate and responsible response to the NTSB
recommendations.
B. SFAR 71 Should Not Be the Model
A number of commenters, including the Experimental Aircraft
Association (EAA), the United States Air Tour Association (USATA), the
Helicopter Association International (HAI), Blue Hawaiian Helicopters,
Air Vegas Airlines, and the National Air Transportation Association
(NATA), questioned the FAA's basis for modeling the proposed rules on
SFAR 71, which governs the commercial air tour industry operating in
Hawaii. Commenters argued that the SFAR 71 rules were not responsible
for the improved safety in air tour operations in Hawaii. They stated
that air tour operations in Hawaii are safer because of improved
technology and operators taking more action to improve safety.
Specifically, Papillon Airways Inc., commenting on behalf of the Tour
Operators Program of Safety (TOPS), cited two reports that state SFAR
71 had no effect on the accident rate reduction since its enactment.
One report posited that the altitude restriction in SFAR 71 has
actually made air tours in Hawaii more dangerous by compressing
available airspace. The other acknowledged a decrease in accidents but
did not credit SFAR 71 with that decrease. Papillon claimed that the
reduction in the number of accidents since SFAR 71 is due entirely to
replaced engines (resulting in fewer power failures) and the creation
of TOPS.
Other commenters, including the NTSB and NorthStar, stated that FAA
did not complete a review of the effectiveness of SFAR 71 in this
rulemaking process, which they believe is necessary to evaluate whether
the SFAR 71 rules actually accomplished their intended goal. They also
commented that the majority of existing part 121 and 135 air tour
operations are concentrated in unique areas of the nation, primarily
Hawaii and the Grand Canyon, and that these environments are not
typical of the remainder of the country. They suggested it would not be
appropriate to extrapolate regulations that might be working in one
specialized area to the entire universe of air tour operations.
Additionally, they stated that there are already layers of regulations
applicable to Hawaii and the Grand Canyon, and the NPRM would establish
complicated rules, making compliance all the more difficult.
The FAA agrees that there may be multiple reasons for accident rate
improvement in Hawaii and other parts of the country. However, we also
believe that SFAR 71 has had a positive impact. Certainly, improved
technology aided in making air tour operations in Hawaii safer, but we
do not support the claim that technology and operator action are solely
responsible for improved safety. Rather, we believe there is a
relationship between the imposition of a minimum, mandatory safety
standard and the decrease in accidents. Purely voluntary improvements
that significantly increase safety would be unlikely to coincide so
neatly with the implementation of SFAR71.
The United States has many areas with rugged terrain, bodies of
water, and vertical cliffs that are subject to rapidly changing weather
patterns. Although air tours may vary as to what kind of terrain is
flown over, the FAA's concerns over flights conducted throughout the
United States are the same. For example, flight over water presents a
risk to passengers regardless of whether that water is the Pacific
Ocean, Lake Mead, or a large reservoir.
C. Withdraw the NPRM and Establish an Advisory Committee
A number of commenters (AOPA, NATA, Antique Airplane Association,
Aviation Foundation of America (AFA), The Lightship Group) recommended
the FAA withdraw the NPRM on the grounds that, as NATA asserted,
``There is a lack of sufficient data to support the FAA's determination
of a need for, and the costs associated with, the proposed
regulations.'' AOPA stated, ``Nothing in the original Federal Register
notice or information that has been made available during the comment
period, including the FAA virtual meeting, indicates there is a
significant safety issue on sightseeing and charity flights that the
FAA must address by advancing this rulemaking initiative.''
The Antique Airplane Association suggested the FAA consider ``the
formation of an industry run organization to effect and enhance these
type operations.'' AFA and The Lightship Group recommended the FAA
establish an Aviation Rulemaking Committee or an Aviation Rulemaking
Advisory Committee to assist in drafting a rule taking the aviation
community's concerns into account.
We declined to establish a rulemaking committee to develop national
air tour standards. The FAA already developed an NPRM for National Air
Tour Safety Standards, had a 240-day comment period, and conducted an
Internet meeting and two public meetings. We received over 2,300
comments in the docket. We do not believe a rulemaking committee would
provide any additional information. Accordingly, we have developed this
final rule based on the comments already submitted.
D. Accident Data Does Not Support Change
A number of commenters questioned the accident data used by the FAA
to justify the proposed rule changes. Most of these commenters
questioned the basis for requiring operation under part 135 since a
high number of the cited accidents involved aircraft operating under
part 135 at the time of the accident. Collings said, ``Since many of
the accidents involve part 135 operators, it should be clear that part
135 is not the answer.'' The Seaplane Pilots Association stated, ``Of
the 12 accidents cited as exemplary of the need for this change, 83%
were conducted under part 135.'' Similarly, the Tennessee Department of
Transportation stated, ``Part 135 air tours resulted in almost twice as
many deaths as their part 91 counterparts.''
The Minnesota Department of Transportation (MDOT) raised questions
about the statistics cited in the NPRM and asserted that they did ``not
bolster the argument that part 135 operations are safer.'' MDOT said
that there was no data that would allow the reader to put the cited
numbers in context. MDOT asked, ``Did the 75 accidents stem from 1,000
or 10,000 or 100,000 total operations?''
The Professional Airways Systems Specialists (PASS) questioned the
FAA's use of the August 24, 1997, crash off Ocean City, MD, as one of
the reasons for changing the rules. The NTSB report indicated that the
aircraft stalled and crashed because the pilot began an aerobic
maneuver at an altitude of approximately 300 feet AGL. PASS asked,
``Since the aircraft was already in violation of a FAR, how is making
the pilot meet part 119 and part 135 going to keep this kind of
accident from happening?'' The Seaplane Pilots
[[Page 6890]]
Association also asserted, ``Many of the accidents profiled resulted
from actions that are prohibited under both part 91 and part 135, and
part 135 status appeared to have little effect on the safety of the
flights profiled in the NPRM.'' TOPS said, ``Safety statistics do not
justify special regulations for helicopter tours conducted by
commercial operators under part 135 (as differentiated from ``sight-
seeing'' flights conducted on an ad hoc basis under part 91).'' It
continued, ``TOPS operators during calendar year 2003 experienced 1.13
accidents per 100,000 air tour hours, compared with 998 accidents per
100,000 flying hours for the civil helicopter fleet at large.''
Kenmore Air Harbor questioned the use of accidents in Hawaii
(particularly helicopter accidents) to justify the proposed rule.
Kenmore stated, ``Needed regulations, which address safety deficiencies
in Hawaii should not nor need not apply to other geographical areas.''
HAI, NorthStar Trekking (NorthStar), and other commenters also
questioned the use of Hawaii accidents to justify the proposed rule
changes. In a similar vein, AFA stated that the accidents cited as
justification for the NPRM are mostly helicopter operations over water
in Hawaii and do not reflect the ``superb safety record of part 91
fixed wing operators* * *''
The NTSB argued that better reporting requirements could lead to
the development of better data. It stated, ``national air tour safety
standards should include a provision that is similar to 14 CFR
121.693(e), which requires the certificate holder to include a list of
passengers' names on the load manifest or to secure this information by
another means.''
The FAA acknowledges that the data on part 91 accidents is less
than ideal. Thus, comparing a list of part 135 accidents against a list
of part 91 accidents is not productive. Only a few of the total number
of part 91 accidents researched were listed in the NPRM. The official
NTSB accident reports we researched didn't specify whether the flight
was ``sightseeing.'' Some reports said ``sightseeing'' in the
narrative, but most only noted the flight as part 91. Because of these
limitations in the data, the FAA cannot assume that part 91 flights
are, in fact, safer than part 135 flights. An accident during a part 91
operation at a traditional sightseeing spot like the Grand Canyon,
Niagara Falls, or at a water fall in Hawaii is normally expected to be
a sightseeing flight, but it might not be. An accident report that
doesn't say ``sightseeing'' or ``air tour'' is not necessarily a
definitive report that sightseeing did not take place, or that the
flight would not be considered an air tour. The data on part 135
operations is more robust. A part 135 sightseeing accident is normally
listed that way; as a sightseeing accident. The part 135 operators
conducting sightseeing flights are well known and their accidents are
usually newsworthy. Most part 135 sightseeing operators conduct
sightseeing flights all day, every day (although some are seasonal)
providing more data points.
In other words, the accident data presented in the NPRM may have
given the impression that there were more part 135 accidents than part
91, but that is not necessarily true, particularly as a percentage of
total sightseeing operations. As we discussed in the NPRM, we have
definitive data between 1993 and 2000 that there were 75 part 91
commercial air tour accidents, and 53 part 135 commercial air tour
accidents. While the data is simply not accurate enough for us to
conclude an exact number of part 91 flights that include sightseeing
and how many of those have had an accident, the captured part 91
flights need new standards for their operation. MDOT makes a good point
in its comment that the number of accidents listed is hard to put into
perspective unless it is known how many part 91 and part 135 commercial
air tour flights took place in that time. The first step in gathering
enough information to calculate an accurate accident rate will be the
establishment of the database supported by the application and approval
of LOAs, as required in Sec. 91.147. Since we are not requiring part
91 operators to report flight hours in this final rule, we still will
not be able to calculate an accident rate when this rule is published.
However, part of the safety improvements in this rule include increased
FAA oversight of these operations. Through the LOA, we will now have
geographic oversight of operations on which we previously did not have
information. In response to the NTSB comment and recommendation to
include a provision similar to 14 CFR Sec. 121.693(e) in the rule,
which would have required operators to list passenger names on load
manifests, that recommendation is outside the scope of this rulemaking.
However, we anticipate that the database based on LOA applications will
generate useful data for future analysis.
The FAA does not agree with the commenters who believe rulemaking
to improve regulatory safety is not justified unless an actual accident
is experienced by a particular operator, group of operators, type of
operator, or foundation. Such an approach would result in an
impracticable regulatory scheme and would inevitably result in the FAA
failing to adequately assure the safety of the flying public. When the
NTSB and FAA investigate an accident, the recommendations are applied
to the broad category of operators or persons who conduct the same type
of operation and who might have the same potential risk of a similar
accident. For instance, if particular operators using 30-passenger
turboprop airplanes crash on approach due to preventable crew errors,
the FAA would not regulate only those particular crew members. The FAA
would regulate all operators and crews using the same equipment. In
this final rule the FAA is regulating the air tour industry, not just
those air tour operators experiencing an accident.
E. Increased Noise and Other Impacts on National Parks
The USATA believed the proposed lower altitudes for multi-engine
helicopters provided an incentive to convert to noisier twin-engine
helicopters. The commenter believed this was in conflict with the
National Parks Air Tour Management Act of 2000, which mandates
incentives for quiet technology aircraft. USATA stated, ``This mixed
message is confused and shows a lack of policy coherence and
initiative. Which way does the FAA want the helicopter air tour
industry to go? The FAA should have a well reasoned, coherent and
coordinated plan that addresses both public safety and noise abatement
for the air tour industry.''
NorthStar commented that the proposed altitude restrictions would
be less safe and would result in more noise impact. NorthStar also
commented that the FAA had not included any noise data or analysis as a
part of this NPRM and had therefore not provided an adequate
opportunity for comment on what appears to be the rationale behind the
change in minimum altitudes.
The National Park Service (NPS) was particularly concerned about
the potential for adverse effects on wildlife resources as a result of
the proposed altitude restrictions. The NPS was concerned that the
proposed minimum standard of 1,000 feet AGL over ``raw terrain'' may
affect sensitive park resources or visitor experience. Of special
concern to NPS were the proposed special deviations that would have
allowed the FAA to approve a lower minimum altitude of not less than
500 feet AGL for single engine helicopters, and not less than 300 feet
AGL for multi-engine helicopters. The NPS commented that the scientific
community had studied the effects of
[[Page 6891]]
aircraft flight on wildlife for many years and provided details on
studies that showed negative impacts to wildlife due to low-level
aircraft. NPS concluded, ``The NPS appreciates the concerns of the NTSB
and the FAA that minimum flight standards could create a compressed
flight environment, particularly over areas of high interest. However,
no analysis of alternatives has been presented for the suggested AGL
and therefore, without additional information, it is not possible to
determine if there is an option that affords greater protection to park
resources while also allowing for a safe, high quality air tour.''
NPS also stated that it was a cooperating agency and cosignatory
with the FAA and they together are responsible for implementation of
the National Parks Air Tour Management Act of 2000. Accordingly, the
NPS had some concern regarding the potential impact this rulemaking
process will have on the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
analyses and resultant air tour management plans (ATMPs). NPS stated
that the National Parks Air Tour Management Act also outlines
appropriate alternative actions that may be considered in an ATMP.
These actions, NPS commented, may include the prohibition of air tours
over a national park, in whole or in part, and may establish conditions
for the conduct of commercial air tours. The operations may include
commercial air tour routes, maximum or minimum altitudes, time of day
restrictions and maximum number of flights per a unit of time. NPS
stated that two of these actions, commercial air tour routes and
maximum or minimum altitudes, are identical to the type of actions
identified in the proposed rule.
We did not propose any commercial air tour routes, time of day
restrictions, or maximum number of flights per unit of time in the
NPRM, because this rule is limited to addressing the safety of air
tours, not their impact on the environment. As noted by NPS, those
concerns are more appropriately handled as part of the ATMPs. In regard
to altitudes, we did not adopt any of the proposed altitude changes,
and the long-standing altitude restrictions continue unchanged.
Accordingly, the FAA does not believe that this rule changes the ATMP
analysis in this regard.
The FAA does not agree that this rule will circumvent the goal of
the Act and its promotion of quieter aircraft. The FAA anticipates
ATMPs will address NPS's concerns for the national parks by
establishing tour routes, altitude limits, incentives for quiet
aircraft technology, and other requirements where necessary. Since many
of the air tour operators fly inside and outside national parks, the
conversion to quiet technology will have a broader benefit than just
inside national parks. In any event, this final rule does not change
any of the altitude minimums already in place. Those altitudes are
safety-driven. Any future ATMP final rule that changes altitude
minimums must meet established safety standards.
With regard to the NPS's specific concern about allowing airplanes
to descend to 1,000 feet AGL and helicopters to 500 feet AGL or 300
feet AGL, the FAA notes that current part 135 Visual Flight Rule (VFR)
minimum altitudes are established in Sec. 135.203 at 500 feet above
the surface during daytime for airplanes, and 300 feet above the
surface for helicopters operating over congested areas. There is no
listed minimum for helicopters over other-than-congested areas. In
other-than-congested areas, helicopters may go below 300 feet AGL. FAA
Advisory Circular 91-36D, Visual Flight Rules (VFR) Flight Near Noise-
Sensitive Areas (as amended, September 17, 2004), recommends a 2,000
feet AGL limit over ``noise sensitive areas.'' This is a voluntary
limit that is based on general environmental concerns and not the
safety concerns that are the identified purpose of this final rule.
The FAA has more restrictive altitude standards for air tours in
Grand Canyon National Park and Hawaii because of the large number of
commercial air tour flights in a relatively small amount of airspace
and the demonstrated hazards. In view of many of the comments and our
reassessment of the relative safety risks, the FAA decided not to
change minimum altitudes in other portions of the country. For the same
reasons, we decided not to adopt the proposed visibility, cloud
clearance, and standoff distance restrictions for other portions of the
country. Any ATMP supplements this final rule.
V. Comments on Part 135 Certification
A. Against Part 135 Certification
Some commenters stated that the requirement to be certificated
under part 119 and obtain approval to operate under part 135 would be
difficult or impossible for certain types of aircraft and operations.
Sopwith Ltd., used as an example the Ford TriMotor aircraft it
operates, and stated, ``While the Ford is a type-certificated design
and holds a standard airworthiness certificate, the Ford cannot be
operated under part 135, because it cannot meet all the requirements of
part 135.'' Similarly, AFA commented that many vintage ex-military
aircraft and foreign type-certificated aircraft do not hold standard
airworthiness certificates and cannot qualify under part 135. EB Air
asked how operators of such aircraft would address and conform to the
many part 135 requirements regarding time life items such as engine and
propeller total times, engine accessory service life, and replacement
of parts.
Bar Harbor Aviation commented that the additional paperwork,
bookkeeping, manual writing, equipment, time, and money required to
become a part 135 operation would not make the operation any safer,
just more complex and expensive to operate. Waldo Wright's Flying
Service commented that, ``Because of the increased regulatory standards
and certification costs of a multi-pilot part 135 certificate, I would
have no choice but to split my company up and apply for a one aircraft-
one operator part 135 certificate for each aircraft.'' Waldo Wright
also commented on the difficulty and expense of obtaining insurance for
operations conducted under part 135, compared to part 91. USATA
believed a ``one-size-fits-all'' approach was not the most prudent way
to approach the issue. USATA stated that the FAA failed to take into
consideration the uniqueness of full-time commercial air tour
operations and the considerable experience of current part 135 and 121
commercial air tour operators in publishing the NPRM, and would impose
additional new requirements with too broad a regulatory brush. USATA
stated, ``Evidence of that is clear since nearly every operational
regulatory provision contained in this NPRM also contains a way in
which the FAA Administrator may grant exceptions. If nearly all of
these proposed requirements are `exceptionable,' then the justification
for imposing them in the first place must be suspect.'' AFA stated that
there is no statistical data that can lead one to conclude that the
affected operations would be any safer if required to become
certificated and operated under part 135.
AOPA stated that ``It is important to note that the primary reason
for eliminating the part 91 exemption under the National Park