Air Ambulance and Commercial Helicopter Operations, Part 91 Helicopter Operations, and Part 135 Aircraft Operations; Safety Initiatives and Miscellaneous Amendments, 62640-62674 [2010-24862]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Parts 1, 91, 120, and 135
[Docket No. FAA–2010–0982; Notice No. 10–
13]
RIN 2120–AJ53
Air Ambulance and Commercial
Helicopter Operations, Part 91
Helicopter Operations, and Part 135
Aircraft Operations; Safety Initiatives
and Miscellaneous Amendments
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
AGENCY:
This proposed rule addresses
air ambulance and commercial
helicopter operations, part 91 helicopter
operations, and load manifest
requirements for all part 135 aircraft.
From 2002 to 2008, there has been an
increase in fatal helicopter air
ambulance accidents. To address these
safety concerns, the FAA is proposing to
implement operational procedures and
require additional equipment on board
helicopter air ambulances. Many of
these proposed requirements currently
are found in agency guidance
publications and would address
National Transportation Safety Board
(NTSB) safety recommendations. Some
of these safety concerns are not unique
to the helicopter air ambulance industry
and affect all commercial helicopter
operations. Accordingly, the FAA also is
proposing to amend regulations
pertaining to all commercial helicopter
operations conducted under part 135 to
include equipment requirements, pilot
training, and alternate airport weather
minima. The changes are intended to
provide certificate holders and pilots
with additional tools and procedures
that will aid in preventing accidents.
DATES: Send your comments on or
before January 10, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments
identified by docket number FAA–
2010–0982 using any of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and follow
the online instructions for sending your
comments electronically.
• Mail: Send comments to Docket
Operations, M–30; U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Room W12–140, West
Building Ground Floor, Washington, DC
20590–0001.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: Take
comments to Docket Operations in
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SUMMARY:
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Room W12–140 of the West Building
Ground Floor at 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC, between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
• Fax: Fax comments to Docket
Operations at 202–493–2251.
For more information on the
rulemaking process, see the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
Privacy: We will post all comments
we receive, without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information you provide.
Using the search function of our docket
web site, anyone can find and read the
electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets,
including the name of the individual
sending the comment (or signing the
comment for an association, business,
labor union, etc.). You may review
DOT’s complete Privacy Act Statement
in the Federal Register published on
April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477–78) or you
may visit https://DocketsInfo.dot.gov.
Docket: To read background
documents or comments received, go to
https://www.regulations.gov at any time
and follow the online instructions for
accessing the docket, or, the Docket
Operations in Room W12–140 of the
West Building Ground Floor at 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington,
DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
For
technical questions concerning this
proposed rule contact Edwin Miller,
Flight Standards Service, Part 135 Air
Carrier Operations Branch, AFS–250,
Federal Aviation Administration, 800
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20591; telephone (202)
267–8166; facsimile (202) 267–5229;
e-mail edwin.miller@faa.gov.
For legal questions concerning this
proposed rule contact Dean Griffith,
Office of the Chief Counsel, AGC–220,
Federal Aviation Administration, 800
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20591; telephone (202)
267–3073; facsimile (202) 267–7971;
e-mail dean.griffith@faa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Later in this preamble under the
Additional Information section, we
discuss how you can comment on this
proposal and how we will handle your
comments. Included in this discussion
is related information about the docket,
privacy, and the handling of proprietary
or confidential business information.
We also discuss how you can get a copy
of related rulemaking documents.
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Authority for This Rulemaking
The FAA’s authority to issue rules on
aviation safety is found in Title 49 of the
United States Code. This rulemaking is
promulgated under the authority
described in 49 U.S.C. 44701(a)(4),
which requires the Administrator to
promulgate regulations in the interest of
safety for the maximum hours or
periods of service of airmen and other
employees of air carriers, and 49 U.S.C.
44701(a)(5), which requires the
Administrator to promulgate regulations
and minimum standards for other
practices, methods, and procedures
necessary for safety in air commerce and
national security.
List of Terms and Acronyms Frequently
Used in This Document
AC—Advisory Circular
ARC—Aviation Rulemaking Committee
CFIT—Controlled flight into terrain
CVR—Cockpit voice recorder
EMS—Emergency medical service
FDR—Flight data recorder
GPS—Global positioning system
HTAWS—Helicopter Terrain Awareness and
Warning System
IFR—Instrument flight rules
IMC—Instrument meteorological conditions
LARS—Light-weight aircraft recording
system
NM—Nautical mile
NTSB—National Transportation Safety Board
NVG—Night vision goggles
NVIS—Night-vision imaging system
SAFO—Safety Alert for Operators
TAWS—Terrain Avoidance and Warning
System
TSO—Technical Standard Order
VFR—Visual flight rules
VMC—Visual meteorological conditions
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Statement of the Problem
B. Helicopter Air Ambulance Operations
C. FAA Actions
D. National Transportation Safety Board
(NTSB) Safety Recommendations
E. Congressional Action
III. Discussion of the Proposal
A. Helicopter Air Ambulance Operations
1. Operational Procedures
a. Part 135 Applicability (§ 135.1)
b. Operations Control Centers (§ 135.617)
c. VFR/IFR Procedures
i. Increase VFR Weather Minima
(§ 135.607)
ii. IFR Operations at Airports and Heliports
Without Weather Reporting (§ 135.609)
iii. IFR to VFR/Visual Transitions
(§ 135.611)
iv. VFR Flight Planning (§ 135.613)
d. Pre-Flight Risk Analysis (§ 135.615)
e. Medical Personnel Pre-Flight Briefing
(§ 135.619)
2. Equipment Requirements
a. Helicopter Terrain Awareness and
Warning Systems (HTAWS) (§ 135.605)
b. Light-Weight Aircraft Recording System
(LARS)
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3. Pilot Requirements
a. Instrument Rating (§ 135.603)
b. Flight and Duty Time Limitations
(§§ 135.267 and 135.271)
B. Commercial Helicopter Operations
(Including Air Ambulance Operations)
1. Operational Procedures
a. IFR Alternate Airport Weather Minima
(§ 135.221)
2. Equipment Requirements
a. Radio Altimeter (§ 135.160)
b. Safety Equipment for Over-Water Flights
(§§ 1.1, 135.167, and 135.168)
3. Training—Recovery From Inadvertent
Flight Into IMC (§ 135.293)
C. Miscellaneous
1. Part 91 Weather Minima (§ 91.155)
2. Load Manifest Requirements for all Part
135 Aircraft (§ 135.63)
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
V. International Compatibility
VI. Regulatory Evaluation, Regulatory
Flexibility Determination, International
Trade Impact Assessment, and Unfunded
Mandates Assessment
VII. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
VIII. Regulations Affecting Intrastate Aviation
in Alaska
IX. Environmental Analysis
X. Regulations That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
XI. Availability of Rulemaking Documents
XII. Additional Information
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Appendix to the Preamble—Additional
Accident Discussions
The Proposed Amendment
I. Executive Summary
This NPRM proposes requirements for
all part 135 aircraft, part 91 helicopter
operations, and air ambulance and
commercial helicopter operations. The
proposal aims to address safety
concerns arising from an increase in air
ambulance related fatalities from 2002
to 2008.
As described in further detail
throughout this document, the NPRM
proposes the following requirements:
Affected entities
Proposal
Part 135—All Aircraft ............................
• Permit operators to transmit a copy of load manifest documentation to their base of operations, in
lieu of preparing a duplicate copy.
• Specify requirements for retaining a copy of the load manifest in the event that the documentation is
destroyed in an aircraft accident.
• Revision of part 91 Visual Flight Rules (VFR) weather minimums.
• Revision of commercial helicopter instrument flight rules (IFR) alternate airport weather minimums.
Part 91—Helicopter Operations ...........
All Commercial Helicopter Operations
(Operating Requirements).
Air Ambulance Operations (Operating
Requirements and Equipage).
• Require helicopter pilots to demonstrate competency in recovery from inadvertent instrument meteorological conditions.
• Require all commercial helicopters to be equipped with radio altimeters.
• Change definition of ‘‘extended over-water operation,’’ and require additional equipment for these operations.
• Require air ambulance flights with medical personnel on board to be conducted under part 135, including flight crew time limitation and rest requirements.
• Require certificate holders with 10 or more helicopter air ambulances to establish operations control
centers.
• Require helicopter air ambulance certificate holders to implement pre-flight risk-analysis programs.
• Require safety briefings for medical personnel on helicopter air ambulances.
• Amend helicopter air ambulance operational requirements to include VFR weather minimums, IFR
operations at airports/heliports without weather reporting, procedures for VFR approaches, and VFR
flight planning.
• Require pilots in command to hold an instrument rating.
• Require equipage with Helicopter Terrain Awareness and Warning Systems (HTAWS), and possibly
light-weight aircraft recording systems (LARS).
In aggregate, the FAA estimates the
mean present value of the total
monetizable costs of these proposals
(over 10 years, 7% discount rate) to be
$225 million, with a range of total
monetizable benefits from $83 million
to $1.98 billion (over 10 years, 7%
discount rate).
The table below summarizes the
present value range of total aggregate
monetizable costs and benefits the FAA
estimates as a result of this rule:
Range (in millions) (over 10
years, 7% discount rate)
Summary of monetizable costs and benefits 1
Air Ambulance .......................................................................................................................................................
Commercial ............................................................................................................................................................
$62 to $1,500.
$21 to $480.
Total Benefits ..................................................................................................................................................
Air Ambulance .......................................................................................................................................................
Commercial ............................................................................................................................................................
$83 to $1,980.
$136.
$89.
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Total Costs .....................................................................................................................................................
The FAA requests comments on the
analysis underlying these estimates, as
well as possible approaches to reduce
the costs of this rule while maintaining
1 ‘‘Air ambulance’’ applies to helicopter air
ambulance operations. ‘‘Commercial’’ applies to all
part 135 aircraft operations, excluding helicopter air
ambulance operations.
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or increasing the benefits. While the
FAA has concluded that the aggregate
benefits justify the aggregate costs,
under some scenarios, the monetizable
benefits may fall short of the
monetizable costs. The FAA seeks
comments on possible changes or
flexibilities that might improve the rule.
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$225.
II. Background
A. Statement of the Problem
The helicopter air ambulance industry
experienced a significant increase in
fatal accidents in 2008, making it the
deadliest year on record for the
industry. During that year, six accidents
claimed 24 lives, including those of
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pilots, patients, and medical personnel.
In addition, there were three non-fatal
accidents in 2008. However, helicopter
air accidents were not confined to 2008.
From 1992 through 2009, there were 135
helicopter air ambulance accidents,
including one midair collision with
another helicopter engaged in an air
ambulance operation. These helicopter
air ambulance accidents resulted in 126
fatalities. In a 2009 report, the U.S.
Government Accountability Office
(GAO) recognized that air ambulance
accidents reached historic levels from
2003 through 2008.2
Helicopter accidents, however, have
not been limited to the air ambulance
industry. The FAA identified 75
commercial helicopter accidents,
occurring from 1994 through 2008 with
causal factors that are addressed in this
proposal. These accidents involving
commercial helicopter operations
resulted in 88 fatalities. These accidents
do not include the helicopter air
ambulance accidents discussed above.
After reviewing the accident data, the
FAA identified controlled flight into
terrain (CFIT), loss of control (LOC),
inadvertent flight into instrument
meteorological conditions (IMC), and
accidents during night conditions as
four common factors in helicopter air
ambulance accidents. A review of
commercial helicopter accidents also
demonstrated that these accidents may
have been prevented if pilots and
helicopters were better equipped for
encounters with inadvertent flight into
IMC, flat-light,3 whiteout,4 and
brownout 5 conditions, and for flights
over water. The FAA also determined
that enhancements to safety equipment
for over-water operations and
establishing more stringent instrument
flight rules (IFR) alternate airport
2 GAO, Aviation Safety: Potential Strategies to
Address Air Ambulance Safety Concerns (2009).
3 The NTSB describes flat-light conditions in
NTSB Safety Recommendation A–02–33 as ‘‘the
diffuse lighting that occurs under cloudy skies
especially when the ground is snow covered. Under
flat light conditions, there are no shadows cast, and
the topography of snow-covered surfaces is
impossible to judge. Flat light greatly impairs a
pilot’s ability to perceive depth, distance, altitude,
or topographical features when operating under
visual flight rules (VFR).’’
4 AC 00–6A, Aviation Weather for Pilots and
Flight Operations Personnel, describes whiteout
conditions as a ‘‘visibility restricting phenomenon
that occurs in the Arctic when a layer of cloudiness
of uniform thickness overlies a snow or ice-covered
surface. Parallel rays of the sun are broken up and
diffused when passing through the cloud layer so
that they strike the snow surface from many angles.
The diffused light then reflects back and forth
countless times between the snow and the cloud
eliminating all shadows. The result is a loss of
depth perception.’’
5 Brownout conditions occur when sand or other
particles restrict visibility and depth perception.
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weather minima would enhance the
safety of all part 135 helicopter
operations.
Prior to developing this proposed
rule, the FAA undertook initiatives to
address the common factors that
contribute to helicopter air ambulance
accidents including issuing notices,
handbook bulletins, operations
specifications, and advisory circulars
(ACs); this proposed rule would codify
many of these initiatives.
Additionally, this proposal addresses
National Transportation Safety Board
(NTSB) safety recommendations and
recommendations made by the Part 125/
135 Aviation Rulemaking Committee
(ARC) concerning helicopter air
ambulance and commercial helicopter
operations. This includes a proposal to
adopt amendments to load manifest
requirements for single-engine part 135
operations, consistent with an NTSB
Safety Recommendation developed in
response to a 1997 accident.
are now transported by helicopter each
year.8
As of February 2009, the FAA
authorized 74 certificate holders to
conduct helicopter air ambulance
operations. These certificate holders
operate approximately 850 helicopters
in air ambulance operations. The size of
these operations varies greatly. The
smallest operators only have one or two
helicopters and operate in one region;
the largest operators may have hundreds
of helicopters across the United States.
Of the 50 largest certificate holders
operating under part 121 or 135, as
measured by the number of aircraft
operated, six conduct helicopter air
ambulance operations. The tenth largest
air carrier in the United States, Air
Methods Corporation, is a helicopter air
ambulance operator.
The following is a breakdown of the
number of helicopter air ambulances
operated by the 74 certificate holders
permitted to conduct helicopter air
ambulance operations as of February,
2009: 38 certificate holders have 5 or
B. Helicopter Air Ambulance Operations fewer helicopters; 14 certificate holders
have 6 to 10 helicopters; 6 certificate
The helicopter air ambulance industry
holders have 11 to 15 helicopters; and
is relatively young but has experienced
16 certificate holders have more than 16
rapid growth during its existence. The
helicopters.
industry’s evolution has not produced a
Certificate holders’ air ambulance
uniform model of operations; rather
programs and operational practices vary
certificate holders vary in size and
as to whether they conduct IFR or VFR
scope of operations. In addition, as
operations, perform formal pre-flight
discussed below, helicopter air
risk analyses, or use operations control
ambulance operations present unique
centers. In addition, certificate holders
challenges meriting regulation beyond
equip their helicopters differently. For
that traditionally applied to part 135
example, some helicopters are
commercial helicopter operations.
permanently configured for full-time air
ambulance operations while others are
Helicopter air medical transportation
not; some are equipped for IFR
was first used prominently during the
operations while others are equipped for
Korean War to move injured soldiers
VFR-only operations; and helicopter air
from the battlefield. Since then,
ambulances have varying situationalhelicopters have been used to transport
awareness technology (such as night
critically injured patients and donor
vision goggles, HTAWS, radio
organs to hospitals because of their
altimeters, etc.) on board.
capability to provide rapid
Helicopter air ambulance operations
transportation over long distances from
present several unique operating
remote locations. The first commercial
helicopter air ambulance program began characteristics that make them distinct
from other types of part 135 helicopter
operation in 1972. The industry grew
operations. Such operations are often
significantly in the 1980s, and is
time-sensitive and crucial to getting a
6 Between 2003 and
continuing to grow.
critically ill or injured patient to a
2008, the Association of Air Medical
medical facility as efficiently as
Services reported a 54 percent increase
in the number of helicopters used by its possible, which may influence flight
crews to fly under circumstances that
members in helicopter air ambulance
they otherwise would not. In addition,
operations.7 The NTSB estimates that
400,000 patients and transplant organs
8
6 National Transportation Safety Board: Safety
Study—Commercial Emergency Medical Service
Helicopter Operations, NTSB/SS–88/01 (Jan. 28,
1988), available at https://www.ntsb.gov/Dockets/
Aviation/DCA09SH001/410702.pdf.
7 See GAO, Aviation Safety: Potential Strategies to
Address Air Ambulance Safety Concerns 4 (2009).
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Testimony of the Hon. Robert L. Sumwalt, III,
Board Member NTSB, Before the Subcommittee on
Aviation, Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure, U.S. House of Representatives, April
22, 2009, available at https://
transportation.house.gov/hearings/
hearingDetail.aspx?NewsID=865; transcript URL:
https://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?
dbname=111_house_hearings&docid=f:49001.pdf.
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these operations often are conducted
under challenging conditions. For
example, helicopter air ambulances
operate generally at low altitudes and
under varied weather conditions.
Operations are conducted year-round, in
rural and urban settings, in
mountainous and non-mountainous
terrain, during the day and at night, and
in IFR and visual meteorological
conditions (VMC). Remote-site landings
pose additional challenges. These
remote sites are often unfamiliar to a
pilot and, unlike an airport or heliport,
may contain hazards such as trees,
buildings, towers, wires, and uneven
terrain. Additionally, in an emergency,
patients cannot choose which operator
provides transportation, and because of
their injuries, may not be able to
participate in the decision to use
helicopter transport. These patients are
often transported by the first company
to accept the flight assignment from an
emergency medical service dispatcher.
The FAA believes that these individuals
should therefore be afforded the
protection of an enhanced regulation for
helicopter air ambulances.
As described in the section below, the
FAA has taken steps through nonregulatory means to improve helicopter
air ambulance safety; however, in
consideration of the industry’s accident
history, characteristics unique to
helicopter air ambulance operations,
and the lack of standardization among
certificate holders’ practices, the FAA
believes that additional regulations are
necessary to ensure the safety of these
flights.
C. FAA Actions
In response to the increasing number
of accidents involving helicopter air
ambulances, the FAA has developed
standards over the years for weather
minima and for helicopter terrain
awareness and warning systems
(HTAWS), and formalized dispatch
procedures. In addition, the FAA has
issued guidance for operational
improvements in areas that address
Crew Resource Management (CRM),
CFIT, inadvertent flight into IMC,
operational control, improved access to
weather information, risk management,
improvement of organizational safety
culture, and aeronautical
decisionmaking skills. The following
provides a summary of many of the
actions taken by the FAA.
On April 8, 2003, the FAA formed the
Part 125/135 ARC to perform a
comprehensive review of parts 125 and
135 and provide recommendations on
rule changes. ARC members included
aviation associations, industry
representatives, employee groups, the
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FAA, and other participants to obtain a
balance of views, interests, and
expertise. The ARC made
recommendations pertaining to
helicopter air ambulance operations and
other commercial helicopter operations
that form the basis of several of the
proposals in this NPRM, including
equipping helicopters with radio
altimeters, increasing weather minima
for helicopter air ambulance operations,
requiring additional safety equipment
for over-water operations, requiring
pilot testing on recovery from
inadvertent flight into IMC, and revising
IFR alternate airport weather
requirements.
In August 2004, the FAA established
a task force to review and guide
government and industry efforts to
reduce helicopter air ambulance
accidents. The task force review of
commercial helicopter air ambulance
accidents for the period of January 1998
through December 2004 revealed that
CFIT, night operations, and inadvertent
flight into IMC were the predominant
factors contributing to those accidents.
On January 28, 2005, the FAA issued
Notice 8000.293, Helicopter Emergency
Medical Services Operations, addressing
CRM, adherence to procedures, and
pilot decisionmaking skills in helicopter
air ambulance operations. This notice
was later incorporated into Safety Alert
for Operators (SAFO) 06001, Helicopter
Emergency Medical Services (HEMS)
Operations (Jan. 28, 2006). On August 1,
2005, the FAA issued Notice 8000.301,
Operational Risk Assessment Programs
for Helicopter Emergency Medical
Services, providing guidance on
operational risk assessment programs,
including training of flightcrews and
medical personnel.
In AC 00–64, Air Medical Resource
Management, issued September 22,
2005, the FAA recommended minimum
guidelines for air medical resource
management training for all air medical
service operations team members,
including pilots, maintenance
personnel, medical personnel,
communications specialists, and other
air medical team members. In Notice
8000.307, Special Emphasis Inspection
Program For Helicopter Emergency
Medical Services, issued September 27,
2005, the FAA addressed a special
emphasis inspection program for
helicopter air ambulance operators,
focusing on operational control, risk
assessment, and training programs. On
January 24, 2006, the FAA issued
handbook bulletin HBAT 06–02,
Helicopter Emergency Services (HEMS)
Loss of Control (LOC) and Controlled
Flight into Terrain (CFIT) Accident
Avoidance Programs, to FAA inspectors
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describing acceptable models for LOC
and CFIT accident avoidance programs.
In January 2006, the FAA amended
Operations Specification A021, which is
issued to all certificate holders
conducting helicopter air ambulance
operations, to establish VFR weather
requirements, including consideration
of adverse effects of ambient lighting at
night and mountainous terrain.
Following the 2008 accidents, the FAA
again amended Operations Specification
A021 to address VFR weather
requirements, applied those weather
requirements to all flights with medical
personnel on board, required a flight
planning requirement, and allowed IFR
approaches when a pilot could consult
a weather reporting source within 15
miles of the landing location.
In 2006, RTCA, Inc.,9 at the FAA’s
request, established a special committee
to develop HTAWS standards. In
December 2008, the FAA issued
Technical Standard Order (TSO)–C194,
Helicopter Terrain Awareness and
Warning System (HTAWS), based on the
minimum operational performance
standards developed by the committee.
This TSO establishes the technical
baseline for the HTAWS requirement in
this proposal.
The FAA issued AC 120–96,
Integration of Operations Control
Centers into Helicopter Emergency
Medical Services Operations (May 5,
2008), that provides guidance to
certificate holders for establishing
operations control and dispatch centers.
The information in AC 120–96 formed
the foundation of this proposal’s
requirement for certain certificate
holders to establish operations control
centers.
In 2008, through Notice 8900.57, Part
135 Helicopter Training Program and
Manual Revisions, the FAA
implemented several pilot training
program revisions applicable to part 135
helicopter training programs in response
to NTSB safety recommendations A–02–
34 and A–02–35, including procedures
for mitigating and recovering from
brownout, whiteout, and flat-light
conditions.
On January 12, 2009, through Notice
8900.63, Validation of HEMS Safety
Initiatives, the FAA, in an effort to
identify how well its voluntary
programs had been accepted, surveyed
the operators through their Principal
Operations Inspectors. Survey results
indicated that 94 percent of the
9 RTCA, Inc. is a private, not-for-profit
corporation that develops consensus-based
recommendations regarding communications,
navigation, surveillance, and air traffic management
(CNS/ATM) system issues. RTCA, Inc. functions as
a Federal Advisory Committee.
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operators had established riskassessment programs, 89 percent had
training in LOC and CFIT, 89 percent
were using operations control centers,
41 percent were using terrain awareness
and warning systems (TAWS), 11
percent were using flight data recorders
(FDR), and 94 percent were using radio
altimeters.
such as spatial disorientation, lack of
general awareness, loss of control, poor
decision making, failure to maintain
clearance of obstacles, inadequate
planning, and improper execution of
standard operating procedures.
NTSB safety recommendations
addressed by this rulemaking include
the following:
D. National Transportation Safety Board
(NTSB) Safety Recommendations
In 1988, the NTSB conducted a safety
study of emergency medical service
operations that examined 59
accidents.10 This study determined that
the helicopter air ambulance accident
rate was almost twice the estimated
accident rate of non-scheduled part 135
helicopter air taxi operations, and were
3.5 times more likely to be fatal.11 The
NTSB found reduced visibility to be the
most common factor associated with
such crashes.
In January 2006, the NTSB conducted
a special investigation of emergency
medical services operations and issued
four recommendations to the FAA.12
These recommendations are discussed
in sections III.A.1.a., III.A.1.b., III.A.1.d.,
III.A.2.a., and III.A.3.b.
In February 2009, the NTSB held a
public hearing on ‘‘Helicopter
Emergency Medical Services’’ to
examine the safety issues associated
with these operations and gather
testimony from government, operators,
industry associations, manufacturers,
and hospitals.13 In September 2009, the
NTSB issued a series of safety
recommendations based on the findings
of the February hearing. The
recommendations that are addressed by
this rulemaking are discussed in
sections III.A.1.b., III.A.1.d., III.A.2.b.,
and III.B.3. The FAA has determined
that the remaining September 2009
recommendations are not ready for
rulemaking at this time.
The NTSB also made
recommendations to public aircraft
operators, the Federal Interagency
Emergency Medical Services
Committee, and the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services’ Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services.
As a result of its investigations and
studies, the NTSB identified several
probable causes of helicopter accidents,
Recommendations on Helicopter Air
Ambulance Operations
A–06–12: Recommends that the FAA
require all emergency medical services
operators to comply with 14 CFR part
135 operations specifications during the
conduct of all flights with medical
personnel on board. (Discussed in
sections III.A.1.a. and III.A.3.b.)
A–06–13: Recommends that the FAA
require all emergency medical services
operators to develop and implement
flight-risk evaluation programs that
include training all employees involved
in the operation, procedures that
support the systematic evaluation of
flight risks, and consultation with others
in emergency medical service (EMS)
flight operations if the risks reach a
predefined level. (Discussed in section
III.A.1.d.)
A–06–14: Recommends that the FAA
require emergency medical services
operators to use formalized dispatch
and flight-monitoring procedures that
include up-to-date weather information
and assistance in flight risk assessment
decisions. (Discussed in section
III.A.1.b.)
A–06–15: Recommends that the FAA
require emergency medical services
operators to install terrain awareness
and warning systems on their aircraft
and to provide adequate training to
ensure that flight crews are capable of
using the systems to safely conduct EMS
operations. (Discussed in section
III.A.2.a.)
A–09–87: Recommends that the FAA
develop criteria for scenario-based
helicopter emergency medical services
pilot training that includes inadvertent
flight into instrument meteorological
conditions and hazards unique to
helicopter emergency medical services
(HEMS) operations, and determine how
frequently this training is required to
ensure proficiency. (Discussed in
section III.B.3.)
A–09–89: Recommends that the FAA
require helicopter air ambulance
operators implement a safety
management system program that
includes sound risk management
practices. (Discussed in sections
III.A.1.b., III.A.1.d, and III.A.2.b.)
A–09–90: Recommends that the FAA
require helicopter air ambulance
operators install flight data recording
10 Commercial Emergency Medical Service
Helicopter Operations, Safety Study NTSB/SS–88/
01 (Washington, DC: National Transportation Safety
Board, 1988).
11 Id. at 7.
12 NTSB, Special Investigation Report on
Emergency Medical Services Operations (NTSB/
SIR–06/01) (Jan. 25, 2006).
13 NTSB, Public Hearing Summary, available at
https://www.ntsb.gov/Events/Hearing-HEMS/
HEMS_Summary.pdf.
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devices and establish a structured flight
data monitoring program that reviews
all available data sources to identify
deviations from established norms and
procedures and other potential safety
issues. (Discussed in section III.A.2.b.)
The FAA notes that the NTSB used
the term ‘‘emergency medical services
operators’’ or ‘‘EMS operators’’ in its
recommendations. However, the FAA
uses the term ‘‘helicopter air ambulance
operators’’ in this proposed rulemaking.
The FAA also notes that NTSB Safety
Recommendations A–06–12 through A–
06–14 addressed both fixed-wing and
helicopter air ambulance operations. As
previously noted, while some
provisions of the proposal extend to
other types of aircraft and commercial
helicopter operations more broadly, the
FAA is focusing largely on helicopter air
ambulance safety in this rulemaking.
Although this proposed rule primarily
focuses on helicopter air ambulance
safety, it also addresses additional
NTSB recommendations, listed below.
Recommendations on Commercial
Helicopter Operations
A–02–33: Recommends that the FAA
require all helicopter pilots who
conduct commercial, passenger-carrying
flights in areas where flat-light or
whiteout conditions routinely occur to
possess a helicopter-specific instrument
rating and to demonstrate their
competency during initial and recurrent
14 CFR 135.293 evaluation check rides.
(Discussed in section III.B.3.)
A–02–34: Recommends that the FAA
require all commercial helicopter
operators conducting passenger-carrying
flights in areas where flat-light or
whiteout conditions routinely occur to
include safe practices for operating in
flat-light or whiteout conditions in their
approved training programs. (Discussed
in section III.B.3.)
A–02–35: Recommends that the FAA
require the installation of radio
altimeters in all helicopters conducting
commercial, passenger-carrying
operations in areas where flat-light or
whiteout conditions routinely occur.
(Discussed in section III.B.2.a.)
A–06–17: Recommends that the FAA
require all rotorcraft operating under [14
CFR] parts 91 and 135 with a transportcategory certification to be equipped
with a cockpit voice recorder (CVR) and
flight data recorder (FDR). (Discussed in
section III.A.2.b.)
A–07–87: Recommends that the FAA
require all existing and new turbinepowered helicopters operating in the
Gulf of Mexico and certificated with five
or more seats to be equipped with
externally mounted life rafts large
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enough to accommodate all occupants.
(Discussed in section III.B.2.b.)
A–07–88: Recommends that the FAA
require all offshore helicopter operators
in the Gulf of Mexico provide their
flight crews with personal flotation
devices equipped with a waterproof,
global-positioning-system-enabled 406
megahertz personal locater beacon, as
well as one other signaling device, such
as a signaling mirror or strobe light.
(Discussed in section III.B.2.b.)
Other Recommendations
A–99–61: Recommends that the FAA
amend recordkeeping requirements in
§ 135.63(c) to apply to single-engine as
well as multiengine aircraft. (Discussed
in section III.C.2.)
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E. Congressional Action
Legislation has been introduced in
both the House of Representatives and
the Senate in the 111th Congress, and in
earlier Congresses, addressing several of
the issues raised in this rulemaking. In
addition, on April 22, 2009, the House
Transportation and Infrastructure’s
Subcommittee on Aviation held a
hearing on oversight of helicopter
medical services. The Subcommittee
heard from a variety of government,
industry, and public representatives
who testified on the House helicopter
air ambulance safety legislation, NTSB
safety recommendations, and FAA
actions to mitigate helicopter air
ambulance accidents.
III. Discussion of the Proposal
In determining how to improve the
safety of helicopter air ambulance
operations, as well as all other
commercial helicopter operations, the
FAA reviewed approximately 4,000
accidents that involved helicopters in
the United States (excluding U.S.
territories). Of those accidents, the FAA
identified 75 commercial helicopter
accidents and 127 helicopter air
ambulance accidents that occurred
between 1994 and 2008 with causal
factors that are addressed in this
proposal. The accidents involving
commercial helicopter operations
resulted in 88 fatalities, 29 serious
injuries, and 42 minor injuries; 28
(approximately 37 percent) involved
one or more fatalities, and 47 had no
fatalities. The accidents involving
helicopter air ambulance operations
resulted in 126 fatalities, 50 serious
injuries, and 42 minor injuries; 46
(approximately 36 percent) involved
one or more fatalities, and 81 had no
fatalities. In addition to injuries and
fatalities, there also was significant
damage or complete hull loss for these
accidents.
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A comparison of the accidents that
occurred between 2000 and 2008 reveals
that there were 66 commercial
helicopter accidents (including 23 fatal
accidents resulting in 65 fatalities) and
98 helicopter air ambulance accidents
(including 35 fatal accidents resulting in
94 fatalities) during that time. The
percentage of fatalities between the two
categories was essentially the same.
Given the equivalent risk of fatality if
involved in an accident, the FAA has
determined that it must focus its efforts
on reducing the higher risk of helicopter
air ambulances being involved in an
accident in the first place.
This proposal, if adopted, would
implement new regulations, and revise
existing regulations, to address the
causes and factors of commercial and
helicopter air ambulance accidents
identified by the FAA and the NTSB.
The FAA notes that compliance dates of
the proposed regulations would vary, as
noted in discussions below. The FAA
believes that many of the accidents
reviewed could have been prevented if
these proposals had been in place
during this 19-year period.
The FAA has also determined that the
safety of commercial air operations
could be enhanced by requiring a load
manifest for all part 135 operations and
is proposing to amend its rules
accordingly.
A. Helicopter Air Ambulance
Operations
The following provisions would apply
to all helicopter air ambulance
operations, conducted under part 135.
These proposals include new
operational and equipment
requirements for these certificate
holders. This rule does not address
fixed-wing air ambulance operations.
The FAA chose to focus on helicopter
air ambulance operations because a
predominance of the accidents involved
helicopter air ambulances,14 and
approximately 74 percent of the air
ambulance fleet is composed of
helicopters.15
1. Operational Procedures
a. Part 135 Applicability (§ 135.1)
The FAA is proposing to amend
§ 135.1 to require that all helicopter air
ambulance operations with medical
personnel on board be conducted under
the operating rules of part 135. This
14 41 of the 55 air ambulance accidents
highlighted by the NTSB in its 2006 Special
Investigation Report involved helicopters. See
NTSB, Special Investigation Report on Emergency
Medical Services Operations, App’x B (2006).
15 See GAO, Aviation Safety: Potential Strategies
to Address Air Ambulance Safety Concerns 1
(2009).
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includes instances where the medical
personnel are employees of the operator.
The safety of helicopter air ambulance
flights, including the welfare of the
medical personnel and patients on those
flights, would be increased if operators
were required to comply with the more
stringent part 135 rules.
Helicopter air ambulance operations
generally consist of two- or three-leg
flights. Currently, the non-patientcarrying legs of those operations may be
conducted under part 91 because
certificate holders consider medical
personnel on board the aircraft to be
crewmembers and the non-patient
transport legs to be positioning flights.
This approach is consistent with current
FAA guidance to inspectors, which
notes that if medical personnel are
crewmembers, they are not considered
passengers, and that flights with only
crewmembers on board may be
conducted under part 91.16
However, the FAA notes that the
primary purpose of having medical
personnel on board helicopter air
ambulance flights is to provide medical
care to the patients being transported,
and they ‘‘cannot be expected to
meaningfully participate in the
decision-making process to enhance
flight safety or to significantly
contribute to operational control of the
flight.’’ 17 Accordingly, the FAA believes
these individuals should be afforded the
same safety protections of part 135 as
those given to patients on board
helicopter air ambulance flights.
Air ambulance accidents have
occurred during all phases of flight. The
NTSB found that 35 of the 55 accidents
it studied for its Special Investigation
Report occurred during part 91
operations with medical personnel, but
no patient, on board.18 The NTSB cited
two examples of fatal accidents that may
have been prevented if the operations
had been conducted according to the
weather minima contained in the part
135 operations specifications issued to
certificate holders conducting helicopter
air ambulance operations in effect at the
time of the investigation. The first
accident, which took place in Salt Lake
City, UT, in 2003, involved a helicopter
air ambulance that crashed into terrain
when weather conditions were below
part 135 minima. The other accident
occurred in Redwood Valley, CA, when
a helicopter air ambulance crashed into
mountainous terrain during high winds
and heavy rain. The NTSB concluded
16 Order
8900.1, vol. 4, chapter 5, section 4.
Special Investigation Report on
Emergency Medical Services Operations (2006).
18 NTSB, Special Investigation Report on
Emergency Medical Services Operations (2006).
17 NTSB,
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that air ambulance operations would be
improved if required to operate under
the part 135 operating rules and that the
minimal contribution of medical
personnel to the safe operation of air
ambulance flights is not sufficient to
justify operating under the less-stringent
part 91 requirements. Those accidents
formed the basis for the NTSB Safety
Recommendation A–06–12 that the FAA
should require all air ambulance
operators to comply with part 135
operations specifications while
conducting flights with medical
personnel on board. This proposal
would implement that recommendation
for helicopter air ambulance operators.
The major differences between
operations conducted under part 91 and
part 135 are the applicable weather
minima and flightcrew rest
requirements. The FAA acknowledges
that these more stringent requirements
may result in operators turning down air
ambulance flights that would meet part
91 weather requirements but not part
135 weather requirements, or if the
flight would put a flightcrew member
over the maximum daily hours of flight
time. Helicopter air ambulance
operations are a form of air
transportation, and the improvements in
air transportation safety that would
result from this proposal justifies the
more stringent part 135 requirement.
This proposal should not require
helicopter air ambulance certificate
holders to make major operational
changes because their operations
generally include a part 135 leg on each
flight. Nevertheless, the FAA calls for
comments on measures that it could
take to address this proposed rule’s
impact on the availability of air
ambulance services.
The FAA is proposing in § 135.601 to
define the term ‘‘helicopter air
ambulance operation’’ to clarify that
helicopter air ambulance operations
include more than just patient-transport
legs. The definition would establish that
any flight, including a positioning or
repositioning flight, conducted for the
purpose of transportation of patients or
donor organs is a helicopter air
ambulance flight, and clarify, through a
non-exclusive list, the types of
operations considered to be helicopter
air ambulance operations. For example,
a flight initiated for patient transport but
terminated before patient pick up would
be considered a helicopter air
ambulance operation. However,
maintenance, service flights for
refueling, or training flights could still
be conducted under part 91 when no
medical personnel are on board.
The FAA also is proposing to define
the term ‘‘medical personnel’’ in
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§ 135.601 with language based on that
found in AC 135–14A, with
modifications. Unlike AC 135–14A, the
proposed definition does not address
the types of duties performed by
medical personnel on the helicopter
other than providing medical care. The
proposal would not preclude medical
personnel from participating in or
assisting the pilot with certain duties
(for example, reading checklists, tuning
radios, and securing doors) as long as
the individuals have been trained by the
certificate holder in accordance with its
FAA-approved training program.
Additionally, the FAA notes that such
medical personnel would not be
considered to be performing safetysensitive functions under 14 CFR part
120 Industry Drug and Alcohol Testing
Program, and would therefore not be
required to undergo drug testing.
Certificate holders would be required
to comply with this provision by the
effective date of the final rule.
b. Operations Control Centers
(§ 135.617)
The FAA is proposing to add
§ 135.617 to require certificate holders
with 10 or more helicopters engaged in
helicopter air ambulance operations to
establish operations control centers.
Certificate holders would be required to
staff these operations control centers
with operations control specialists
trained and equipped to communicate
with pilots, advise pilots of weather
conditions, and monitor the progress of
each flight. Each certificate holder
covered by this requirement would be
responsible for establishing its own
individual operations control center.
Each certificate holder would be
required to provide enough operations
control specialists at each operations
control center to ensure proper
operational control of each flight.
FAA regulations currently do not
require helicopter air ambulance
operators to have an operations control
center. In 2008, the FAA issued AC
120–96, which provides
recommendations to assist helicopter air
ambulance operators with the
development, implementation, and
integration of an operations control
center, and enhanced operational
control procedures similar to those
found in part 121. Members of the
helicopter air ambulance industry have
noted that the AC is a ‘‘product of a
survey of best practices in the air
medical industry and gives guidance to
other air medical services as to the
benefits of this type of operation.’’ 19 In
19 Statement from the Association of Air Medical
Services, Helicopter Association International, and
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developing this proposal, the FAA
sought to standardize operations control
centers by codifying the concepts of AC
120–96 into a framework appropriate for
helicopter air ambulance operations.
The FAA notes that a January 2009 FAA
survey of inspectors with oversight of
helicopter air ambulance operations
showed that 89 percent of helicopter air
ambulance operators have voluntarily
established some type of operations
control center.
The NTSB, in its 2006 Special
Investigation Report on Emergency
Medical Services Operations, identified
the following four fatal accidents, which
may have been prevented if formalized
dispatch and flight-monitoring
procedures had been in place.20
(1) In a 2004 Pyote, TX, accident in
which a helicopter air ambulance
transporting a patient crashed into
terrain while maneuvering in reducedvisibility conditions, the pilot was not
aware of expected thunderstorm activity
in the area because he did not obtain a
weather briefing before departure.
(2) In the 2003 Salt Lake City, UT,
accident in which a helicopter air
ambulance crashed into terrain when
weather conditions were below part 135
minima, the operator’s dispatcher
encouraged the pilot to accept the flight
in spite of the fact that another company
had refused it because of low visibility
conditions. The NTSB stated that a
flight dispatcher with specific
knowledge of flight requirements would
likely have been able to more fully
comprehend the importance of the other
company’s refusal, independently
gathered and correctly interpreted
pertinent weather information from all
available sources, and provided
appropriate advice to the pilot.
(3) In a 2004 accident in Newberry,
SC, a helicopter air ambulance collided
with trees in poor weather conditions.
Three flightcrews had declined the
mission based on their awareness of
unsafe weather conditions, specifically
the presence of fog. A 911 dispatcher
that communicated with the pilot did
not inform the pilot that the other three
flightcrews had declined the mission
because of fog.
(4) A helicopter air ambulance that
crashed into mountainous terrain in
2004 in Battle Mountain, NV, was not
reported overdue until approximately
four hours after its departure. The flight
crossed from one county to another, and
911 dispatch centers from the two
Air Medical Operators Association to the NTSB 14
(Jan. 13, 2009), available at https://www.ntsb.gov/
Dockets/Aviation/DCA09SH001/default.htm.
20 NTSB, Special Investigation Report on
Emergency Medical Services Operations (NTSB/
SIR–06/01) 7 (Jan. 25, 2006).
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counties were not required to
communicate with each other directly.
Responsibility for initiating
communications when crossing into
another county dispatch center was
placed on the pilot. Because the aircraft
was not reported missing in a timely
manner, the opportunity for potentially
life-saving search and rescue operations
was lost.
The NTSB concluded that
‘‘[f]ormalized dispatch and flightmonitoring procedures, including a
dedicated dispatcher with aviationspecific knowledge and experience,
would enhance the safety of emergency
medical services flight operations by
providing the pilot with consistent and
critical weather information, assisting in
go/no go decisions, and monitoring the
flight’s position.’’ This resulted in NTSB
Safety Recommendation A–06–14 that
air ambulance operators be required to
‘‘use formalized dispatch and flightfollowing procedures that include up-todate weather information and assistance
in flight risk assessment decisions.’’ This
proposal would address that safety
recommendation.
This proposed regulation, which
would also partially address NTSB
Safety Recommendation A–09–89
regarding the implementation of sound
risk management practices, could
contribute to a certificate holder’s
overall safety program because it would
be a method of incorporating risk
management practices into a company’s
flight operations. In particular, an
operations control specialist would
provide additional input on proposed
operations and be able to monitor
flights, potentially helping pilots avoid
dangerous situations.
Under this proposal, operations
control specialists would perform the
following functions: (1) Maintain twoway communications with pilots; 21 (2)
provide pilots with weather information
to include current and forecasted
weather along the planned route of
flight; (3) monitor the flight progress;
and (4) participate in pre-flight risk
analysis.22 This proposal is intended to
provide an additional measure to help
prevent CFIT, loss of control,
inadvertent flight into IMC, and
accidents at night.
The FAA is proposing to require
certificate holders with 10 or more air
ambulance helicopters to establish
21 The FAA notes that this proposal is not
intended to limit two-way communication between
the operations control specialist and the pilot to
traditional two-way radio communication. Rather,
other means of communication, such as satellite
phone or data link, also would be acceptable.
22 See section III.A.1.d. of the preamble to this
NPRM.
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operations control centers for several
reasons. The FAA’s analysis of current
helicopter air ambulance operators
shows that the vast majority of
operations are conducted by operators
with these larger fleets. The FAA’s
review of operations specifications
issued to the 74 certificate holders
authorized to conduct helicopter air
ambulance operations shows that, as of
February 2009, there were 24 certificate
holders with 10 or more helicopters in
their fleets. Those certificate holders
operated 620 of the 884 total helicopters
in helicopter air ambulance operations.
Additionally, the level of operational
complexity and management detail
required for safe operations is greater for
certificate holders with 10 or more
helicopter air ambulances.
Although certificate holders with nine
or fewer helicopter air ambulances are
not covered by this provision, the FAA
finds that the pre-flight risk analysis
requirement proposed under § 135.615
may provide a sufficient alternative for
these operators because of their limited
scope of operations.23
The FAA requests comments on
whether the requirement should be
dependent on fleet size or number of
operations conducted. The agency asks
that comments be accompanied by data
regarding the number of operations
conducted by helicopter air ambulances
and/or the typical number of hours
flown per aircraft.
The FAA is proposing in § 135.617 to
require the staffing of operations control
centers with operations control
specialists, rather than certificated
aircraft dispatchers.24 The training
program associated with FAAcertificated aircraft dispatcher licensing
is primarily focused on large, fixedwing, transport category aircraft
operating under part 121. While aspects
of this training, such as weather
information and radio communication,
are relevant to helicopter operations,
this proposal is designed to permit
certificate holders to create training
programs directly applicable to
helicopter air ambulance operations.
Accordingly, the FAA sought to
incorporate the more general elements
of part 65-certificated aircraft dispatcher
training into the proposed requirements
for training operations control
specialists. Although the FAA is not
proposing to require formal certification
of operations control specialists, it may
consider formal FAA certification of
23 See section III.A.1.d. of the preamble to this
NPRM.
24 Aircraft dispatchers, certificated under part 65,
generally are employed by part 121 air carriers and
specialize in scheduled air carrier transportation.
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these individuals in the future if
appropriate.
The FAA notes that certificate holders
could be subject to enforcement action
for using inadequately trained
operations control specialists, or may be
responsible for errors committed by an
operations control specialist. Likewise,
an operations control specialist also
could be subject to enforcement action
or civil penalties if he or she failed a
drug test, functioned as an operations
control specialist without completing
training or passing examinations, or
verified false entries on a pre-flight
analysis worksheet.
Certificate holders may want to hire
certificated aircraft dispatchers, or
others with general aviation or weather
knowledge, to serve as operations
control specialists. This proposal would
allow a certificate holder to offer
individuals with recent, relevant
experience an initial training course that
features a reduced number of hours of
initial training, focusing on the
certificate holder-specific training topics
addressed below. A reduced training
program would be permissible because
of the knowledge these individuals have
obtained through training for other
positions that is applicable to the
operations control specialist position.
This benefit would be extended to the
following persons with specific
aviation-related training—(1) Military
pilots, flight navigators, and
meteorologists; (2) civilian pilots, flight
engineers, meteorologists, air traffic
controllers, and flight service specialists
involved in air carrier operations; and
(3) certificated aircraft dispatchers
involved in part 121 operations. This
provision is similar to 14 CFR 65.57,
which permits individuals who have
not graduated from an aircraft
dispatcher school, but who have
relevant aviation experience, to apply
for an aircraft dispatcher certificate.
In addition, with respect to the preflight risk analysis that would be
required under this proposal for all
helicopter air ambulance operations,25
the operations control specialist would
ensure that the pilot completed the preflight risk analysis worksheet, confirm
and verify the entries on the worksheet,
and work with the pilot to mitigate any
identified risk. The operations control
specialist, along with the pilot in
command, would be required to
acknowledge in writing (by signing,
initialing, or another method as defined
in the certificate holder’s operations
manual) that the worksheet had been
completed accurately. The FAA believes
that the operations control specialist’s
25 Id.
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review of the risk assessment will
provide an additional measure of safety
to helicopter air ambulance flights. By
signing the worksheet, the operations
control specialist will be indicating that
he or she agrees with the level of risk
associated with that flight.
Operations control specialists would
be performing safety-sensitive functions
such as providing pre-flight weather
assessment, assisting with fuel
planning, alternate airport weather
minima, and communicating with pilots
regarding operational concerns during
flight. These duties are similar to those
of an aircraft dispatcher, and therefore,
operations control specialists would be
subject to the restrictions on drug and
alcohol use, and to a certificate holder’s
drug and alcohol testing program as
described in 14 CFR part 120.
To ensure operations control
specialists are capable of performing
safety-sensitive functions, § 135.617
would require certificate holders to
establish and implement an FAAapproved initial and recurrent training
and testing program for operations
control specialists. Operations control
specialists would be required to
undergo training and testing on—
(1) General aviation topics such as
weather, navigation, flight-monitoring
procedures, air traffic control
procedures, aircraft systems, and aircraft
limitations and performance; and (2)
topics specific to each certificate holder,
such as aviation regulations and
operations specifications, crew resource
management, and the local flying area.
Initial training would address both the
general aviation and certificate holderspecific topics. Recurrent training
would focus on certificate holderspecific topics. The FAA believes that
the certificate holder-specific topics are
more likely to change from year to year
than the more general topics, justifying
a more frequent rate of testing.
An individual would need to receive
initial training and pass an FAAapproved written and practical test
developed and given by the certificate
holder before performing duties as an
operations control specialist. An
individual would not be able to
continue as an operations control
specialist unless he or she completed
annual recurrent training and passed a
written and practical test given by the
certificate holder. The certificate holder
would be responsible for maintaining
records of the training and tests given to
each operations control specialist for the
duration of that individual’s
employment and for 90 days thereafter.
This proposal also would establish
daily duty periods for operations control
specialists which are based on the part
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121 aircraft dispatcher duty time
requirement. A certificate holder could
schedule an operations control
specialist for a maximum of 10
consecutive hours of duty. If an
operations control specialist’s duty time
exceeds 10 hours in a 24-hour period,
then the certificate holder would be
required to provide at least 8 hours of
rest before that individual’s next duty
period. Such a circumstance may occur
if a flight monitored by the operations
control specialist is not complete until
after the end of his or her scheduled 10hour duty period. The operations
control specialist would be required to
remain on duty until each flight he or
she is monitoring is complete, until
those flights have left the operations
control specialist’s jurisdiction, or until
relieved by another operations control
specialist. The certificate holder must
provide adequate time at the beginning
of a shift to allow the operations control
specialist to become familiar with
current and expected weather
conditions for the area of operations.
The certificate holder must also
establish a checklist of the subjects to be
discussed during shift changes. The
checklist should contain subjects such
as current and forecasted weather,
helicopter maintenance status,
helicopter operations in progress, and
other relevant information. In addition
to duty time limitations, this proposal
would require that every 7 consecutive
days, an operations control specialist be
provided 24 consecutive hours of rest.
This requirement would take effect 2
years after the effective date of the final
rule. The FAA believes that this would
provide certificate holders with ample
time to establish operations control
centers, develop training and testing
programs, and to hire and provide the
estimated 80 hours of training required
of operations control specialists.
Although not specifically proposed
here, the FAA seeks comment on
whether to require operations control
specialists to obtain a certificate of
demonstrated proficiency from the FAA.
The FAA is considering this
requirement because it would enable the
agency to suspend or revoke an
operations control specialist’s certificate
of demonstrated proficiency, thereby
ensuring that person could not continue
to hold the operations control specialist
position if his or her actions merited
such a response. Individuals would not
be permitted to serve as an operations
control specialist without obtaining a
certificate of demonstrated proficiency.
It the FAA were to adopt this
approach, the agency anticipates that it
would issue a certificate of
demonstrated proficiency to an
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individual upon notification by a
certificate holder that the individual has
successfully completed the certificate
holder’s FAA-approved initial training
and testing requirements. Anticipating
that there may be a period of time
between notification and issuance of a
certificate of demonstrated proficiency,
the FAA would permit a person to serve
as an operations control specialist from
the date the certificate holder notifies
the FAA that the person has met the
training and testing requirements.
Certificates of demonstrated
proficiency would be valid for the
length of time that an operations control
specialist works for a certificate holder.
If a certificated operations control
specialist were to leave one certificate
holder to work for another, he or she
would need to obtain a new certificate
following completion of the new
employer’s training and testing program.
In the full Regulatory Evaluation in
the public docket for this rulemaking,
the FAA estimates that the proposed
requirement for certificate holders with
10 or more helicopters engaged in
helicopter air ambulance operations to
establish operations control centers
could cost $97 million or $60 million
present value to implement over 10
years. The FAA specifically requests
comments, accompanied by data, on the
accuracy of this cost estimate. In
addition, the agency requests comments
on how effective this requirement
would be in preventing accidents, as
well as suggested alternatives for
achieving comparable safety benefits.
c. VFR/IFR Procedures
The FAA is proposing a series of
operational initiatives to increase the
safety of helicopter air ambulance
operations. Specifically, the FAA is
proposing to—(1) Increase VFR weather
minima, (2) allow IFR operations at
locations without weather reporting,
(3) specify procedures for VFR/visual
transitions from instrument approaches,
and (4) require additional VFR flight
planning. These proposals are intended
to reduce accidents due to CFIT,
obstacle collisions, accidents during
night operations, and accidents
resulting from inadvertent flight into
IMC by prescribing more stringent VFR
requirements and providing more
opportunity for IFR operations. These
rules are proposed only for helicopter
air ambulance operations because of the
unique environment in which those
operations are conducted, including offairport or heliport landings and
potentially time-sensitive operations.
The FAA notes that these proposals
address recommendations made by the
Part 125/135 ARC.
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The FAA believes that the following
accident is indicative of the type that
this section of the proposal is intended
to prevent. On January 11, 1998, a Bell
222UT, operating under part 135 with
no filed flight plan and originating near
Sandy, UT, encountered inadvertent
IMC due to extremely poor weather.
Shortly after take off, the helicopter
collided with mountainous terrain
resulting in fatal injuries to all on board.
The NTSB cited the cause of the
accident as the pilot’s failure to
‘‘maintain sufficient clearance or
altitude from mountainous terrain,’’ and
continuing into known adverse weather.
NTSB Accident Report FTW98FA093
(Oct. 30, 1998).
The FAA proposes for these
provisions to take effect at the effective
date of the final rule.
i. Increase VFR Weather Minima
(§ 135.607)
The FAA is proposing to add
§ 135.607 to prescribe more stringent
VFR weather minima for helicopter air
ambulance operations in uncontrolled
airspace than those currently
established in part 135.
Currently, § 135.205 requires visibility
of at least 1⁄2 statute mile during the day
and 1 statute mile at night for VFR
helicopter operations at an altitude of
1,200 feet or less above the surface in
Class G airspace. For certificate holders
conducting helicopter air ambulance
operations, Operations Specification
A021 sets forth more stringent weather
minima for VFR operations conducted
in uncontrolled airspace. This rule
would codify the weather requirements
of Operations Specification A021.
The NTSB cited in its 2006 Special
Investigation Report two examples of
fatal accidents that may have been
prevented if the operations had been
conducted according to the weather
minima contained in the part 135
helicopter air ambulance operations
specifications in effect at the time of the
investigation. The first was the 2003
Salt Lake City, UT, accident in which a
helicopter air ambulance crashed into
terrain when weather conditions were
below part 135 minima. The other
accident occurred in Redwood Valley,
CA, when a helicopter air ambulance
crashed into mountainous terrain during
high winds and heavy rain. The Safety
Board concluded that EMS operations
would be improved if all emergency
medical services were operated under
part 135. The NTSB subsequently issued
Safety Recommendation A–06–12
recommending that the FAA require all
emergency medical services operators to
comply with part 135 operations
62649
specifications while conducting flights
with medical personnel on board. This
proposal would address that safety
recommendation.
The proposed weather minima for
uncontrolled airspace are determined by
whether the flight is taking place in a
mountainous or non-mountainous area,
and whether, within those
classifications, the flight is taking place
in a certificate holder’s local flying area
or is a cross-country flight. As defined
in proposed § 135.601, a local flying
area is an area that the certificate holder
designates as one in which its pilots are
familiar with the terrain and other
obstacles. Weather minima are less
stringent in local flying areas because of
pilots’ increased familiarity with
obstacles and the operating environment
as compared with other cross-country
areas. A local flying area would be
limited to a 50-nautical mile (NM)
radius because the FAA believes that a
pilot would not be able to demonstrate
detailed knowledge of hazards such as
towers and high-altitude terrain within
a larger area. The local flying area
definition would codify the language of
Operations Specification A021 issued
on January 23, 2006.
Table 1 shows the proposed VFR
minimum altitudes and visibility
requirements.
TABLE 1—VFR MINIMUM ALTITUDES AND VISIBILITY REQUIREMENTS
Weather Minima
Location
Day
Nonmountainous local flying areas
Nonmountainous cross-country flying areas.
Mountainous local flying areas ......
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Mountainous cross-country flying
areas.
800-foot ceiling, 2 statute
visibility.
800-foot ceiling, 3 statute
visibility.
800-foot ceiling, 3 statute
visibility.
1,000-foot ceiling, 3 statute
visibility.
In all flying areas, certificate holders
conducting operations in a helicopter
equipped with an FAA-approved nightvision imaging system (NVIS) or FAAapproved HTAWS could apply lower
weather minima during night
operations. Those requirements would
be less stringent than the basic night
operations minima because of the
obstacle and CFIT avoidance benefits
obtained from those devices. An
approved NVIS would require, at
minimum, a night vision goggle (NVG)
system as defined in paragraph 1.2 of
RTCA/DO–275, Minimum Operational
Performance Standards for Integrated
Night Vision Imaging System
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miles
miles
miles
miles
1,000-foot ceiling,
visibility.
1,000-foot ceiling,
visibility.
1,500-foot ceiling,
visibility.
1,500-foot ceiling,
visibility.
3 statute miles
5 statute miles
3 statute miles
5 statute miles
Equipment, which states that the NVIS
system includes not only the NVGs
themselves, but also interior and
exterior lighting, windshield and
windows, and general crew station
design requirements. RTCA/DO–275,
paragraph 1.6.1, defines NVGs as
binocular systems. Under this proposal
the FAA does not intend to change the
term ‘‘NVIS’’ to include systems other
than NVGs. Therefore, unless equipped
with HTAWS, operators using systems
that do not meet the definition of
‘‘NVIS’’ would not be permitted to use
the NVIS weather minima in § 135.607.
Because of the requirement proposed
in § 135.605 for all helicopter air
ambulances to be equipped with
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Night using an approved
NVIS or HTAWS
Night
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800-foot ceiling, 3 statute
visibility.
1,000-foot ceiling, 3 statute
visibility.
1,000-foot ceiling, 3 statute
visibility.
1,000-foot ceiling, 5 statute
visibility.
miles
miles
miles
miles
HTAWS within 3 years of the effective
date of the final rule (discussed in
section III.A.2.a.), it is anticipated that
all certificate holders would eventually
operate under these reduced night
operations weather minima. The FAA
seeks comment on the interrelationship
of these two proposed requirements.
The FAA believes that requiring all
VFR legs of a helicopter air ambulance
operation to comply with more stringent
weather requirements would be an
effective method of increasing safety in
helicopter air ambulance operations.
The FAA does not believe that
certificate holders would need to make
significant changes to their operations
because this proposed rule would
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incorporate the operating limitations
and the weather minima already
applicable under Operations
Specification A021.
ii. IFR Operations at Airports and
Heliports Without Weather Reporting
(§ 135.609)
The FAA is proposing to add
§ 135.609 to allow helicopter air
ambulance operators to conduct IFR
operations at airports and heliports
without a weather reporting facility.
Currently, the regulations only permit
IFR operations into and out of airports
with an on-site weather reporting
source. The proposed rule would allow
certificate holders to obtain operations
specifications permitting IFR operations
into and out of locations without a
weather reporting facility if they are
able to obtain weather reports from an
approved weather reporting facility
located within 15 NM of the destination
landing area. The FAA believes that this
provision would increase the use of IFR
by helicopter air ambulance operators
and result in more aircraft operating in
a positively controlled environment,
thereby increasing safety.
The FAA has granted exemptions
from these regulations to helicopter air
ambulance operators and based this
proposal on those exemptions.26 In
Exemption No. 9490, the FAA
determined it was ‘‘safer and in the
public interest to conduct operations
under IFR rather than VFR particularly
in low and marginal weather
conditions’’ because IFR operation is an
effective method of countering CFIT
accidents. Additionally, this provision
would codify a similar provision in
Operations Specification A021 issued to
helicopter air ambulance operators.
The FAA notes that this proposal
would not relieve a pilot from the
requirement to assess the landing
conditions before descending below the
minimum descent altitude set forth in
§ 91.175. To operate in this
environment, certificate holders also
would be required to implement
additional safety measures beyond those
otherwise required for IFR flight to
ensure the pilot has the appropriate
tools to operate the helicopter safely
into locations without weather
reporting. For example, helicopters used
in these operations would have to be
equipped with an autopilot and
navigation equipment appropriate to the
26 Exemption Nos. 9490 and 9490B (Regulatory
Docket No. FAA–2006–26407); Exemption No. 9665
(Regulatory Docket No. FAA–2008–0169);
Exemption No. 6175 (Regulatory Docket No. FAA–
2001–9195) (granting authority for departures only);
Exemption No. 6175G (Regulatory Docket No. FAA–
2001–9195).
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approach to be flown, such as an IFRcertified global positioning system
(GPS) or wide area augmentation system
(WAAS) receiver. Additionally, to help
the pilot ascertain the weather in the
aircraft’s vicinity, § 135.609 would
require helicopters to be equipped with
severe weather detection equipment,
such as weather radar or lightning
detection equipment. The ‘‘navigation
equipment appropriate to the approach
to be flown’’ is necessary because, for
example, although an ILS approach at
the nearby municipal airport may
provide the lowest planning minima, if
the aircraft is equipped with only a GPS,
the lower planning minima of the ILS
are unusable.
Section 135.609 not only establishes
aircraft equipment requirements to
ensure a higher level of safety and to
mitigate the associated risk, but also
requires certain training of the
flightcrew. That training is tailored to
the operating environment and the
weather observations needed at those
locations. These equipment and training
requirements are found in the
exemptions referenced above. The FAA
believes that these additional equipment
and training requirements are necessary
to compensate for the lack of specific
weather information available at the
destination.
iii. IFR to VFR/Visual Transitions
(§ 135.611)
The FAA is proposing to add
§ 135.611 to establish weather minima
for transitions to the VFR segment of an
instrument approach.27 Pilots
conducting an IFR approach would,
upon reaching a point in space at a
minimum descent altitude, continue the
flight to the landing area under VFR if
conditions permit. This provision
would facilitate operations under IFR
with their associated safety benefits.
Proposed § 135.611(a)(1) establishes
the requirements for instrument
approaches containing the instruction to
27 The approaches permitted under IFR PinS
Copter Special Instrument Approach Procedures,
and IFR Standard and certain Special Instrument
Approach Procedures (IAPs) are developed by the
FAA using standardized methods associated with
the U.S. Standard for Terminal Instrument
Procedures (TERPs). IFR Standard and PinS Copter
Special Instrument Approach Procedures are
publicly available approaches for use by
appropriately qualified pilots operating properly
equipped and airworthy aircraft. Special IAPs
generally service private-use airports or heliports,
and the FAA authorizes only certain individual
pilots or pilots in individual organizations to use
these procedures. Special IAPs may require
additional crew training and/or aircraft equipment
or performance, and may also require the use of
landing aids, communications, or weather services
not available for public use. Instrument approach
procedures that service private use airports or
heliports are generally special IAPs.
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‘‘proceed visually’’ from the missed
approach point (MAP). For these
approaches, the weather minima
reflected on the approach chart would
apply.
For PinS Copter Special Approaches,
proposed 135.611(a)(2) would permit
operations under lower weather minima
than currently allowed for cruise flight
in uncontrolled airspace when
transitioning from IFR to a VFR segment
on approach. These approaches contain
the instruction to ‘‘proceed VFR.’’ The
applicable minima are based on the
distance from the MAP to the landing
area. The pilot would therefore need to
evaluate the proximity of the MAP to
the landing area to determine the
appropriate VFR minima, which are
based on the distance from the landing
area. Under proposed § 135.611(a)(2)(i),
the visibility must be at least 1 statute
mile if the MAP is within 1 NM of the
heliport of intended landing. To make
the transition from IFR flight to VFR
from a point in space 3 NM or less from
the destination, a pilot would need to
have 2 statute miles of visibility and a
600-foot ceiling during the day, or 3
statute miles of visibility and a 600-foot
ceiling at night in accordance with
§ 135.611(a)(3).
The FAA recognizes that the area
between the MAP and the ‘‘heliport of
intended landing’’ (i.e. the heliport
reflected on the approach chart as no
deviation to another location is
authorized in this case) has been flight
checked but may not meet the
requirements to ‘‘proceed visually.’’ The
FAA recognizes that obstacles in the
vicinity of an instrument approach are
flight-checked and marked on
instrument approach charts. Approach
charts are updated more frequently than
the sectional charts used in VFR
operations. Therefore, it is less likely
that pilots would encounter unexpected
obstacles when following an approach
documented on an instrument approach
chart than when en route using a
sectional chart.
The FAA recognizes that a helicopter
air ambulance operator may follow a
special or standard instrument approach
to a heliport or airport to descend below
weather and then transition to VFR
flight to land at another location. In that
case, the minima of § 135.611(a)(3) or
§ 135.611(a)(4) would apply, depending
on the distance to the intended landing
area, which could be an off-site location.
Lastly, if a pilot transitions from IFR
to VFR from a point in space more than
3 NM from the destination, the higher
weather minima of proposed § 135.607
would apply. The FAA selected 3 NM
because that distance is the standard
amount of visibility required for VFR
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operations in controlled airspace in the
lower altitudes.
This proposed rule also sets forth
standards for pilots departing a
destination if they used the provisions
of this section to access that location.
The same weather minima would apply
to the departure if the pilot has filed an
IFR flight plan and will obtain IFR
clearance within 3 NM of the departure
location, and if the pilot departs
following an FAA-approved obstacle
departure procedure. However it is
important to note that a pilot who
simply flies the reverse course of the
approach used when landing would not
be following an FAA-approved obstacle
departure procedure, as this procedure
has not been flight-checked to specific
departure criteria.
The FAA believes that flights
conducted under IFR obtain many safety
benefits such as obstacle clearance,
aircraft separation, and possible weather
avoidance, thereby reducing obstacle
collisions, CFIT, and wire strikes. The
proposed rule would benefit pilots by
enabling them to access more
destinations by flying within the IFR
structure, and then continuing on a VFR
segment that has been flight checked for
obstacles by the FAA. If the flight can
be continued, then the pilot would have
the benefit of operating through an area
where obstacles have been flight
checked and marked by the FAA. If the
flight cannot continue under VFR, then
the pilot must maintain IFR flight and
continue to an alternate destination
consistent with current regulations.
This proposal would implement Part
125/135 ARC recommendations. Also,
this proposal would codify the
provision of Operations Specification
A021 regarding weather minima to be
used during transitions to VFR flight
with changes pertaining to Copter
Special Instrument Approaches.
iv. VFR Flight Planning (§ 135.613)
The FAA is proposing to add
§ 135.613 to require helicopter air
ambulance pilots to perform pre-flight
planning to determine the minimum
safe altitude along the planned en route
phase of flight when conducting VFR
operations.
The FAA is proposing to require
pilots to evaluate, document, and plan
to clear terrain and obstacles along the
planned route of flight by no less than
300 feet for day operations, and 500 feet
for night operations. The pilot would
use this minimum safe cruise altitude
when determining the minimum
required ceiling and visibility for the
planned flight. If the weather minima
would not permit VFR flight at the
minimum safe cruise altitude, the pilot
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could either conduct the flight under
IFR, or not conduct the flight. Pilots
could deviate from the planned flight
path if conditions or operational
considerations necessitate a deviation.
However, during such deviations, the
pilot would not be relieved from
weather or terrain/obstruction clearance
requirements.
If changes to the planned flight occur
during flight, the pilot could continue
along the new route until reaching his
or her destination without re-planning
the flight using the requirements of
proposed § 135.613. However, upon
reaching an intermediate stop, the pilot
would have to evaluate the new route
for terrain and obstacle clearance while
the aircraft is on the ground before
departure.
This proposal is intended to prevent
obstacle collisions by requiring pilots to
be aware of the terrain and highest
obstacles along a planned route. The
proposal would codify a provision of
Operations Specification A021, issued
to all helicopter air ambulance
certificate holders, which requires the
identification and documentation of the
highest obstacle along the planned route
before VFR operations.
d. Pre-Flight Risk Analysis (§ 135.615)
The FAA is proposing to add
§ 135.615 to require certificate holders
to implement pre-flight risk-analysis
programs. The FAA believes that preflight risk analysis may prevent
accidents by mitigating risks before
flight. This proposal is intended to
provide certificate holders with the
means to assess risk and make
determinations regarding the flight’s
safety before launch.
Pre-flight risk assessment has been the
subject of FAA guidance, industry best
practices, and an NTSB study. On
August 1, 2005, the FAA published
Notice 8000.301, Operational Risk
Assessment Programs for Helicopter
Emergency Medical Services, which
provided guidance to inspectors on riskassessment programs used in helicopter
air ambulance operations. The notice
discussed concepts used in a risk
management and assessment program,
and provided examples of risk variables
that a certificate holder could consider
in the decision to launch a flight. These
variables included weather, flight
crewmember performance, operating
environment, airworthiness status of the
helicopter, and weather. The notice also
included several examples of riskassessment matrices that certificate
holders could use in their operations,
and included the concept of consulting
with management personnel if the risk
level reached a certain level. The notice
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also encouraged pilots to obtain
information pertaining to a planned
operation from a number of sources,
including mechanics, communications
specialists, and flight medical
personnel, when determining risks
associated with a flight operation.
Notably, a basic concept of a risk
assessment program articulated in the
notice is that the pilot’s authority to
decline a flight assignment is supreme,
while his or her decision to accept a
flight is subject to review if risks are
identified. The notice stated that once
the pilot has declined a flight
assignment, other parties, such as a
certificate holder’s management
personnel, should not continue the risk
assessment pertaining to that flight in an
effort to override the pilot’s decision to
decline the assignment.
On January 28, 2006, the FAA
published SAFO 06001, which
recommended that certificate holders
apply ‘‘safety attributes or risk
management/assessment strategies to
each flight.’’
In AC 120–96 (May 5, 2008), the FAA
recognized that operations control
centers provide improvements in preflight risk analysis and conceptualized
joint mission responsibility shared by
pilots and operations control centers.
This AC also provides practical
examples of pre-flight risk analyses and
how such analyses can be integrated
into helicopter air ambulance
operations. The AC discusses that
operations control specialists may assist
helicopter air ambulance pilots by
participating in risk analysis, providing
supplementary information regarding
weather, route information, and landing
zones, monitoring flight information
such as weather, and monitoring flight
progression.28
A January 2009 FAA survey of
inspectors with oversight of helicopter
air ambulance operations found that 94
percent of helicopter air ambulance
operators have some type of decisionmaking and risk-analysis programs in
place. The survey did not reveal the
extent of these decision-making and
risk-analysis programs; however, the
FAA believes that the models currently
in use incorporate government,
industry,29 and military risk-analysis
28 The FAA has issued other ACs relevant to this
topic. Advisory Circular 135–14A Emergency
Medical Services/Helicopter (EMS/H) (June 20,
1991) included guidance on ‘‘Judgment and
Decisions,’’ and Advisory Circular 120–51E Crew
Resource Management Training (Jan. 22, 2004)
discussed the importance of developing pilot-error
management skills and procedures.
29 The International Helicopter Safety Team
(IHST) and the Helicopter Association International
(HAI) have developed resources, such as IHST’s
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practices as these entities have been the
primary entities developing such
programs.
The NTSB also has addressed the
need for pre-flight risk analysis. In its
2006 Special Investigation Report on
Emergency Medical Services
Operations, the NTSB concluded, based
in part on its investigations of three fatal
helicopter air ambulance accidents, that
the ‘‘implementation of flight risk
evaluation before each mission would
enhance the safety of emergency
medical services operations.’’ 30 With
regard to the 2003 Salt Lake City, UT,
accident in which a helicopter air
ambulance crashed into terrain in poor
weather conditions, the NTSB noted
that had the pilot been required to
perform a systematic evaluation of the
flight risks (including assessments of
weather minima and route of flight), the
pilot may not have accepted the
mission. The NTSB also cited the 2004
Battle Mountain, NV, fatal accident in
which a helicopter air ambulance
transporting a patient crashed into
mountainous terrain while on a direct
route in deteriorating weather
conditions, and believed that if the pilot
had performed a risk evaluation, he may
have chosen a different route, and the
accident may have been prevented. The
NTSB also identified the 2004 Pyote,
TX, fatal accident, in which a helicopter
air ambulance transporting a patient
crashed into terrain while maneuvering
in reduced-visibility conditions and
noted that the pilot had not performed
a risk assessment.
The FAA’s proposal is intended to
provide standard guidelines for the
implementation of pre-flight risk
analysis procedures. Under the
proposal, the pilot in command of a
helicopter air ambulance would be
required to conduct a pre-flight risk
assessment before the first leg of each
helicopter air ambulance operation.
Helicopter air ambulance operations
generally consist of two legs, such as a
hospital-to-hospital transfer, or three
legs, in which the helicopter departs its
base to pick up a patient, transfers the
patient to a hospital, then returns to
base. The pre-flight analysis only would
need to be conducted before departure
on the first leg, but should be conducted
with consideration for each leg of the
operation. The pilot also would be
required to sign the completed risk
analysis worksheet, and provide the
date and time of signing. Through this
‘‘Safety Management System Toolkit,’’ to assist
operators with implementing risk-analysis
programs.
30 NTSB, Special Investigation Report on
Emergency Medical Services Operations ((NTSB/
SIR–06/01) 4 (Jan. 25, 2006).
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requirement, the FAA intends to
highlight that the pilot is responsible for
accurately completing this worksheet.
The FAA proposes to require
certificate holders to establish their risk
assessment procedures and document
them in their operations manuals. A
pre-flight risk analysis would consist of
at least the following: (1) Flight
considerations (for example, a review of
any obstructions and terrain along the
entire intended route, altitude
considerations for the area being flown,
and fuel considerations); (2) human
factors (for example, whether a pilot
may be affected by personal stress,
knowledge of the patient’s injuries (e.g.,
pediatric, or critical injury), fatigue, and
experience in the type of operation to be
conducted); (3) weather along the
intended route (for example, weather for
take off, en route, and destination
airports to include forecasts); (4)
whether another operator has refused or
rejected the flight request; and (5)
strategies for mitigating identified risk,
including obtaining and documenting
the certificate holder’s management
personnel’s approval of the decision to
accept a flight when the risks are
elevated. Certificate holders would be
permitted to add additional categories to
mitigate risks associated with their
specific operations.
As previously noted, certificate
holders would be required to develop a
method to determine whether the flight
request had been offered to another
company. This provision is intended to
combat the practice of ‘‘helicopter
shopping’’ in which a flight request
turned down by one company will be
offered to another. If another company
had been offered and refused the flight,
it is important to understand why the
flight was refused. If a flight was refused
because of weather considerations, that
information should feature prominently
in the second company’s pre-flight risk
analysis. However, if the first company
turned down the flight because its
helicopter was inoperative, then that
refusal likely would not impact the risk
assessment for the second company in
determining whether to accept the
flight. The FAA notes that the helicopter
air ambulance industry has taken steps
to address this problem, for example by
creating a Web site (https://
www.weatherturndown.com) where
companies can report when they do not
accept a flight and the basis for the
decision. Nevertheless, the FAA is
proposing a requirement to ensure that
this practice is adopted by all certificate
holders authorized to conduct
helicopter air ambulance operations.
In addition, the proposal would
require certificate holders to establish a
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procedure for obtaining and
documenting management personnel’s
decision to launch a flight when the risk
reaches a predetermined level. This
provision is designed so that pilots will
seek a second opinion regarding
whether to launch. This would be
particularly effective where the risk is
not so great that it is clear that the flight
should be refused, but rather when it is
at a level where a pilot may be unsure
about the flight’s safety, and the pilot
may feel personal pressure to perform
the flight and perhaps save a life despite
the identified risks. The FAA
emphasizes the basic concept
articulated in Notice 8000.301 that risk
analysis forms should not be used by a
certificate holder’s management
personnel, or others within an
organization, to override a pilot’s
decision to decline a flight assignment.
The FAA’s proposal also would
require certificate holders to retain the
original or a copy of completed preflight risk analysis worksheets for at
least 90 days from the date of the
operation. Certificate holders would be
permitted to determine where the
completed worksheets will be kept, but
the procedures for collecting the
worksheets and maintaining the records
would need to be outlined in certificate
holders’ operations manuals.
The FAA notes that this proposal
would respond to NTSB Safety
Recommendation A–06–13 in which the
NTSB recommended that the FAA
require helicopter air ambulance
operators ‘‘to develop and implement
flight risk evaluation programs that
include training all employees involved
in the operation, procedures that
support the systematic evaluation of
flight risks, and consultation with others
in EMS flight operations if the risks
reach a predefined level.’’ This proposal
also may contribute to a certificate
holder’s overall safety program because
a pre-flight risk assessment would be a
method of incorporating proactive safety
methods into a company’s flight
operations. Accordingly, this proposal
also would partially address NTSB
Safety Recommendation A–09–89
regarding the implementation of sound
risk management practices.
Certificate holders would be required
to comply with this provision by the
effective date of the final rule.
e. Medical Personnel Pre-Flight Briefing
(§ 135.619)
The FAA is proposing to add
§ 135.619 to require that medical
personnel on board a helicopter air
ambulance flight receive a supplemental
pre-flight safety briefing with
information specific to helicopter air
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ambulance flights. This information
would be in addition to the passenger
briefing currently required under part
135. As an alternative to the proposed
pre-flight safety briefing, certificate
holders would be permitted to provide
training every 2 years to medical
personnel through an FAA-approved
training program. This proposal would
positively affect the safety of operations
because as a result of an increased
familiarity with the aircraft and
emergency procedures, medical
personnel would be less likely to
inadvertently introduce risk to the
operation when outfitting the passenger
compartment the purpose of providing
medical treatment and when providing
medical care to a patient.
The following accidents exemplify the
types of accidents that this proposal is
intended to prevent.
On November 9, 2004, the pilot of a
Bell 206L1 helicopter, operated under
part 91 near Tulsa, OK, lost control
during cruise flight and crashed causing
substantial damage to the helicopter.
The pilot stated that the medical
personnel added two oxygen tanks in
the cargo area before takeoff. The
oxygen tanks were stacked and reached
approximately the same height as the
cargo area’s latch release. The NTSB
noted the accident was caused by the
loss of tail rotor drive as a result of a
blanket coming in contact with the tail
rotor blades after the baggage
compartment door unlatched during
flight. NTSB Accident Report
DFW05LA019 (Feb. 24, 2005).
On March 6, 2003, a pilot operating a
Bell 206L–3 under part 91 lost control
of the helicopter. No injuries were
sustained by the flightcrew or medical
personnel on board. Before takeoff to
pick up a patient in Llano, TX, medical
personnel opened and closed the aft
cargo compartment. The NTSB noted
that the accident was caused by a
blanket from the aft cargo compartment
that entered into the tail rotor blades
causing the pilot’s loss of control. The
NTSB determined that the aft cargo
compartment lock was fully operational,
and a contributing cause of the accident
was medical personnel improperly
securing this compartment. NTSB
Accident Report FTW03LA104 (Aug. 26,
2003).
Under the proposal, certificate
holders would be required to brief
medical personnel before flight on
specific topics including the
physiological aspects of flight (how
flight affects the human body), patient
loading and unloading, safety in and
around the aircraft, and emergency
procedures. This briefing would
supplement the passenger briefing
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requirements found in § 135.117(a) and
(b). The FAA believes that an additional
safety briefing is warranted because of
the unique role of medical personnel on
helicopter air ambulance flights, which
may include working around an
operating helicopter, patient loading
and unloading, and providing medical
care within a compact, moving, vehicle.
The FAA would permit the briefing to
be provided once per shift for medical
personnel assigned to a helicopter air
ambulance base.
The FAA is proposing to allow
certificate holders the option to provide
safety training to medical personnel in
lieu of the pre-flight briefing. Training
topics would include the same topics
addressed in the proposed pre-flight
safety briefing. The FAA believes that it
would be advantageous to certificate
holders to implement medical personnel
training programs. Training programs
would help ensure that medical
personnel serving on board their
helicopters have enhanced knowledge
of the required training topics and a
greater familiarity with the aircraft than
those who receive only the pre-flight
briefing. The FAA anticipates that
certificate holders who fly with a
consistent group of medical personnel
would take advantage of this provision
to expedite operations. The proposal
would require that the certificate
holder’s training program be approved
by the FAA, and that medical personnel
receive training every 24 months. The
training program would include a
minimum of 4 hours of ground training
and 4 hours of training in and around
a helicopter air ambulance. In the event
some medical personnel on board a
helicopter air ambulance flight have
received this training, but others have
not, the pilot in command would be
required to provide the proposed
supplemental pre-flight safety briefing.
The FAA notes that these provisions
incorporate aspects of agency guidance
in AC 135–14A, Emergency Medical
Services/Helicopter, which includes
suggested training for medical personnel
in aviation terminology, use of medical
equipment in the aircraft, physiological
aspects of flight, and patient loading
and unloading. This proposal also
incorporates aspects of AC 00–64,
including human factors, training,
encouraging communications, and
promoting standard operating
procedures.
Under the proposal, the FAA would
require the certificate holder to
document the training it provides to
each individual who serves as medical
personnel, and maintain a record of that
training for 26 calendar months
following the individual’s completion of
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training. This record would include the
individual’s name, the most recent date
that training was completed, and a
description, copy, or reference to the
training materials used. The FAA is
proposing this period of time because
the training provided to medical
personnel would expire after 24 months,
and the additional 60-day period would
ensure that the records would be
available for review by the FAA after the
training had expired, if necessary.
Certificate holders would be required
to comply with this provision by the
effective date of the final rule.
2. Equipment Requirements
a. Helicopter Terrain Awareness and
Warning Systems (HTAWS) (§ 135.605)
The FAA is proposing to add
§ 135.605(a) to require that all
helicopters used in air ambulance
operations be equipped with HTAWS.
The FAA believes that HTAWS would
assist helicopter air ambulance pilots in
maintaining situational awareness of
surrounding terrain and obstacles, and
therefore help prevent accidents caused
by CFIT, loss of control, inadvertent
flight into IMC, and night operations.
HTAWS has particular relevance to
helicopter air ambulance operations,
which often are conducted at night and
into unimproved landing sites.
HTAWS 31 is a helicopter-specific
application of TAWS technology. TAWS
technology originally was developed for
airplanes and is required on turbinepowered airplanes configured with six
or more passenger seats used in part 135
operations. In 2005, the FAA
recommended that helicopter air
ambulance operators consider using
TAWS for night operations when
conditions and mission dictate.32
However, TAWS technology presents
operational difficulties, such as
nuisance warnings, when used in
helicopters. HTAWS takes into account
that helicopters generally do not fly as
fast as airplanes and typically operate
closer to the ground in hazard-rich
environments. HTAWS assesses the
aircraft’s position over a smaller area of
terrain than TAWS to prevent warnings
to pilots of terrain or obstacles that do
not immediately pose a hazard. The
FAA believes that the decrease in
nuisance warnings with HTAWS
increases the usefulness of the
equipment. It is because of these
31 HTAWS uses its position sources to determine
a helicopter’s horizontal and vertical position and
compare it to surrounding terrain. HTAWS derives
a helicopter’s ground speed, position, and altitude
from a global positioning system (GPS) and a preprogrammed algorithm database installed and
maintained by the HTAWS manufacturer.
32 Notice 8000.293.
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significant differences that the FAA is
proposing to require certificate holders
to install HTAWS and would not accept
TAWS designed for an airplane as an
alternate means of compliance.
In 2006, RTCA, Inc. established a
special committee that developed
RTCA/DO–309, Minimum Operational
Performance Standards (MOPS) for
Helicopter Terrain Awareness and
Warning System (HTAWS) Airborne
Equipment. The FAA subsequently
issued TSO–C194, which sets out the
minimum performance standards for
HTAWS. A survey of FAA inspectors
revealed that 41 percent of certificated
helicopter air ambulance operators have
started equipping their helicopter fleets
with TAWS. However, the FAA did not
ask in its survey whether these devices
were compliant with TSOs for TAWS
(TSO–C151, Terrain Awareness and
Warning System) or HTAWS (TSO–
C194). The FAA recognizes that some
certificate holders voluntarily equipped
their helicopters with TAWS, or other
TAWS-like devices, that may not meet
the standards of TSO–C194 for HTAWS.
Nevertheless, the FAA is proposing that
these certificate holders equip their
helicopter air ambulances with HTAWS
because of the differences between
TAWS and HTAWS. The FAA proposes
to incorporate the standards articulated
in TSO–C194 by reference in
§ 135.605(a).
The FAA believes the following
accident is illustrative of the type of
accident that may be prevented if
helicopters are equipped with HTAWS.
On March 21, 2002, a Eurocopter AS–
350B helicopter, returning to its base in
Susanville, California, collided with the
surface of a lake. The pilot became
disoriented as they flew over the ‘‘glassy
smooth’’ water, and subsequently
descended ‘‘within 20 to 50 feet of the
lake surface’’ and eventually struck the
lake surface causing fatal injuries to the
pilot and serious injuries to the medical
personnel. The NTSB determined that
the causal effect of the accident was the
pilot’s failure ‘‘to maintain sufficient
altitude/clearance above the water while
performing a low altitude flight.’’ The
NTSB also cited as contributing factors
the ‘‘the glassy water conditions, and
lack of visual cues concerning
perception of altitude.’’ See NTSB
Accident Report LAX02FA114 (Apr. 28,
2004).
In its January 25, 2006, Special
Investigation Report on Emergency
Medical Services Operations, the NTSB
stated that the ‘‘use of terrain awareness
and warnings systems would enhance
the safety of emergency medical services
flight operations by helping to prevent
controlled flight into terrain accidents
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that occur at night or during adverse
weather conditions.’’ 33 The NTSB cited
the 2004 Pyote, TX, fatal accident in
which a helicopter air ambulance
transporting a patient crashed into
terrain while maneuvering in reducedvisibility conditions. The NTSB stated
that if ‘‘a TAWS had been installed and
appropriately set to a minimum safe
altitude setting, the pilots would have
received ample warning during their
respective aircraft’s gradual descent into
terrain * * *.’’ The FAA notes that this
proposal addresses NTSB Safety
Recommendation A–06–15, which
called on the FAA to require helicopter
air ambulance operators ‘‘to install
terrain awareness and warning systems
on their aircraft and to provide adequate
training to ensure that flight crews are
capable of using the systems to safely
conduct EMS operations.’’ 34
The FAA notes that other
organizations recognize the value of
HTAWS. The Flight Safety Foundation
found that HTAWS could address riskassociated low-level VFR operations,
especially at night.35 The Air Medical
Physician Association noted that a team
organized to study helicopter air
ambulance accidents determined that
TAWS could be a highly effective
accident intervention strategy.36 The
team made its determinations by
reviewing the technical, financial,
regulatory, and operational feasibility of
its proposed interventions.
Under the proposal, the FAA would
give certificate holders 3 years from the
effective date of the final rule to install
HTAWS that meets the standards of
TSO–C194. The FAA believes 3 years
will provide ample time for the
manufacture of an adequate supply of
HTAWS units and for these units to be
incorporated into helicopters. In
addition, a 3-year compliance period
will permit certificate holders to spread
out the cost of compliance over that
period of time.
The FAA notes that it considered
allowing certificate holders to use NVGs
in lieu of HTAWS. However, the FAA
has decided against such a proposal
because NVGs may not be appropriate
for all operations (for example,
inadvertent flight into IMC), and
additional time is needed to research
the best use of the equipment before
allowing it to be used as an alternate
method of compliance. The FAA also
33 NTSB/SIR–06/01,
p. 11.
34 Id.
35 Flight Safety Foundation, Helicopter
Emergency Medical Services (HEMS) Industry Risk
Profile 43 (2009).
36 Air Medical Physician Association, A Safety
Review and Risk Assessment in Air Medical
Transport 15–17 (2002).
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considered requiring all commercial
helicopters to be equipped with
HTAWS; however, the agency believes
the greatest benefit would be realized by
helicopter air ambulance operators
because a much greater percentage of
their operations are conducted at night
and in off-airway routing, and involve
unimproved and unfamiliar landing
areas.
The FAA seeks comments on the
proposed requirement to install
HTAWS, the proposed implementation
date, and possible alternatives to this
provision. Comments should be
accompanied by appropriate supporting
documentation, data, and analysis.
b. Light-Weight Aircraft Recording
System (LARS)
The FAA is considering requiring
certificate holders conducting helicopter
air ambulance operations to install a
light-weight aircraft recording system
(LARS) in their helicopters. The FAA
would target this proposal towards the
helicopter air ambulance industry
because of the number of accidents
experienced by this segment of the
commercial helicopter industry. As
discussed earlier in this NPRM, between
1994 and 2008 helicopter air
ambulances suffered a greater amount of
accidents as compared with other
commercial helicopters.
LARS comprises a system or
combination of systems which record a
helicopter’s flight performance and
operational data. The FAA is
considering requiring the installation of
LARS in order to provide critical
information to investigators in the event
of an accident. The FAA anticipates
providing 3 years to allow sufficient
time to procure and install LARS.
Flight data recording devices are not
widely used in the commercial
helicopter air ambulance industry.
Responses to FAA Notice 8900.63,
Validation of HEMS Safety Initiatives,
issued January 12, 2009, indicated that
approximately 89 percent of existing
helicopter air ambulance certificate
holders have not equipped with a flight
data recorder (FDR) system or an ‘‘FDRlike system.’’ The FAA believes that
LARS can be used to assist accident
investigations, as well as to promote
operational safety, and that an equipage
requirement may be warranted due to
the small number of certificate holders
that are using such devices.
Currently, § 135.151 requires a
cockpit voice recorder (CVR) system in
rotorcraft with a passenger seating
configuration of six or more seats and
for which two pilots are required by
certification or operating rules. In
addition, § 135.152 requires FDRs in
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rotorcraft with a passenger seating
configuration of 10 or more seats. Most
helicopters used in air ambulance
operations are configured with fewer
than six seats and, therefore, are not
equipped with CVRs or FDRs. The FAA
would require installation of LARS for
all helicopter air ambulances regardless
of passenger seating capacity or the
number of pilots required by
certification or operating rules, unless a
certificate holder could demonstrate
that a CVR or FDR could be used to
comply with any requirements. The
FAA notes that § 135.152(k) excepts
certain helicopters manufactured before
August 18, 1997, from the FDR
requirements of § 135.152. Nevertheless,
if such helicopters are used in air
ambulance operations, certificate
holders would be required to equip
those helicopters with LARS.
The FAA notes that NTSB Safety
Recommendation A–06–17
recommended requiring all transportcategory rotorcraft operating under part
91 or part 135 to be equipped with CVRs
and FDRs. The FAA is not proposing to
require traditional CVRs or FDRs in
helicopter air ambulances, as required
for other aircraft because of the cost and
the weight of such equipment. CVR and
FDR installation is a complex process
that includes invasive access and
modifications to install necessary
sensors and wiring. The costs of a
supplemental type certificate (STC) and
the CVR and the FDR equipment could
prove to be prohibitive for this
application. In addition, helicopter air
ambulances tend to be smaller than
aircraft for which CVRs and FDRs are
required, and available space and
weight allotted for personnel and
medical equipment are at a premium.
An FAA review of Operations Safety
System (OPSS) data showed that more
than 70 percent of the helicopters listed
on helicopter air ambulance operators’
certificates weigh less than 6,000
pounds. A combination CVR and FDR is
estimated to weigh up to 10 pounds
compared with LARS that may weigh
less than 1 pound to 5 pounds.
Therefore, the FAA believes the weight
of a CVR and an FDR would have a
greater adverse impact on a helicopter
air ambulance operator’s ability to
provide medical care to a patient and on
the performance characteristics of a
smaller helicopter than LARS.
LARS would be required to capture
data according to a broadly defined set
of parameters including information
pertaining to the aircraft’s state (such as
heading, altitude, and attitude),
condition (such as rotors, transmission,
engine parameters, and flight controls),
and system performance (such as full
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authority digital engine control, and
electronic flight instrumentation
system). The FAA is considering
requiring operation of a helicopter’s
LARS from the application of electrical
power before take-off until the removal
of electrical power after termination of
flight. LARS would have to receive
electrical power from the helicopter’s
bus that provides the maximum
reliability for operation without
jeopardizing service to essential or
emergency loads.
Requiring these devices to capture a
comprehensive set of parameters, such
as those in place for FDRs, see 14 CFR
135.152, would significantly increase
the cost of these units. The FAA
estimates that LARS cost $6,450, plus
installation and software to obtain data
from the unit. The FAA believes that
this requirement could be broadly and
quickly implemented by the helicopter
air ambulance industry in part because
of the relatively low cost of these
devices.
The FAA acknowledges that LARS
does not have the same crash
survivability as CVRs and FDRs which
are required by regulation to meet a
crashworthiness standard. Nevertheless,
the FAA believes that LARS will yield
beneficial data when used in helicopter
air ambulances. Helicopter accidents
usually involve forces much less severe
than airplane accidents, as the flight
envelope is usually much smaller. For
example, helicopter accidents seldom
involve impact airspeed in excess of 150
knots. Accidents which occur in hover
operations typically involve speed less
than 10 knots. Likewise, altitude ranges
and vertical speeds are normally
substantially less than the potential
airplane accident profiles. These facts
lend credence to the concept of LARS
for accident investigation purposes
using devices that are not hardened to
the extent required by the Technical
Standard Order for Flight Data
Recorders or Cockpit Voice Recorders.
In addition, the FAA’s Office of
Accident Investigation and Prevention
(AVP) reviewed helicopter air
ambulance accident photographs from
the last three years and found that the
rear section of the tailboom (near the tail
cone, tail rotor attachment and/or tail
fin) has a high physical survival rate.
This section of the aircraft often
experiences the lowest deceleration
loads (the rest of the aircraft has
crumpled or disintegrated forward of
the tail, absorbing or attenuating the
deceleration), and is furthest from the
fuel system, and hence usually
unburned. This is most likely in
straight-on impact, which is usually
associated with controlled flight into
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terrain accidents. In loss of control
accidents, where the mechanics of
impact may be more varied, the rear of
the tailboom usually survives. AVP
estimated a survival rate of the rear of
the tailboom structure (without
structural compromise of burn damage)
to be approximately 70 percent.
Therefore, the FAA believes that a LARS
memory module in the rear of the
tailboom would allow a high potential
for survival in the event of an accident.
The FAA also notes that the NTSB
found that LARS ‘‘are crash-resistant
and can provide significant information
for investigators to determine accident
causation * * *.’’ 37
The proposal under consideration is
to require the installation of LARS to
provide event data to aid investigators
after an accident. Currently, because
most helicopter air ambulances are not
equipped with flight data recording
devices, investigators must piece
together information pertaining to an
accident from a variety of sources. LARS
could provide precise technical data
regarding the flight, such as heading,
altitude, and attitude that may
otherwise be unavailable. The FAA asks
for comments on whether LARS will
provide data that is valuable in an
accident investigation.
The FAA also invites comments on
whether operators that are required to
install LARS for accident investigation
would also use those systems to
improve daily operations, including
whether operators would be more likely
to participate in an FAA-approved
Flight Operations Quality Assurance
(FOQA) program if required to equip
helicopters with LARS. A LARS could
be used to collect digital flight data in
an FAA-approved FOQA program.
FOQA participants use the collected
data to improve the safety of their
operations, while the FAA uses the data
to observe trends in operations and
make system-wide safety enhancements
based on those trends. In order to
provide an incentive for participation in
the FOQA program, the FAA protects
certain voluntarily submitted FOQA
data against public release and, except
for criminal or deliberate actions, will
not use FOQA data obtained from an
operator’s FOQA program in an
enforcement action against that operator
or its employees.38 These protections
37 NTSB Safety Recommendations A–09–87
through A–09–96, Sep. 24, 2009, p. 9.
38 See 14 CFR 13.401(e); 14 CFR part 193; 66 FR
55042 (Oct. 31, 2001); Advisory Circular 120–82,
Flight Operational Quality Assurance (Apr. 12,
2004); FAA Order 8000.81, Designation of FOQA
Information as Protected From Public Disclosure
Under 14 CFR part 193 (Apr. 14, 2003).
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are available only if the data is collected
by the operator pursuant to a voluntary,
FAA-approved, FOQA program.
The FAA is also considering requiring
certificate holders that conduct air
ambulance operations to install LARS
and create a program that would use
data obtained from the device to analyze
and mitigate risk. Certificate holders
could use the LARS data to modify their
operational and maintenance
procedures, provide immediate
feedback to pilots in training, and
highlight areas in which additional
training may be needed. Certificate
holders also could use the data as a
training tool during flight simulator
training sessions to reproduce situations
that actually occurred in its operations.
Certificate holders would be required
to collect flight performance and
operational data that characterizes the
state of the helicopter and its
subsystems which the certificate holder
determines is pertinent to its safety
program. Each certificate holder would
be required to document the procedures
and tools it would use to download and
analyze the data from LARS, and the
procedures and criteria it would use to
identify and evaluate the data from
LARS to enhance safety in its
operations.
The FAA would require a certificate
holder to establish a method to retrieve,
analyze, and evaluate data that is
collected by LARS. Under this proposal,
the FAA intends to provide flexibility to
certificate holders with respect to how
each certificate holder uses its LARS
data by allowing them to establish an
individualized program that is unique to
its operation.
The FAA notes that this proposal
would address NTSB Safety
Recommendation A–09–90 that
recommends requiring certificate
holders to install flight data recording
devices on helicopter air ambulances
and to ‘‘establish a structured flight data
monitoring program that reviews all
available data sources to identify
deviations from established norms and
procedures and other potential safety
issues.’’ Because the FAA would require
LARS under this scenario, the data
developed by operators would not be
eligible for protection under 14 CFR part
193, Protection of Voluntarily
Submitted Information.
Under this proposal, the FAA
anticipates that certificate holders could
use FDRs installed in helicopter air
ambulances to comply with the LARS
requirement. If the certificate holder is
required under § 135.152 to have an
FDR, it would be able to choose to use
either the FDR or a certified quickaccess recorder (QAR) connected to the
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flight data acquisition unit to comply
with this requirement. A QAR provides
a means to access the data collected by
a FDR without removing the FDR. The
time and effort required to access and
download data from the FDR could be
prohibitive. The additional weight from
a QAR installation is about 0.5 pounds.
A QAR unit, STC, and support software
can cost $10,000 to $15,000, compared
to the cost and installation of a LARS of
less than $10,000. In either case, the
proposed requirement to show how this
data is being used to improve the safety
of flight operations would remain
applicable.
The FAA considered permitting a
CVR as an alternate means of complying
with the proposed requirement to use
LARS in an accident prevention
program. However, similar to an FDR,
the data recorded on a CVR may be
difficult to retrieve following a flight.
CVRs may be installed in hard-to-access
locations inhibiting access to the unit.
Further, obtaining the data may require
the certificate holder to remove the CVR
from the aircraft in order to transfer the
data in an audible format. This process
is time-consuming and labor-intensive,
potentially causing the helicopter to
remain out of service for a period of
time. A certificate holder may require an
inventory of CVRs to replace a removed
CVR and immediately return the
helicopter to service. Although CVRs
provide excellent post-accident
information, the CVR data alone does
not provide adequate information for an
accident prevention program. The FAA
believes that these inefficiencies,
combined with the limited usefulness of
a CVR, could present a significant
barrier to using CVR information to
improve the safety of a certificate
holder’s operations.
Although CVRs, FDRs, and QARs
have been successfully implemented in
several industry accident prevention
programs, as discussed, the FAA does
not believe that traditional recorders
provide the most efficient means to
collecting flight performance and
operational data for helicopter air
ambulances. In light of the fact that
some helicopters currently used in air
ambulance operations may be equipped
with CVRs or FDRs, and given the
comprehensive amount of data collected
by and superior crashworthiness of
those devices, the FAA calls for
comments regarding how certificate
holders could incorporate these devices
into a program to enhance the safety of
helicopter air ambulance operations.
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3. Pilot Requirements
a. Instrument Rating (§ 135.603)
The FAA is proposing to add
§ 135.603 to require a helicopter air
ambulance pilot to hold a helicopter
instrument rating.
Currently, § 135.243(a) and (b) require
the pilot in command of a helicopter air
ambulance to hold, at a minimum, a
commercial pilot certificate. To obtain a
commercial pilot certificate with a
helicopter rating, § 61.129(c) requires
that a pilot complete 10 hours of
instrument training. However,
helicopter air ambulance pilots are not
required to hold instrument ratings
unless they will be performing IFR or
VFR over-the-top operations. In addition
to other requirements, § 61.65 requires a
pilot to complete 50 hours of crosscountry flight time as pilot in command
and 40 hours of actual or simulated
instrument time to obtain an instrument
rating.
As discussed previously, the FAA
found that inadvertent flight into IMC is
a common factor in helicopter air
ambulance accidents. In general, many
accidents result when pilots who lack
the necessary skills or equipment to fly
in marginal VMC or IMC attempt flight
without outside references. This
proposal is intended to ensure that
helicopter air ambulance pilots are
equipped to handle these situations and
extract themselves from these dangerous
situations. A pilot who receives the
more extensive training on navigating a
helicopter solely by reference to
instruments provided by obtaining an
instrument rating is better able to
maintain situational awareness and
maneuver the helicopter into a safe
environment than a pilot without an
instrument rating.
The FAA is not proposing that a
helicopter air ambulance pilot maintain
instrument currency. This proposal is
targeted to VFR operators because
operators conducting IFR operations
already must maintain instrument
currency. The FAA has chosen this
approach because, for VFR operators,
this capability may require fewer
resources than required to meet full
currency requirements while
maintaining adequate safety standards.
Under this proposal, pilots would be
required to demonstrate the ability to
recover from inadvertent IMC during
their annual competency checks.39 The
FAA believes that pilots who learn basic
instrument skills while obtaining an
instrument rating, supplemented by
preparation for an annual competency
39 See section III.B.3. of the preamble to this
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check, will be adequately prepared to
recover from an inadvertent IMC
encounter.
This proposal would take effect 3
years after the effective date of the rule
to allow helicopter air ambulance pilots
who are not instrument-rated adequate
time to pursue an instrument rating and
to distribute the costs over a period of
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b. Flight and Duty Time Limitations
(§§ 135.267 and 135.271)
The FAA is proposing to amend
§§ 135.267 and 135.271 to require
helicopter air ambulance operations
conducted with medical personnel on
board to count towards a pilot’s daily
flight time limitations.
Currently, in certain situations, flight
segments conducted without passengers
but with medical personnel on board
the helicopter are conducted under part
91. Specifically, part 91 segments
preceding part 135 segments are
considered ‘‘other commercial flying’’
and count towards a pilot’s daily flight
time limitations. Part 91 segments that
follow part 135 segments do not count
towards the daily flight time limitations
under § 135.267 or § 135.271, although
these flights count towards a flightcrew
member’s quarterly and yearly flight
time limitations because they are
commercial flights.
Helicopter air ambulance accidents
have not been limited to flights
conducted while patients were on board
the aircraft. In fact, 35 of the 55
accidents included in the NTSB’s
January 2006 Special Investigation
Report on Emergency Medical Services
Operations, occurred with medical
personnel but no patients were on
board.40 The FAA, therefore, is
proposing to provide additional
protections to medical crewmembers on
flights, which under the current rules,
would be conducted under part 91.
As previously discussed, the FAA is
proposing to apply part 135 rules to all
helicopter air ambulance flights with
medical personnel on board. This would
have the effect of bringing such flight
segments of a helicopter air ambulance
operation under the part 135 flight and
duty rules. The changes proposed to
§§ 135.267 and 135.271 emphasize that
all flight time in helicopter air
ambulance operations would be
considered flight time that counts
towards a pilot’s daily fight time
limitations.
The FAA notes that these proposed
changes respond to NTSB Safety
40 NTSB, Special Investigation Report on
Emergency Medical Services Operations (NTSB/
SIR–06/01) 3 (Jan. 25, 2006).
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Recommendation A–06–12. In that
recommendation, the NTSB recognized
that part 135 and part 91 differ
regarding crew rest requirements—part
135 contains flight time limitations and
rest requirements while part 91 does
not. The NTSB emphasized in that
recommendation that the phases of
flight that involve transporting medical
personnel, patient drop-off, and aircraft
positioning comprise the EMS mission
and should not be differentiated. The
NTSB concluded that the safety of EMS
operations would be improved if the
entire EMS flight operated under part
135 operations specifications.
Certificate holders would be required
to comply with this provision by the
effective date of the final rule.
B. Commercial Helicopters Operations
(Including Air Ambulance Operations)
The following provisions would apply
to all commercial helicopter operations,
including helicopter air ambulance
operations, conducted under part 135.
These proposals include new
operational and equipment
requirements for affected certificate
holders.
1. Operational Procedures
a. IFR Alternate Airport Weather
Minima (§ 135.221)
The FAA is proposing to amend
§ 135.221 to revise the alternate airport
weather minima for helicopter IFR
operations. Currently, pilots conducting
IFR operations must designate an
alternate airport at which the weather
conditions will be at or above the
authorized landing minima at the
estimated time of arrival.
Under the proposal, for part 97
instrument approach procedures or
special instrument approach
procedures, to designate an airport as an
alternate, the ceiling at the alternate
airport would need to be 200 feet above
the minimum for the approach to be
flown, and the visibility would need to
be at least 1 statute mile, but never less
than the minimum visibility for the
approach to be flown. For airports
without a part 97 instrument approach
or no special instrument approach
procedure, the ceiling and visibility
minima would be those allowing
descent from the minimum en route
altitude, approach, and landing under
VFR.
The FAA notes that the proposal
recognizes the differences in operating
characteristics between helicopters and
airplanes. Helicopters fly shorter
distances at slower airspeeds than most
other aircraft, carry less fuel than an
airplane, and generally remain in the air
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for shorter periods of time between
landings. As a result, it is often more
difficult for a helicopter to fly out of a
weather system to an alternate
destination. In addition, the destination
airport and alternate airport are likely to
be in the same air mass and thus
experiencing similar weather. Therefore,
requiring pilots to use increased
weather minima when selecting an
alternate airport would improve the
likelihood of landing at the alternate
airport if weather conditions in the area
deteriorate while the helicopter is en
route.
The FAA notes that it adapted this
proposal from the current alternate
airport weather requirement in § 91.169
and from the weather minima in
Operations Specification H105 issued to
part 135 helicopter operators
conducting IFR operations. The FAA
also notes that the Part 125/135 ARC
recommended a similar change.
Certificate holders would be required
to comply with this provision by the
effective date of the final rule.
2. Equipment Requirements
a. Radio Altimeter (§ 135.160)
The FAA is proposing to add
§ 135.160 to require radio altimeters for
all helicopters operated under part 135.
Certificate holders would have 3 years
from the effective date of the final rule
to comply. Currently, part 135 does not
require radio altimeters for any aircraft.
However, under FAA Operations
Specification A050, helicopter operators
authorized to use night vision goggles in
night operations are required to use
radio altimeters.
Radio altimeters are designed to
inform the pilot of the aircraft’s actual
height above the ground.41 A radio
altimeter can greatly improve a pilot’s
awareness of height above the ground
(AGL) during hover, landing in
unimproved landing zones (rough field
landings), and landings in confined
areas where a more vertical approach
may be required. Additionally, radio
altimeters help increase situational
awareness during inadvertent flight into
IMC, night operations, and flat-light,
whiteout, and brownout conditions. In
all of these conditions, pilots lose their
reference to the horizon and to the
ground.
Radio altimeters are proven
technology that is relatively low-cost,
41 A radio altimeter sends a radio wave to the
ground and determines the height of aircraft above
the surface by measuring the time it takes for the
radio wave to be reflected back to the receiving
unit. Altitude is then displayed on the aircraft’s
control panel. Additionally, the pilot can select a
low altitude indicator to alert him or her of a lowaltitude situation.
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reliable, and user-friendly. According to
a January 2009 FAA survey of certificate
holders authorized to conduct
helicopter air ambulance operations, 89
percent of helicopter air ambulance
operators have installed radio altimeters
on their aircraft. The FAA estimates,
based on a sampling of certificate
holders, that 75 percent of helicopters
used in other part 135 operations are
currently equipped with radio
altimeters.
The FAA believes that the following
accident illustrates the type of accident
that may have been prevented with the
use of radio altimeters. On May 31,
2006, a Bell 206L–1 helicopter,
operating under 14 CFR part 135 and
originating in Juneau, AK, collided with
terrain while maneuvering in reduced
visibility over an ice field. The pilot
encountered whiteout and flat light
conditions, and fog. The pilot and two
out of the six passengers received minor
injuries. During the investigation, the
pilot stated that he could not ‘‘discern
the ground below him due to the flat
light conditions.’’ The NTSB cited ‘‘the
pilot’s failure to maintain adequate
altitude/clearance from terrain while
maneuvering in adverse weather
conditions’’ as the probable cause of the
accident. The NTSB further noted that
the helicopter was not equipped with a
radio altimeter. See NTSB Accident
Report ANC06LA066 (Feb. 26, 2007).
The proposal would respond to NTSB
Safety Recommendation A–02–35,
which was issued after the
investigations of several accidents in
which flat-light or whiteout conditions
were mentioned as the probable cause.
In its recommendation, the NTSB noted
that radio altimeters, currently not
required for helicopters, might aid pilots
in recognizing proximity to the ground
in flat-light and whiteout conditions.
In addition, the FAA notes that the
proposal would respond to the Part 125/
135 ARC’s recommendation to require
installation of radio altimeters in
helicopter air ambulances. For the
reasons discussed above, however, the
FAA is proposing broader use of radio
altimeters to increase safety in all part
135 rotorcraft operations.
The FAA notes that this proposed rule
would require helicopter air ambulances
to be equipped with both HTAWS and
a radio altimeter. Additionally, other
commercial helicopter operators may
opt to voluntarily equip their
helicopters with HTAWS. The FAA
considered whether to permit devices
that perform functions similar to radio
altimeters, such as HTAWS, to satisfy
the radio altimeter requirement.
However, the FAA has determined that
either an FAA-approved radio altimeter,
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or other device that measures an
aircraft’s altitude by sending a signal to
the ground, should be required because
of the accuracy of information obtained
from those units and the method by
which that information is collected.
Some HTAWS are passive and derive
the aircraft’s ground speed, position,
and altitude from a GPS and a
preprogrammed algorithm database
installed and maintained by the
HTAWS manufacturer. Additionally,
altitude indications on such systems
often rely on the pilot setting the correct
barometric pressure, which may change
rapidly, to obtain an accurate reading.
The FAA is concerned that passive
systems may not provide as accurate an
altitude reading for pilots experiencing
brownout or white-out conditions while
close to the ground. A radio altimeter is
an active system that provides real-time
information to the pilot regarding the
aircraft’s height above the terrain,
including elevated heliports and
buildings, by sending and receiving a
signal from the aircraft. Radio altimeters
are also not subject to variations in
barometric pressure. The FAA notes that
an HTAWS that incorporates or works
in conjunction with a radio altimeter
function would meet the requirements
of this proposal. The FAA seeks
comment on the requirement to install
a radio altimeter, and the safety benefits
of installing both HTAWS and a radio
altimeter. The FAA also seeks
comments on the proposed effective
date of this provision.
b. Safety Equipment for Over-Water
Flights (§§ 1.1, 135.167, and 135.168)
The FAA is proposing to revise the
definition of extended over-water
operation in § 1.1 as it applies to
helicopters. The FAA also is proposing
to amend § 135.167 to exclude rotorcraft
and add § 135.168 prescribing graduated
emergency equipment requirements for
rotorcraft based on the distance the
rotorcraft is operating from the
shoreline. Certificate holders would
have 3 years from the effective date of
the final rule to comply with proposed
§ 135.168.
Currently, under § 91.205(b)(12) and
§ 135.183, a passenger-carrying
helicopter operating over water at an
altitude that would not permit it to
reach land in the event of engine failure
must be equipped with approved
flotation gear for each passenger and,
unless it is a multiengine helicopter that
meets certain performance
requirements, helicopter floatation
devices. Additionally, a helicopter
engaged in extended over-water
operations (currently defined as more
than 50 NM from the nearest shoreline
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or offshore heliport structure) is
required to carry the equipment listed in
§ 135.167.
Under proposed § 1.1, the reference to
offshore heliport structures would be
removed from the definition of
‘‘extended over-water operation’’ for
helicopters. As a result, any operation
conducted more than 50 NM from the
nearest shoreline would be an extended
over-water operation, regardless of
proximity to offshore heliport
structures. The FAA recognizes that the
current rule permits helicopters to travel
long distances from shore without
carrying safety equipment other than
floatation devices and life preservers, as
long as they remain within 50 miles of
an offshore heliport. In the Gulf of
Mexico, for example, some offshore oil
platforms are located 150 NM from the
shoreline. The FAA is concerned that
offshore heliports may not provide the
same search and rescue capabilities as
are available on shore, such as Coast
Guard patrols and a greater number of
vessels in the vicinity. Accordingly, the
FAA believes that this change would
increase safety by eliminating the ability
to hopscotch from heliport to heliport at
great distances from shore without
carrying water survival safety
equipment.
Under proposed rule § 135.168, a
helicopter operating over water beyond
autorotational distance from the
shoreline but within 50 NM of the
shoreline would be required to carry,
among other equipment—life
preservers; a 406 megahertz (MHz)
emergency locator transmitter that
meets the requirements of TSO–C126a,
406 MHz Emergency Locator
Transmitter (ELT), a pyrotechnic
signaling device; and electronically
deployable or externally mounted life
rafts. For extended over-water
operations, a helicopter would need to
be equipped with the equipment
required for over water operations, as
well as additional survival equipment
prescribed in proposed § 135.168.
The FAA is proposing to require a 406
MHz ELT for several reasons. As
indicated in previous rulemakings, the
406 MHz ELT provides an enhancement
and more life-saving benefits, especially
for over-water operations, than the
121.5/243 MHz ELT. See 65 FR 81316
(Dec. 22, 2000); 59 FR 32050 (Jun. 21,
1994). These benefits include a
narrower search area, a stronger signal
resulting in less interference, and the
ability to code the transmitter with the
owner’s or aircraft’s identification.
Further, as of February 1, 2009, the
international search-and-rescue satellite
system, known as COSPAS–SARSAT,
ceased monitoring 121.5 MHz ELTs in
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response to guidance from the
International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO) and the
International Maritime Organization
(IMO). These organizations mandate
safety requirements for aircraft and
maritime vessels and have recognized
the limitations of the 121.5 MHz
beacons and the superior capabilities of
the 406 MHz alerting system.
Among the equipment that would be
required under proposed § 135.168 for
operations conducted beyond
autorotational distance from shore are
electronically deployable or externally
mounted life rafts. The FAA believes
that life rafts, in addition to life
preservers, are necessary safety
equipment in the event of ditching.
Passengers and crewmembers who are
forced to exit a helicopter in water may
be subject to strong currents and waves,
making it difficult to swim or float with
a life preserver for long periods of time.
In addition, a person in a life raft is not
as affected by cold water temperatures
and is more visible to rescuers than if
he or she is in the water. In accidents
involving over-water operations, rescue
aircraft can experience difficulty
locating and reaching a downed
helicopter because of the strength of the
currents in which a ditching occurred
and inaccurate coordinates provided by
the pilot experiencing the emergency.
Passenger access to emergency
equipment sufficient to remain afloat for
the period of time it is likely to take a
rescue mission to reach the site
enhances survivability.
The proposed requirement for
electronically deployable or externally
mounted life rafts would increase the
likelihood that these items would be
available during an emergency. In two
accidents investigated by the NTSB,
helicopters sank before passengers
could deploy the life rafts that were on
board.
One accident cited by NTSB occurred
off the coast of Texas in 2005 following
an in-flight fire and eventual dualengine power loss. When the helicopter,
which was operating under part 135, hit
the water, it sank so rapidly that neither
of the two life rafts stored under the
cabin seats were retrieved before the
helicopter sank. The occupants, all of
whom were wearing personal flotation
devices, survived; however, some
occupants suffered hypothermia during
the 71⁄2 hours that elapsed before they
were rescued. The NTSB noted that,
although the survivors’ personal
flotation devices were equipped with
locator lights, the U.S. Coast Guard
search and rescue crews, using nightvision goggles, reported that the lights
were barely visible at night in the waters
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of the Gulf of Mexico. NTSB Accident
Report DFW05MA230 (Apr. 28, 2009).
In another accident, which occurred
in 2003, a helicopter operating under
part 135 experienced engine failure over
the Gulf of Mexico and ditched. The
pilot and four passengers evacuated and
inflated their personal flotation devices;
however, the pilot and one passenger
died and the other passengers were
seriously injured before the rescue team
arrived. The helicopter was equipped
with a life raft located under the cabin
seats, but it was not deployed. Surviving
passengers indicated that they were not
briefed about the location of the life raft.
The NTSB noted ‘‘[w]ith better access to
life rafts stored on board the aircraft and
better signaling devices, occupants
would have had a greater chance of
surviving.’’ NTSB Accident Report
FTW03FA097 (Apr. 28, 2005).
The FAA notes that these proposals
address NTSB Safety Recommendation
A–07–87 that recommends all existing
and new turbine-powered helicopters
operating in the Gulf of Mexico and
certificated with five or more seats be
equipped with externally mounted life
rafts large enough to accommodate all
occupants. Additionally, they address
NTSB Safety Recommendation A–07–88
that recommends all offshore helicopter
operators in the Gulf of Mexico provide
their flight crews with personal flotation
devices equipped with a waterproof,
global-positioning-system-enabled 406
megahertz personal locater beacon, as
well as one other signaling device, such
as a signaling mirror or strobe light.
Additionally, the Part 125/135 ARC
recommended that the FAA amend its
regulations to base emergency
equipment requirements on the distance
a helicopter operates from the shoreline.
The FAA agrees with the Part 125/135
ARC’s recommendation, and believes its
proposed changes would result in a
higher level of safety because of the
enhanced safety equipment carried by
helicopters operating over water.
The FAA points out that the proposed
safety equipment requirements for
helicopters differ from those for
airplanes. This distinction is made for
two reasons. First, helicopters generally
operate at lower altitudes than
passenger-carrying aircraft. In the Gulf
of Mexico, helicopters serving oil rigs
typically operate at altitudes below
10,000 feet. These lower altitudes leave
little power-off glide capability. Second,
airplanes are designed with certain
features that enable them to float for a
period of time after ditching, such as
doors above the waterline, closeable
outflow valves in the wings, and, in
some airplanes, pressurized cabins.
Helicopters do not incorporate these
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design features and behave less
predictably when ditched. Therefore,
the FAA believes that helicopter
passengers should have additional
protections for survival in water if they
need to exit the helicopter after
ditching.
3. Training—Recovery From Inadvertent
Flight Into IMC (§ 135.293)
The FAA is proposing to amend
§ 135.293 to require helicopter pilots to
demonstrate recovery from an
inadvertent IMC encounter and
understand procedures for aircraft
handling in flat-light, whiteout, and
brownout conditions.
The current regulations do not require
a pilot to demonstrate safely
maneuvering an aircraft back into VMC
following an inadvertent flight into IMC
during a § 135.293 competency check.
Pilots seeking a commercial or airline
transport pilot (ATP) certificate are not
required to demonstrate an IMC
recovery during the initial examination.
A demonstration of IMC recovery is not
included in the currency requirements
for any pilot certificate. However, the
FAA requires demonstration of Lost
Procedures and Radio Navigation and
Radar Services, which contain
components similar to IMC recovery
procedures under, the Commercial Pilot
Practical Test Standards for
Rotorcraft.42 In AC 135–14A, the FAA
also recommends that helicopter air
ambulance pilots obtain training in
basic instrument flying skills to assist in
recovery from inadvertent flight into
IMC.
Under this proposal, § 135.293 would
require a pilot to demonstrate a realistic
course of action that he or she might
take to escape from inadvertent IMC
during a competency check. The FAA
understands that aircraft are configured
differently and instrument approaches
may not be readily available in all
places where helicopters operate.
Therefore, the FAA would permit
flexibility in the method by which a
pilot meets the demonstration
requirement and expects that inspectors
would approve methods appropriate to
the aircraft, equipment, and facilities
available.
The proposal would require that the
demonstration be scenario-based and
include attitude instrument flying,
recovery from unusual attitudes,
navigation, ATC communications, and
at least one instrument approach. The
check-pilot should coordinate with
ATC, if available, before the execution
of the scenario to inform ATC that
exercises will be performed with VFR42 FAA–S–8081–16A.
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equipped helicopter and that radar
vectors and directional turns will be
requested. If the aircraft is appropriately
equipped and the check is conducted at
a location where an ILS is operational,
the pilot should demonstrate an ILS
approach. If the pilot is unable to
conduct an ILS approach, he or she
should demonstrate a GPS approach if
the aircraft is equipped to do so and the
pilot is properly trained. If neither an
ILS nor GPS procedure can be
performed, the pilot should perform
another instrument approach. Partial
panel operations, during which
instrument failure or loss of
instrumentation is simulated, should be
considered if sufficient instruments are
available from single sources.
The proposal also would require a
pilot to demonstrate knowledge of the
methods for avoiding the conditions
described above and the proper aircraft
handling on a written or oral test. To
satisfy these requirements, the FAA
anticipates that pilots would receive
training on items such as landing zone
reconnaissance, risk mitigation,
maintaining situational awareness and
decision-making on whether to land or
choose an alternate landing site.
This provision would take effect on
the effective date of the final rule.
In 2002, the NTSB issued Safety
Recommendations A–02–33 and A–02–
34 after investigating five commercial
helicopter accidents in Alaska in which
flat-light or whiteout conditions were
thought to be the probable cause of the
accidents. In its recommendations, the
NTSB expressed concern that
commercial helicopter operators who
operate in such conditions are not
required to be instrument-rated or to
demonstrate instrument competency,
and that those pilots are not provided
with the training necessary to operate
safely in such conditions. The NTSB
therefore recommended in Safety
Recommendation A–02–33 that the FAA
require all helicopter pilots who
conduct commercial, passenger-carrying
flights in areas where flat light or
whiteout conditions routinely occur to
possess a helicopter-specific instrument
rating and to demonstrate their
instrument competency during initial
and recurrent pilot testing required
under 14 CFR 135.293. In addition, in
Safety Recommendation A–02–34, the
NTSB recommended requiring all
commercial helicopter operators
conducting passenger-carrying flights in
areas where flat light or whiteout
conditions routinely occur to include
safe practices for operating in flat light
or whiteout conditions in their
approved training programs.
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This proposed rule also would
address NTSB Safety Recommendation
A–09–87 that calls for development of
scenario-based pilot training for
helicopter air ambulance pilots that
included inadvertent flight into IMC
and hazards unique to helicopter air
ambulance operations, and determine
how frequently this training is required
to ensure proficiency.
C. Miscellaneous
1. Part 91 Weather Minima (§ 91.155)
The FAA is proposing to revise
§ 91.155 to prescribe visibility minima
for helicopters operating under part 91
in Class G airspace. Section 91.155(b)(1)
currently requires helicopters operating
under VFR, at 1,200 feet or less above
the surface, to remain clear of clouds
and operate at a speed that permits the
pilot adequate opportunity to see any air
traffic or obstruction in time to avoid a
collision. The FAA is concerned that the
current standard does not provide an
adequate margin of safety for pilots who
may suddenly encounter IMC because of
rapidly changing weather. The FAA is
also concerned that the ‘‘clear of clouds’’
standard, without an associated
minimum visibility, may encourage
‘‘scud running’’ in which pilots fly at a
continually decreasing altitude to
remain clear of lowering clouds in an
attempt to stay in VFR conditions.
Consequently, the FAA is proposing a
minimum visibility standard of 1⁄2
statute mile during the day, and 1
statute mile at night, for helicopters
operating under VFR at 1,200 feet or less
above the surface in Class G airspace.
This proposal would provide a greater
margin of safety for operators because
pilots would be required to maintain a
fixed amount of visibility, and would be
less likely to suddenly encounter IMC.
In addition to the proposed visibility
minima, the proposed rule would retain
the current requirement to remain clear
of clouds.
This provision would take effect on
the effective date of the final rule.
2. Load Manifest Requirements for All
Part 135 Aircraft (§ 135.63)
The FAA is proposing to revise the
requirements of § 135.63 to apply to all
aircraft operated under part 135 and to
permit electronic transmission of
manifest copies. In considering this
proposal for commercial operations, the
FAA determined this requirement
would be beneficial for all part 135
operations. Currently, § 135.63 requires
the preparation of a load manifest
detailing information such as aircraft
weight, center of gravity, crewmember
identification, and other aircraft
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information before a flight involving a
multiengine aircraft. The load manifest
must be prepared in duplicate, and one
copy must be carried on board the
aircraft to its destination. Section 135.63
currently does not prescribe any specific
action for the copy of the load manifest
not carried on board the aircraft.
However, the FAA has advised
certificate holders to incorporate
procedures in their operations manuals
for the disposition of the duplicate
copy.43
In the past, multiengine airplanes
were the predominant means of
transportation under part 135. Recently,
single-engine passenger carrying aircraft
have increased in size and capacity and,
therefore their use in on-demand
operations has increased. In 2005, the
125/135 ARC recommended that the
FAA amend load manifest requirements
to include all part 135 aircraft. The FAA
finds that all operators carrying
passengers for hire must generate a
manifest, regardless of the type of
aircraft operated. In the event of an
emergency, the operator must be able to
account for aircraft occupants and, in
the case of a fatal or serious accident,
contact next of kin. Additionally, the
FAA believes that, in the event of an
accident, load manifest information
pertaining to the aircraft’s weight and
balance would be useful in determining
whether the aircraft was loaded within
the aircraft’s center-of-gravity limits and
maximum allowable takeoff weight.
Therefore a copy of the load manifest
should be available if the copy on the
aircraft is destroyed.
This proposal would respond to
NTSB Safety Recommendation A–99–
61. That recommendation followed a
1997 accident in which a single-engine
aircraft operating under part 135 and
not equipped with an FDR collided with
terrain, killing the pilot and all eight
passengers. The NTSB determined that
weight and balance may have played a
role. The NTSB expressed concern that
‘‘single-engine operators may not
consistently give weight and balance
calculations the attention necessary to
ensure safe flight,’’ and noted that
§ 135.63(c) currently requires only
operators of multiengine aircraft to
prepare an accurate load manifest in
duplicate before each take off. The
NTSB therefore recommended that the
FAA amend the regulation ‘‘to apply to
single-engine as well as multiengine
aircraft.’’
43 Legal Interpretation to Stanley L. Bernstein,
from Rebecca B. MacPherson, Assistant Chief
Counsel for Regulations (Nov. 11, 2009), available
at https://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/
headquarters_offices/agc/pol_adjudication/agc200/
Interpretations/.
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In addition, the FAA is proposing to
eliminate the requirement that the load
manifest be prepared in duplicate for
certificate holders who elect to
electronically transmit the information
contained in the load manifest to their
operations base before take off. A
certificate holder electing this option
would be permitted to transmit the
information by facsimile, e-mail, online
form, or other electronic means and the
information must be received by the
certificate holder’s base of operations or
other approved location before take off.
This would ensure that the load
manifest information is available in the
event that the copy carried on board the
aircraft is destroyed. If a certificate
holder does not elect to transmit load
manifest information electronically, it
would be required to prepare the load
manifest in duplicate. Additionally, the
proposed rule would require the pilot in
command to arrange for a copy of the
load manifest to be sent to the certificate
holder, retained in a suitable place at
the takeoff location, or retained in
another location approved by the FAA.
The FAA notes that the proposed
regulation would not alter the
requirement that a copy of the load
manifest must be carried on board the
aircraft to its final destination, although
that copy may be in an electronic
format. In addition, the proposal would
not change the required content of the
load manifest.
Certificate holders would be required
to comply with this provision by the
effective date of the final rule.
While the FAA believes that proposed
change could improve safety by
enhancing pre-flight planning by pilots
conducting part 135 operations, in its
full Regulatory Evaluation (in the public
docket for this rulemaking) the agency
estimates it could impose costs of $134
million or $82 million present value.
The FAA estimates that the present
value benefits at 7% over 10 years
would be $20 million. The FAA seeks
comments, accompanied by data, on
how these costs could be reduced and
how benefits could be increased while
maintaining an equivalent level of
safety.
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposal contains the following
new information collection
requirements. As required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3507(d)), the FAA has submitted
the information requirements associated
with this proposal to the Office of
Management and Budget for its review.
Use: The information collection
would enable helicopter air ambulance
operators to verify that risk analyses are
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being performed and that safety
procedures and training requirements
are being followed. In the event of an
accident, the FAA and other entities
could examine these records.
Number of Respondents: 17,237.
Estimate of Annual Burdens: The
following proposals would result in
recordkeeping burdens.
(1) Require certificate holders
performing helicopter air ambulance
operators to implement pre-flight riskanalysis programs (§ 135.615): This
proposal would require that certificate
holders outline procedures for
conducting pre-flight risk-analysis
programs in their operations manuals.
The following estimate corresponds to
section A.1.d. of the economic
evaluation.
Average per Year
Cost to Helicopter Air Ambulance
Operators To Develop a Pre-Flight Risk
Analysis Program
Operations control specialists = 288
Time needed for a clerical person to
maintain records of the training and
examinations = 5/60 hour
Salary of clerical person = $26 per hour
Air ambulance operators = 73
Time needed to develop risk analysis
program = 60 hours
Salary of helicopter pilot = $48 per hour
Cost: $29,037,040/10 = $2,903,704
Time: 604,940 hours/10 = 60,494 hours
(2) Require air ambulance operators
with 10 or more helicopters to have an
operations control center to
communicate with pilots, advise pilots
of weather conditions, and provide
flight-following services (§ 135.617):
This proposal would require certificate
holders to train and test operations
control specialists and retain records on
those employees.
The following estimate corresponds to
section A.1.b. of the economic
evaluation.
Cost of Maintaining Records for the
Operations Control Specialists’ Training
and Examinations
First-Year Cost
First-Year Cost
Cost: 73 × 60 × $48 = $210,240
Time: 73 × 60 = 4,380 hours
Cost: 288 × (5/60) × $26 = $624
Time: 288 × (5/60) = 24 hours
Subsequent Years: Per-Year Costs
Subsequent Years: Per-Year Costs
Cost: 288 × (5/60) × $26 = $624
Time: 288 × (5/60) = 24 hours
Cost: $0
Time: 0 hours
Total Over 10 Years
Total Over 10 Years
Cost: $210,240
Time: 4,380 hours
Cost: $624 × 10 = $6,240
Time: 24 hours × 10 = 240 hours
Average per Year
Average per Year
Cost: $210,240/10 = $21,024
Time: 4,380 hours/10 = 438 hours
Cost for Pilots To Perform a Pre-Flight
Risk Analysis Before Each Flight
Air ambulance Helicopters = 989
Operations per year per aircraft = 367
Time needed for risk analysis = 10/60
hour
Salary of helicopter pilot = $48 per hour
First-Year Cost
Cost: 989 × 367 × (10/60) × $48 =
$2,903,704
Time: 989 × 367 × (10/60) = 60,494
hours
Subsequent Years: Per-Year Costs
Cost: $6,240/10 = $624
Time: 240 hours/10 = 24 hours
(3) Require additional VFR flight
planning (§ 135.613): This proposal
would require helicopter air ambulance
pilots to perform pre-flight planning.
Certificate holders would need to
outline procedures for pre-flight
planning in their operations manuals.
The following estimate corresponds to
section A.1.c. of the economic
evaluation.
Cost To Helicopter Air Ambulance
Operators To Establish Procedures To
Evaluate, Analyze, and Use Additional
VFR Flight Planning in Their Operations
Manuals
Cost: 989 × 367 × (10/60) × $48 =
$2,903,704
Time: 989 × 367 × (10/60) = 60,494
hours
Air ambulance helicopters = 989
Operations per year per aircraft = 367
Time needed for the flight planning = 5/
60 hour
Salary of helicopter pilot = $48 per hour
Total Over 10 Years
First-Year Cost
Cost: $2,903,704 × 10 = $29,037,040
Time: 60,494 hours × 10 = 604,940
hours
Cost: 989 × 367 × (5/60) × $48 =
$1,451,852
Time: 989 × 367 × (5/60) = 30,247 hours
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Subsequent Years: Per-Year Costs
Cost: 989 × 367 × (5/60) × $48 =
$1,451,852
Time: 989 × 367 × (5/60) = 30,247 hours
Total Over 10 Years
Cost: $1,451,852 × 10 = $14,518,520
Time: 30,247 hours × 10 = 302,470
hours
Average per Year
Cost: $14,518,520/10 = $1,451,852
Time: 302,470 hours/10 = 30,247 hours
(4) Light-weight aircraft recording
system (LARS) on helicopter air
ambulances: The FAA is seeking
comment on whether to require that
certificate holders install LARS on their
helicopter air ambulances and outline
procedures for evaluating and using
LARS data in their operations manuals.
The following estimate corresponds to
section A.2.b. of the economic
evaluation.
One-Time Cost to Helicopter Air
Ambulance Operators To Install LARS
Helicopter air ambulances = 989
Unit cost to equip with LARS = $6,450
First-Year Cost
Cost: 989/3 × $6,450 = $2,126,350
Subsequent 2 Years: Per-Year Costs
Cost: 989/3 × $6,450 = $2,126,350
Total Over 10 years
Cost: $2,126,250 × 3 = $6,379,050
Average per Year
Cost to Helicopter Air Ambulance
Operators To Establish Procedures To
Evaluate, Analyze, and Use LARS Data
in Their Operations Manuals
Air ambulance operators = 73
Time needed for chief pilot = 2 hours
Time needed for a clerical person = 6
hours
Salary of chief pilot = $53 per hour
Salary of clerical person = $26 per hour
First-Year Cost
Cost: [73 × 2 × $53] + [73 × 6 × $26] =
$19,126
Time: [73 × 2] + [73 × 6] = 584 hours
Subsequent Years: Per-Year Costs
Cost: $0
Time: 0 hours
Total Over 10 Years
Cost: $19,126
Time: 584 hours
First-Year Cost
Average per Year
Cost: $19,126/10 = $1,913
Time: 584 hours/10 = 58.4 hours
(5) Require that medical personnel on
board helicopter air ambulance flights
either receive a supplemental safety
briefing or safety training in lieu of a
pre-flight briefing (§ 135.619): Certificate
holders choosing the option to provide
safety training would be required to
retain training records on those
employees.
The following estimate corresponds to
section A.1.e. of the economic
evaluation.
Cost to Certificate Holder for
Documenting the Training Provided to
Medical Personnel
Cost: $6,349,050/10 = $637,905
Cost for LARS Software
First-Year Cost
Medical personnel = 10,965
Time needed for a clerical person to
document the training = 5/60 hour
Salary of Clerical Person = $26 per hour
Cost: 989/3 × $750 = $247,250
First-Year Cost
Second-Year Cost
Cost: 10,965 × (5/60) × $26 = $23,758
Time: 10,965 × (5/60) = 914 hours
Helicopter air ambulances = 989
Cost for LARS software = $750
Cost: 989 × ( ⁄ ) × $750 = $494,500
23
Subsequent Years: Per-Year Costs
Subsequent Years: Per-Year Costs
Cost: 10,965 × (5/60) × $26 = $23,758
Time: 10,965 × (5/60) = 914 hours
Total Over 10 Years
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Cost: 989 × $750 = $741,750
Total Over 10 Years
Cost: $247,250 + $494,500 + $741,750 ×
8 = $6,675,750
Cost: $23,758 × 10 = $237,580
Time: 914 hours × 10 = 9,140 hours
Average per Year
Average per year.
Cost: $6,675,750/10 = $667,575
Cost: $237,580/10 = $23,758
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Time: 9,140 hours/10 = 914 hours
(6) Require preparation of a load
manifest by operators of all aircraft (not
limited to multiengine aircraft) operated
under part 135 (§ 135.63): This would
amend existing OMB Control Number
2120–0039 by expanding the
applicability from multiengine aircraft
to all aircraft. The following, therefore,
addresses single-engine aircraft only.
The following estimate corresponds to
section C.2. of the economic evaluation.
Air ambulance aircraft (single-engine) =
108
Commercial aircraft (single-engine) =
3,752
Average number of takeoffs daily = 3
Technical time per takeoff = 5/60 hour
Salary of single-engine pilot = $38 per
hour
Sfmt 4702
Cost = [(108) × (3) × (365) × (5/60) ×
($38)] + [(3,752) × (3) × (365) × (5/60)
× ($38)] = $13,384,550
Time = [(108) × (3) × (365) × (5/60)] +
[(3,752) × (3) × (365) × (5/60)] =
352,225 hours
Subsequent Years: Per-Year Costs
Cost = [(108) × (3) × (365) × (5/60) ×
($38)] + [(3,752) × (3) × (365) × (5/60)
× ($38)] = $13,384,550
Time = [(108) × (3) × (365) × (5/60)] +
[(3,752) × (3) × (365) × (5/60)] =
352,225 hours
Total Over 10 Years
Cost = $13,384,550 × 10 = $133,845,500
Time = 352,225 hours × 10 = 3,522,250
hours
Average Per Year
Cost = $133,845,500/10 = $13,384,550
Time = 3,522,250 hours/10 = 352,225
hours
(7) Require that operations control
specialists would be subject to
certificate holders’ drug and alcohol
testing programs (§§ 120.105 and
120.215): The FAA believes that,
because certificate holders currently
administer and maintain records for
drug and alcohol testing for other
employees (approved under OMB
Control Number 2120–0535), the cost
for a clerical person to maintain these
records would be negligible.
Summary of all Burden Hours and
Costs:
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The agency is soliciting comments
to—
(1) Evaluate whether the proposed
information requirement is necessary for
the proper performance of the functions
of the agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden;
(3) Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
(4) Minimize the burden of collecting
information on those who are to
respond, including by using appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or
other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology.
Individuals and organizations may
send comments on the information
collection requirement by January 10,
2011, and should direct them to the
address listed in the ADDRESSES section
at the beginning of this preamble.
Comments also should be submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Attention: Desk Officer for FAA,
New Executive Building, Room 10202,
725 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC
20053.
According to the 1995 amendments to
the Paperwork Reduction Act (5 CFR
1320.8(b)(2)(vi)), an agency may not
collect or sponsor the collection of
information, nor may it impose an
information collection requirement
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number. The OMB control
number for this information collection
will be published in the Federal
Register, after the Office of Management
and Budget approves it.
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V. International Compatibility
In keeping with U.S. obligations
under the Convention on International
Civil Aviation, it is FAA policy to
conform to International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO) Standards and
Recommended Practices to the
maximum extent practicable. The FAA
has reviewed the corresponding ICAO
Standards and Recommended Practices
and has identified no differences with
these proposed regulations.
VI. Regulatory Evaluation, Regulatory
Flexibility Determination, International
Trade Assessment, and Unfunded
Mandates Assessment
Regulatory Evaluation
Changes to Federal regulations must
undergo several economic analyses.
First, Executive Order 12866 directs that
each Federal agency shall 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 (Pub. L. 96–354) requires
agencies to analyze the economic
impact of regulatory changes on small
entities. Third, the Trade Agreements
Act (Pub. L. 96–39) 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 requires agencies to consider
international standards and, where
appropriate, that they be the basis of
U.S. standards. Fourth, the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L.
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
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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 with base year of 1995).
This portion of the preamble
summarizes the FAA’s analysis of the
economic impacts of this proposed rule.
Readers seeking greater detail should
read the full regulatory evaluation, a
copy of which is in the docket for this
rulemaking.
In conducting these analyses, FAA
has determined that this proposed rule:
(1) Has benefits that justify its costs; (2)
is not an economically ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ as defined in section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866; (3) would
be otherwise ‘‘significant’’ as defined in
Executive Order 12866 and DOT’s
Regulatory Policies and Procedures; (4)
would have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities; (5) would not create
unnecessary obstacles to the foreign
commerce of the United States; and (6)
would not impose an unfunded
mandate on state, local, tribal
governments, or on the private sector by
exceeding the threshold identified
above. These analyses are summarized
below.
The estimated mean benefit value for
the air ambulance provisions is $270
million or $160 million present value
over the next 10 years. The estimated
mean benefit value for the commercial
provisions is $193 million or $115
million present value over the next 10
years. The FAA estimates the cost of
this proposed rule for the air ambulance
provisions would be approximately
$210 million ($136 million, present
value) over the next 10 years. The
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estimated cost of the proposed rule for
the commercial provisions would be
approximately $145 million ($89
million, present value) over the next 10
years.
As noted in the full regulatory
evaluation, the FAA is unable to
estimate the costs of provisions A.1.a,
A.3.b, and B.2.a. The FAA calls for
comments from affected entities
requesting that all comments be
accompanied by clear and detailed
supporting economic documentation.
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with PROPOSALS-PART 2
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
Because the FAA did not have actual
annual revenues for air ambulance
operators, the agency estimated them
using helicopter counts as a revenue
driver. The FAA assumed an average of
367 operations per year for each
helicopter and a revenue charge of
$7,000 per operation. As such, the FAA
estimated that 28 small air ambulance
operators (with estimated revenues
lower than $7 million) out of the 73 air
ambulance operators would be affected
by this proposed regulation. Their
annualized cost per operation 44 ranges
between $123 and $131. Their ratio of
annualized cost to annual revenue
ranges between 1.76% and 1.88%,
which is significant.45 This proposal
would impact approximately 18 not-forprofit air ambulance operators.
Accordingly, the FAA prepared a
regulatory flexibility analysis for small
air ambulance operators, as described in
the next section.
For air tour operators, the FAA
assumed an average of 747 operations
per year for each helicopter and a
revenue charge of $1,700 per operation.
As such, the FAA identified 31 small air
44 Annualized cost per operation equals total
annualized costs divided by number of helicopter
air ambulance operations per year. Total annualized
cost equals present value cost over 10 years times
capital recovery factor.
45 This is a lower bound estimate because the
FAA was unable to estimate the costs of several
requirements.
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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.
The FAA invites public comment on its
RFA analysis, as detailed below,
particularly with respect to the number
of small entities impacted, the costs for
small entities, and alternatives to the
proposed rule that would meeting the
agency’s statutory objectives in a less
burdensome manner.
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
regulatory flexibility analysis as
described in the Act.
This proposed rule would impact air
ambulance, air tour, and on demand
operators. The U.S. Small Business
Administration (SBA) classifies
businesses as small based on size
standards, typically expressed in terms
of annual revenue or number of
employees. SBA publishes a table of
small business size standards matched
to North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) codes.
Table 1 shows the size standards for the
entities that would be affected by this
rule.
tour operators (with estimated revenues
lower than $7 million) out of the 43 air
tour operators that would be affected by
this regulation. Their annualized cost
per operation ranges between $10 and
$24. Their ratio of annualized cost to
annual revenue ranges between 0.58%
and 1.42%, which may be significant.
Accordingly, the FAA prepared a
regulatory flexibility analysis for small
air tour operators, as described in the
next section.
The FAA identified 379 small on
demand operators (with 1,500 or fewer
employees) out of the 380 on demand
operators that would be affected by this
proposed regulation. Although their
annualized compliance costs ranges
between $6,752 and $642,020, the
agency is unable to estimate their
annual revenues because average
revenue per operation for these entities
is not meaningful. There are a number
of factors (e.g., length of flight, type of
helicopter) that determine the revenue
for an individual operation. These
factors are not likely to result in a
distribution around a meaningful
average revenue. The FAA seeks
comment on the impact to on demand
operators as a result of this proposal.
considered the proposed rule, (2) the
objectives and legal basis for the
proposed rule, (3) the kind and number
of small entities to which the proposed
rule would apply, (4) the reporting,
recordkeeping, and other compliance
requirements of the proposed rule,
(5) all Federal rules that may duplicate,
overlap, or conflict with the proposed
rule, and (6) alternatives to the proposed
rule.
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
Under section 603(b) of the RFA (as
amended), each regulatory flexibility
analysis is required to address the
following points: (1) Reasons the agency
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Reasons the FAA Considered the Rule
See section II. Background.
The Objectives and Legal Basis for the
Rule
The FAA’s authority to issue rules on
aviation safety is found in Title 49 of the
United States Code. This rulemaking is
promulgated under the authority
described in 49 U.S.C. 44701(a)(4),
which requires the Administrator to
promulgate regulations in the interest of
safety for the maximum hours or
periods of service of airmen and other
employees of air carriers, and 49 U.S.C.
44701(a)(5), which requires the
Administrator to promulgate regulations
and minimum standards for other
practices, methods, and procedures
necessary for safety in air commerce and
national security. As discussed
throughout this document, the proposal
aims to improve safety for air
ambulance operations and other
commercial helicopter operations.
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The Kind and Number of Small Entities
to Which the Proposed Rule Would
Apply
Based on a review of part 135
certificates and operations
specifications, the FAA estimates 28
small air ambulance operators and 31
air tour operators that the proposed rule
would impact. The agency estimates
that these operators have annual
revenues between $1.3 million to
$6.3 million.46
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements of the
Proposed Rule
Reporting, recordkeeping, and other
compliance requirements are outlined
in section IV. Paperwork Reduction Act.
The FAA seeks comment on whether
reporting, recordkeeping, and
compliance costs vary from small to
large entities.
All Federal Rules that May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict With the Proposed
Rule
The FAA is unaware of any Federal
rules that duplicate, overlap, or conflict
with the proposed rule.
Other Considerations
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For the purpose of this analysis, the
degree to which small entities can afford
the cost of the proposed rule is
predicated on the availability of
financial resources. Costs can be paid
from existing assets such as cash, by
borrowing, through the provision of
additional equity capital, by accepting
reduced profits, by raising prices, or by
finding other ways of offsetting costs.
One means of assessing the
affordability is the ability of each of the
small entities to meet its short-term
obligations, such as looking at net
income, working capital and financial
strength ratios. According to financial
literature, a company’s short-run
financial strength is substantially
influenced by its working capital
position and its ability to pay short-term
liabilities, among other things. However,
the FAA was unable to find this type of
financial information for the affected
entities, and so used an alternative way
of analyzing affordability. The approach
used by the FAA was to compare
estimated revenues with the annualized
compliance costs.
Small air ambulance operators and air
tour operators may have trouble
absorbing the costs of complying with
the proposed rule if their annualized
46 Aviation Week, World Aerospace Database,
Winter, 2009.
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Competitiveness Analysis
For small air ambulance and air tour
operators, the ratio of annualized cost to
estimated annual revenue ranges
between 0.58% and 1.88%. For large air
ambulance and air tour operators, it
ranges between 0.62% and 2.4%. The
FAA expects that based on these results,
there would be little change in the
competitiveness of small air ambulance
and air tour operators relative to large
operators.
Alternatives
Affordability Analysis
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costs exceed 5 percent of their estimated
revenues. The idea is that if a business
has such a high cost, percentage-wise, it
would likely have trouble absorbing the
costs of complying with the proposed
rule. The average ratio of annualized
cost to estimated annual revenue for
small air ambulance operators and air
tour operators ranges between 0.58%
and 1.88%. Thus, the FAA expects that
small air ambulances and air tour
operators would not have trouble
absorbing the costs of complying with
this rule.
Related to this analysis, the FAA
seeks comment on whether the
economic impact on small entities is
significant.
Jkt 223001
Alternative One—The current
proposal would give certificate holders
three years from the effective date to
install all required pieces of equipment.
This alternative would change the
compliance date to four years after the
effective rule date. This would help
small business owners cope with the
burden of the expenses because they
would be able to integrate these pieces
of equipment over a longer period of
time.
Conclusion—This alternative is not
preferred because it would delay safety
enhancements. Thus, the FAA does not
consider this to be an acceptable
alternative in accordance with 5 U.S.C.
603(c).
Alternative Two—This alternative
would exclude the HTAWS unit from
the rulemaking proposal. Although this
alternative would reduce annualized
costs to small air ambulance operators
by approximately 12% and the ratio of
annualized cost to annual revenue
would decrease from a range of between
1.76% and 1.88% to a range of between
1.55% and 1.65%, the annualized cost
of the proposed rule would still be
significant for all 35 small air
ambulance operators. Since all 35 small
air ambulance operators would still be
significantly impacted by this
alternative, the alternative not only does
not eliminate the problem for a
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62665
substantial number of small entities, but
also it would reduce safety.
Conclusion—The HTAWS is an
outstanding tool for situational
awareness and to help helicopter air
ambulance pilots during nighttime
operations. This equipment is a great
enhancement for situational awareness
in all aspects of flying including day,
night, and instrument meteorological
conditions. Therefore the FAA believes
that this equipment is a significant
enhancement for safety throughout all
aspects of helicopter operations. The
accident data shows that the HTAWS
provision could have prevented many
air ambulance accidents if this equipage
was available at the time of the accident.
Thus the FAA does not consider this to
be an acceptable alternative in
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 603(c).
Alternative Three—The alternative
would increase the requirement of
certificate holders from 10 to 15
helicopters or more that are engaged in
helicopter air ambulance operations to
have an Operations Control Center.
Conclusion—The FAA believes that
operators with 10 or more helicopters
engaged in air ambulance operations
would cover 66% of the total population
of the air ambulance fleet in the U.S.
The FAA believes that operators with 15
or more helicopters would decrease the
coverage of the population to 50%.
Furthermore, complexity issues arise
and considerably increase with
operators of more than 10 helicopters.
Thus the FAA does not consider this to
be an acceptable alternative in
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 603(c).
The FAA invites public comment on
the conclusions reached with regard to
the alternatives outlined above.
Conclusion
The FAA has determined that this
proposed rule would have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
helicopter air ambulance and air tour
operators. Because the agency is unable
to estimate annual revenues for ondemand operators, the FAA cannot
determine whether the proposed rule
would have a significant impact on a
substantial number of on-demand
operators. The FAA believes that small
helicopter air ambulance and air tour
operators would be able to afford the
proposed rule and would remain
competitive. While small entities would
likely be able to afford the proposal, the
FAA seeks comment on whether small
entities will be able to remain
competitive under the proposal.
International Trade Impact Assessment
The Trade Agreements Act of 1979
(Pub. L. 96–39), as amended by the
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Uruguay Round Agreements Act (Pub.
L. 103–465), prohibits Federal agencies
from establishing standards or engaging
in related activities that create
unnecessary obstacles to the foreign
commerce of the United States.
Pursuant to these Acts, the
establishment of standards is not
considered an unnecessary obstacle to
the foreign commerce of the United
States, so long as the standard has a
legitimate domestic objective, such as
the protection of safety, and does not
operate in a manner that excludes
imports that meet this objective. The
statute also requires consideration of
international standards and, where
appropriate, that they be the basis for
U.S. standards. The FAA has assessed
the potential effect of this proposed rule
and determined that it would have only
a domestic impact and therefore will not
create unnecessary obstacles to the
foreign commerce of the United States.
Unfunded Mandates Assessment
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4)
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 an
expenditure of $100 million or more (in
1995 dollars) 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
$136.1 million in lieu of $100 million.
This proposed rule does not contain
such a mandate; therefore, the
requirements of Title II of the Act do not
apply.
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with PROPOSALS-PART 2
VII. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
The FAA has analyzed this proposed
rule under the principles and criteria of
Executive Order 13132, Federalism. The
agency 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.
VIII. Regulations Affecting Intrastate
Aviation in Alaska
Section 1205 of the FAA
Reauthorization Act of 1996 (110 Stat.
3213) requires the Administrator, when
modifying regulations in title 14 of the
CFR in a manner affecting intrastate
aviation in Alaska, to consider the
extent to which Alaska is not served by
transportation modes other than
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Jkt 223001
aviation, and to establish appropriate
regulatory distinctions. Because this
proposed rule would apply to helicopter
air ambulance, commercial helicopter,
and general aviation operations, the
FAA specifically requests comments on
whether there is justification for
applying the proposed rule differently
in intrastate operations in Alaska.
IX. Environmental Analysis
FAA Order 1050.1E identifies FAA
actions that are categorically excluded
from preparation of an environmental
assessment or environmental impact
statement under the National
Environmental Policy Act in the
absence of extraordinary circumstances.
The FAA has determined this proposed
rulemaking action qualifies for the
categorical exclusion identified in
paragraph 312f. Additionally, the FAA
reviewed paragraph 304 of Order
1050.1E and determined that this
rulemaking involves no extraordinary
circumstances.
X. Regulations That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
The FAA has analyzed this NPRM
under Executive Order 13211, Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use (May 18, 2001). The
agency has determined that it is not a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under
Executive Order 13211 because it is not
likely to have a significant adverse effect
on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy. The NPRM is, however,
‘‘significant’’ under DOT’s Regulatory
Policies and Procedures.
XI. Availability of Rulemaking
Documents
You can get an electronic copy of
rulemaking documents using the
Internet by—
1. Searching the Federal eRulemaking
Portal (https://www.regulations.gov);
2. Visiting the FAA’s Regulations and
Policies web page at https://
www.faa.gov/regulations_policies or
3. Accessing the Government Printing
Office’s Web page at https://
www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/.
You can also get a copy by sending a
request to the Federal Aviation
Administration, Office of Rulemaking,
ARM–1, 800 Independence Avenue
SW., Washington, DC 20591, or by
calling (202) 267–9680. Make sure to
identify the docket number, notice
number, or amendment number of this
rulemaking.
You may access all documents the
FAA considered in developing this
proposed rule, including economic
analyses and technical reports, from the
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Internet through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal referenced in
paragraph (1).
XI. Additional Information
Comments Invited
The FAA invites interested persons to
participate in this rulemaking by
submitting written comments, data, or
views. We also invite comments relating
to the economic, environmental, energy,
or federalism impacts that might result
from adopting the proposals in this
document. The most helpful comments
reference a specific portion of the
proposal, explain the reason for any
recommended change, and include
supporting data. To ensure the docket
does not contain duplicate comments,
please send only one copy of written
comments, or if you are filing comments
electronically, please submit your
comments only one time.
We will file in the docket all
comments we receive, as well as a
report summarizing each substantive
public contact with FAA personnel
concerning this proposed rulemaking.
Before acting on this proposal, we will
consider all comments we receive on or
before the closing date for comments.
We will consider comments filed after
the comment period has closed if it is
possible to do so without incurring
expense or delay. We may change this
proposal in light of the comments we
receive.
Proprietary or Confidential Business
Information
Do not file in the docket information
that you consider to be proprietary or
confidential business information. Send
or deliver this information directly to
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
document. You must mark the
information that you consider
proprietary or confidential. If you send
the information on a disk or CD ROM,
mark the outside of the disk or CD ROM
and also identify electronically within
the disk or CD ROM the specific
information that is proprietary or
confidential.
Under 14 CFR 11.35(b), when we are
aware of proprietary information filed
with a comment, we do not place it in
the docket. We hold it in a separate file
to which the public does not have
access, and we place a note in the
docket that we have received it. If we
receive a request to examine or copy
this information, we treat it as any other
request under the Freedom of
Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552). We
process such a request under the DOT
procedures found in 49 CFR part 7.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 196 / Tuesday, October 12, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Appendix to the Preamble—Additional
Accidents Discussions
The following is a list of accidents
(listed with reference to the associated
preamble discussions) illustrative of the
type that the FAA believes this proposal
may have prevented.
A. Helicopter Air Ambulance
Operations
1. Operational Procedures
b. Operational Control Center
On July 13, 2004, a Bell 407
helicopter, operating under 14 CFR part
135, collided with trees resulting in fatal
injuries to the pilot, medical personnel
and patient on board. The pilot
performed a weather check before
accepting the flight and was provided
flight monitoring by the Spartanburg
County Communications 911
Department of the Spartanburg County
Office of Emergency Services. The flight
was conducted in night visual,
meteorological conditions were present,
with mist and light fog prevailing in the
area of the accident site. The accident
pilot was not informed that other pilots
had declined this mission due to fog.
The NTSB cited the pilot’s failure to
maintain terrain clearance as the cause
of the accident, and contributing factors
included ‘‘inadequate weather and
dispatch information relayed to the
pilot.’’ See NTSB Accident Report
CHI04MA182 (Jan. 26, 2006).
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d. Preflight Risk Analysis
On August 21, 2004, a Bell 407
helicopter, operating under 14 CFR part
135 and en route to Washoe Medical
Center in Reno, Nevada, collided with
mountainous terrain resulting in fatal
injuries to the pilot, two medical
personnel, the patient’s mother, and the
infant patient. The pilot had a choice of
two routes, and he chose the direct
route over mountainous terrain instead
of the route following the I–80 which
was 10 minutes longer. The pilot chose
the route through mountainous terrain.
The NTSB noted that there was no
indication that the pilot obtained a
weather briefing before departure and
that if he had ‘‘he would have likely
learned of the cloud cover and light
precipitation present along his planned
route of flight.’’ The NTSB cited the
pilot’s lack of maintaining sufficient
clearance of mountainous terrain as the
cause of this accident, and other
contributing factors such as the pilot’s
improper decision to take the direct
route over mountainous terrain in dark
night conditions. See NTSB Accident
Report SEA04MA167 (Jan. 26, 2006).
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15:04 Oct 08, 2010
Jkt 223001
On November 29, 1998, a McDonnell
Douglas MD–900 helicopter, en route to
St. Alphonsus hospital heliport in
Boise, ID, and operating under 14 CFR
part 135, struck unmarked transmission
wires when departing from a car
accident site resulting in major damage
to four of the five main rotor blades. No
injuries were sustained by the flight
crew, medical personnel, or patient on
board. The NTSB cited the pilot and
ground crew’s failure to identify the
existence of the wires as factors
contributing to this accident. The FAA
believes that a pre-flight review of the
proposed landing site may have
prevented this accident. See NTSB
Accident Report SEA99LA016 (Jan. 11,
2000).
On November 19, 1993, a Bell 206L
helicopter, operating under part 135
rules landed hard in the Atlantic Ocean
resulting in fatal injuries to all three
passengers and serious injuries to the
pilot during nighttime conditions. The
pilot, operating at night under VFR,
encountered inadvertent IMC and
crashed. The NTSB determined the
cause of the accident was the pilot’s
continued VFR flight into IMC, and
contributing factors included weather,
dark night, and rough sea conditions.
See NTSB Accident Report
BFO94FA013 (Nov. 1, 1994).
2. Equipment Requirements
a. Helicopter Terrain Awareness and
Warning Systems
On December 12, 1996, a
Messerschmitt-Bolkow-Blohn BO–
105CBS helicopter, operating under part
135, collided with terrain at night in
instrument conditions while
transporting a patient to a hospital in
Rochester, NY. Witnesses observed that
cloud cover and the isolated area made
for a dark night with no discernable
horizon. About two minutes after the
pilot’s departure for the hospital, the
helicopter collided with terrain
resulting in fatal injuries to all on board.
The NTSB stated the cause for this
accident was ‘‘the pilot’s failure to
maintain altitude/clearance from the
terrain,’’ and other factors relating to the
accident included ‘‘darkness, low
ceiling, rising terrain, and high wind
condition.’’ See NTSB Accident Report
IAD97FA032 (Jul. 31, 2008).
b. Light-Weight Aircraft Recording
System (LARS)
On June 29, 2008, two Bell 407
helicopters collided in midair while
approaching the Flagstaff Medical
Center helipad. Both helicopters were
destroyed, and all seven persons aboard
the two aircraft were fatally injured. Day
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VMC prevailed. The NTSB determined
that the probable cause of this accident
was both helicopter pilots’ failure to see
and avoid the other helicopter on
approach to the helipad. Contributing to
the accident were the failure of the pilot
of one of the helicopters to follow
arrival and noise abatement guidelines
and the failure of the pilot of the other
helicopter to follow communications
guidelines. The NTSB noted that ‘‘had
either operator established a formal
flight-monitoring program, the use of
non-standard procedures might have led
the operators to take corrective action
that could have prevented the two
helicopters from arriving at the same
helipad on different approach angles
that particular day.’’ See NTSB Accident
Report DEN08MA116A/B (May 7, 2009).
On May 27, 1993, an Aerospatiale AS
350B helicopter, operating under 14
CFR part 135, crashed into terrain near
Cameron, MO, resulting in fatal injuries
to the pilot and patient and serious
injuries to medical personnel. The
NTSB found that the accident was a
result of loss of engine power due to the
failure of the second state turbine
labyrinth seal. In its factual report, the
NTSB noted that aircraft manufacturer
representatives described that a crack
could develop under thermal low cycle
fatigue, then develop as ‘‘ ‘subsequent
distortion leads to rub between the
inner diameter of the hub and the inner
turbine labyrinth lips.’ ’’ An
appropriately equipped LARS could
capture audio files for acoustic analysis
of dynamic components in the event of
an accident or incident. Such
mechanical failures could be detectable
by LARS equipped to record ambient
audio files. See NTSB Accident Report
CHI93FA182 (Jun. 24, 1994).
B. Commercial Helicopter Operations
(Including Air Ambulance Operations)
2. Equipment Requirements
a. Radar Altimeter
On July 23, 2003, a Bell 206B
helicopter, operating under 14 CFR part
135, crashed into the inside wall of the
Waialeale Crater, Kauai, HI, fatally
injuring the pilot and all four
passengers. This sightseeing tour
originated at the Lihue Airport in Kauai
under VFR conditions. During the flight,
the pilot encountered clouds and a low
ceiling. The pilot descended into the
mountain side. The NTSB determined
the probable cause of this accident was
the pilot’s failure to maintain ‘‘adequate
terrain clearance/altitude while
descending over mountainous terrain’’
and continued flight into adverse
weather. The contributing factors were
clouds and a low ceiling. See NTSB
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 196 / Tuesday, October 12, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Accident Report LAX03FA241 (Sept. 14,
2007).
On January 10, 2005, a Eurocopter
Deutschland GmbH EC–135 P2
helicopter, operating under part 91,
crashed in the Potomac River, fatally
injuring the pilot and paramedic and
seriously injuring the flight nurse.
During low-altitude cruise flight, the
helicopter impacted water without any
distress warning from the pilot. The
NTSB noted the cause of this accident
was ‘‘the pilot’s failure to identify and
arrest the helicopter’s descent, which
resulted in controlled flight into
terrain.’’ Other factors identified by the
NTSB included the dark night
conditions and a lack of an operable
radio altimeter. NTSB Accident Report
NYC05MA039 (Dec. 20, 2007).
3. Training—Recovery From Inadvertent
Flight Into IMC
On September 20, 1995, a Bell 206L
helicopter, operating under 14 CFR part
91, was substantially damaged after the
pilot inadvertently encountered IMC
and lost control. The NTSB found that
the pilot’s failure to maintain control of
the helicopter was the cause of this
accident. It cited the pilot’s inadvertent
VFR flight into IMC conditions as a
factor contributing to the accident. See
NTSB Accident ID #CHI95LA327.
On December 23, 2003, an Augusta
A109A helicopter, operated under part
91 en route to pick up a patient during
a helicopter air ambulance operation,
collided with mountainous terrain near
Redwood Valley, CA, while trying to
reverse course following an encounter
with night IMC. The crash fatally
injured all on board and destroyed the
helicopter. The NTSB determined the
cause of the accident was the pilot’s
improper in-flight planning and
decision to continue flight under visual
flight rules into deteriorating weather
conditions which resulted in an
inadvertent in-flight encounter with
IMC. See NTSB Accident ID
#LAX04FA076.
List of Subjects
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with PROPOSALS-PART 2
14 CFR Part 1
Air transportation.
14 CFR Part 91
Aircraft, Airmen, Aviation safety,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
14 CFR Part 120
Airmen, Alcohol abuse, Alcoholism,
Alcohol testing, Aviation safety, Drug
abuse, Drug testing, Operators,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Safety, Safety-sensitive,
Transportation.
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15:04 Oct 08, 2010
Jkt 223001
14 CFR Part 135
Air taxis, Aircraft, Airmen, Aviation
safety, Incorporation by reference,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
The Proposed Amendment
In consideration of the foregoing, the
Federal Aviation Administration
proposes to amend chapter I of title 14,
Code of Federal Regulations, as follows:
PART 1—DEFINITIONS AND
ABBREVIATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 1
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 40113, 44701.
2. Amend § 1.1 by revising the
definition of ‘‘Extended over-water
operation’’ to read as follows:
§ 1.1
General definitions.
*
6. Amend § 120.105 by adding
paragraph (i) to read as follows:
§ 120.105
Employees who must be tested.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) Operations control specialist
duties.
7. Amend § 120.215 by adding
paragraph (a)(9) to read as follows:
§ 120.215
Covered employees.
(a) * * *
(9) Operations control specialist
duties.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 135—OPERATING
REQUIREMENTS: COMMUTER AND
ON DEMAND OPERATIONS AND
RULES GOVERNING PERSONS ON
BOARD SUCH AIRCRAFT
8. The authority citation for part 135
continues to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
Extended over-water operation means
an operation over water at a horizontal
distance of more than 50 nautical miles
from the nearest shoreline.
*
*
*
*
*
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 41706, 40113,
44701–44702, 44705, 44709, 44711–44713,
44715–44717, 44722, 45101–45105.
PART 91—GENERAL OPERATING AND
FLIGHT RULES
(a) * * *
(9) Helicopter air ambulance
operations with medical personnel, as
defined in § 135.601(b)(4), on board the
aircraft.
*
*
*
*
*
10. Amend § 135.63 by revising the
introductory text of paragraph (c) and
revising paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
3. The authority citation for part 91
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 1155, 40103,
40113, 40120, 44101, 44111, 44701, 44704,
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).
4. Amend § 91.155 by revising
paragraph (b)(1) to read as follows:
§ 91.155
Basic VFR weather minimums.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Helicopter. A helicopter may be
operated clear of clouds if operated at a
speed that allows the pilot adequate
opportunity to see and avoid other air
traffic or obstruction in time to avoid a
collision, provided the visibility is at
least—
(i) One half statute mile during the
day; or
(ii) One statute mile at night.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 120—DRUG AND ALCOHOL
TESTING PROGRAM
5. The authority citation for part 120
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 40101–40103,
40113, 40120, 41706, 41721, 44106, 44701,
44702, 44703, 44709, 44710, 44711, 45101–
45105, 46105, 46306.
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9. Amend § 135.1 by adding
paragraph (a)(9) to read as follows:
§ 135.1
Applicability.
§ 135.63
Recordkeeping requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Each certificate holder is
responsible for the preparation and
accuracy of a load manifest containing
information concerning the loading of
the aircraft. The manifest must be
prepared in duplicate unless the
certificate holder receives a copy of the
load manifest, by electronic or other
means, at its principal operations base
or at another location used by it and
approved by the FAA prior to the
aircraft’s take off. The load manifest
must be prepared before each take off
and must include:
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The pilot in command of an
aircraft for which a load manifest must
be prepared must carry a copy of the
completed load manifest in the aircraft
to its destination and, unless the
certificate holder receives a copy of the
load manifest prior to take off as
provided for in paragraph (c) of this
section, arrange at the takeoff location
for a copy to be sent to the certificate
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 196 / Tuesday, October 12, 2010 / Proposed Rules
holder, retained in a suitable place at
the takeoff location, or retained in
another location approved by the FAA
until the flight is complete. The
certificate holder shall keep copies of
completed load manifests for at least 30
days at its principal operations base, or
at another location used by it and
approved by the FAA.
11. Add § 135.160 to read as follows:
§ 135.160 Radio altimeters for rotorcraft
operations.
After [DATE 3 YEARS AFTER
EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE], no person may operate a
rotorcraft unless that rotorcraft is
equipped with an operable FAAapproved radio altimeter, or an FAAapproved device that incorporates a
radio altimeter, unless otherwise
authorized in the certificate holder’s
approved minimum equipment list.
12. Amend § 135.167 by revising the
section heading and the introductory
text of paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 135.167 Emergency equipment:
Extended over-water operations—Aircraft
other than rotorcraft.
(a) Except where the FAA amends the
operations specifications of the
certificate holder to require the carriage
of any or all specific items of the
equipment listed below for any overwater operation, or allows a deviation
for a particular extended over-water
operation in response to an application
by a certificate holder, no person may
operate an aircraft other than a rotorcraft
in extended over-water operations
unless it carries, installed in
conspicuously marked locations easily
accessible to the occupants if a ditching
occurs, the following equipment:
*
*
*
*
*
13. Add § 135.168 to read as follows:
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with PROPOSALS-PART 2
§ 135.168 Emergency equipment: Overwater and extended over-water
operations—Rotorcraft.
(a) For purposes of this section, the
following definitions apply—
(1) Over-water operation: A flight
beyond autorotational distance from the
shoreline.
(2) 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 at which
a rotorcraft could be landed safely. This
does not include land areas which are
unsuitable for landing such as vertical
cliffs or land intermittently under water.
(b) Over-water operations. After
[DATE 3 YEARS AFTER EFFECTIVE
DATE OF THE FINAL RULE], except
where the FAA amends the operations
specifications of the certificate holder to
require the carriage of all or any specific
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items of the equipment listed below,
allows a deviation for a particular
operation, or the over-water operation is
necessary only for takeoff or landing, no
person may operate a rotorcraft in overwater operations unless it carries,
installed in conspicuously marked
locations easily accessible to the
occupants in the event of an emergency
water landing, the following equipment:
(1) Approved life preservers equipped
with an approved survivor locator light,
which must be worn by each occupant
of the rotorcraft from take off until the
flight is no longer over water;
(2) One approved pyrotechnic
signaling device;
(3) Enough life rafts of a rated
capacity and buoyancy to accommodate
the maximum number of occupants the
rotorcraft is certificated to carry;
(4) An approved, automatically
deployable, survival-type emergency
locator transmitter (ELT) in each life
raft. Batteries used in ELTs must be
maintained in accordance with the
following —
(i) Non-rechargeable batteries must be
replaced when the transmitter has been
in use for more than 1 cumulative hour
or when 50 percent of their useful lives
have expired, as established by the
transmitter manufacturer under its
approval. The new expiration date for
replacing the batteries must be legibly
marked on the outside of the
transmitter. The battery useful life
requirements of this paragraph do not
apply to batteries (such as wateractivated batteries) that are essentially
unaffected during probable storage
intervals; or
(ii) Rechargeable batteries used in the
transmitter must be recharged when the
transmitter has been in use for more
than 1 cumulative hour or when 50
percent of their useful-life-of-charge has
expired, as established by the
transmitter manufacturer under its
approval. The new expiration date for
recharging the batteries must be legibly
marked on the outside of the
transmitter. The battery useful-life-ofcharge requirements of this paragraph
do not apply to batteries (such as wateractivated batteries) that are essentially
unaffected during probable storage
intervals;
(5) Each life raft required under this
paragraph must be electronically
deployable, or externally mounted and
accessible, and equipped with—
(i) One survival kit, appropriate for
the route to be flown, or
(ii) Contain at least the following—
(A) One approved day/night signaling
device;
(B) One life raft repair kit;
(C) One bailing bucket;
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(D) One signaling mirror;
(E) One police whistle;
(F) One raft knife;
(G) One inflation pump;
(H) One 75-foot retaining line;
(I) One magnetic compass;
(J) One dye marker or equivalent; and
(K) One fishing kit.
(c) Extended over-water operations.
After [DATE 3 YEARS AFTER
EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE], except where the FAA amends
the operations specifications of the
certificate holder to require the carriage
of all or any specific items of the
equipment listed below or allows a
deviation for a particular operation, no
person may operate a rotorcraft in
extended over-water operations unless it
carries, installed in conspicuously
marked locations easily accessible to the
occupants in the event of an emergency
water landing, the following equipment:
(1) Approved life preservers equipped
with an approved survivor locator light,
which must be worn by each occupant
of the rotorcraft during the duration of
the flight
(2) The equipment listed in
paragraphs (b)(2) through (b)(4) of this
section;
(3) One flashlight having at least two
operable size ‘‘D’’ cell or equivalent
batteries; and
(4) Each life raft required under this
paragraph must be electronically
deployable or externally mounted and
accessible, and equipped with or
contain at least the following—
(i) The equipment listed in paragraph
(b)(5) of this section;
(ii) One radar reflector;
(iii) One canopy (for sail, sunshade, or
rain catcher);
(iv) Two pints of water per each
person the life raft is rated to carry, or
one sea water desalting kit for each two
persons the life raft is rated to carry; and
(v) One book on survival appropriate
for the area in which the rotorcraft is
operated.
(d) Passenger Briefing. Passengers
carried in over-water or extended overwater operations must be briefed on the
following:
(1) Procedures for fastening and
unfastening seatbelts;
(2) Procedures for opening exits and
exiting the rotorcraft;
(3) Procedures for water ditching;
(4) Requirements for the use of life
preservers;
(5) Procedures for emergency exit
from the rotorcraft in the event of a
water landing; and
(6) The location and use of life rafts
and other floatation devices prior to
flight.
(e) Maintenance. The equipment
required by this section must be
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maintained in accordance with
§ 135.419.
(f) ELT Standards. The ELT required
by paragraph (b)(4) of this section must
meet the requirements in Technical
Standard Order (TSO)-C126a. Technical
Standard Order C126a, 406 MHz
Emergency Locator Transmitter (ELT),
December 17, 2008, is incorporated by
reference into this section with the
approval of the Director of the Office of
the Federal Register under 5 U.S.C.
552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. Copies may
be obtained from the U.S. Department of
Transportation, Subsequent Distribution
Office, DOT Warehouse M30, Ardmore
East Business Center, 3341 Q 75th
Avenue, Landover, MD 20785;
telephone (301) 322–5377. Copies are
also available on the FAA’s Web site.
Use the following link: https://
www.airweb.faa.gov/
Regulatory_and_Guidance_Library/
rgTSO.nsf/0/
0ac772bbed9b95a586257523007629b3/
$FILE/TSO-C126a.pdf. All approved
material is available for inspection at
the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). For
information on the availability of this
material at NARA, call 202–741–6030 or
go to https://www.archives.gov/
federal_register/
code_of_federal_regulations/
ibr_locations.html.
(g) ELT Alternative Compliance.
Operators with an ELT required by
paragraph (b)(4) of this section that
meets a later version of TSO–C126a, or
an ELT with an approved deviation
under § 21.609 of this chapter, also are
in compliance with this section.
14. Revise § 135.221 to read as
follows:
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with PROPOSALS-PART 2
§ 135.221
minima.
IFR: Alternate airport weather
(a) Aircraft other than rotorcraft. No
person may designate an alternate
airport unless the weather reports or
forecasts, or any combination of them,
indicate that the weather conditions
will be at or above authorized alternate
airport landing minima for that airport
at the estimated time of arrival.
(b) Rotorcraft. Unless otherwise
authorized by the FAA, no person may
include an alternate airport or heliport
in an IFR flight plan unless appropriate
weather reports or weather forecasts, or
a combination of them, indicate that, at
the estimated time of arrival at the
alternate airport or heliport, the ceiling
and visibility at that airport or heliport
will be at or above the following
weather minima –
(1) If, for that airport or heliport, an
instrument approach procedure has
been published in part 97 of this
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chapter, or a special instrument
approach procedure has been issued by
the FAA to the operator, the ceiling is
200 feet above the minimum for the
approach to be flown, and visibility is
at least 1 statute mile but never less than
the minimum visibility for the approach
to be flown.
(2) If, for the alternate airport or
heliport, no instrument approach
procedure has been published in part 97
of this chapter and no special
instrument approach procedure has
been issued by the FAA to the operator,
the ceiling and visibility minima are
those allowing descent from the MEA,
approach, and landing under basic VFR.
15. Amend § 135.267 by adding
paragraph (g) to read as follows:
§ 135.267 Flight time limitations and rest
requirements: Unscheduled one- and twopilot crews.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) For purposes of this section the
term ‘‘flight time’’ includes any
helicopter air ambulance operation with
medical personnel, as defined in
§ 135.601, on board the helicopter.
16. Amend § 135.271 by adding
paragraph (j) to read as follows:
§ 135.271 Helicopter hospital emergency
medical evacuation service (HEMES).
*
*
*
*
*
(j) For purposes of this section the
term ‘‘flight time’’ includes any HEMES
operations with medical personnel, as
defined in § 135.601, on board the
helicopter.
17. Amend § 135.293 by—
a. Removing the word ‘‘and’’ from the
end of paragraph (a)(7)(iii);
b. Removing the period and adding ‘‘;
and’’ in its place at the end of paragraph
(a)(8);
c. Adding paragraph (a)(9);
d. Redesignating paragraphs (c)
through (f) as paragraphs (d) through (g)
respectively; and
e. Adding new paragraph (c).
The additions read as follows:
§ 135.293 Initial and recurrent pilot testing
requirements.
(a) * * *
(9) For rotorcraft pilots, procedures
for aircraft handling in flat-light,
whiteout, and brownout conditions,
including methods for recognizing and
avoiding those conditions.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Each competency check for a
rotorcraft pilot must include a
demonstration of the pilot’s ability to
maneuver the rotorcraft solely by
reference to instruments. The check
must determine the pilot’s ability to
safely maneuver the rotorcraft into
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visual meteorological conditions
following an inadvertent encounter with
instrument meteorological conditions.
For competency checks in non-IFRcertified rotorcraft, the pilot must
perform such maneuvers as are
appropriate to the rotorcraft’s installed
equipment, the certificate holder’s
operations specifications, and the
operating environment.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 135.297
[Amended]
18. Amend § 135.297 by removing the
reference to ‘‘§ 135.293 (d)’’ and adding
‘‘§ 135.293 (e)’’ in its place in the last
sentence of paragraph (c) introductory
text.
19. Add subpart L to part 135 to read
as follows:
Subpart L—Helicopter Air Ambulance
Equipment, Operations, and Training
Requirements
Sec.
135.601 Applicability and definitions.
135.603 Pilot-in-command qualifications.
135.605 Helicopter terrain awareness and
warning system (HTAWS).
135.607 VFR minimum altitudes and
visibility requirements.
135.609 IFR operations at locations without
weather reporting.
135.611 VFR/visual transitions from
instrument approaches.
135.613 VFR flight planning.
135.615 Pre-flight risk analysis.
135.617 Operations control centers.
135.619 Medical personnel briefing
requirements.
Subpart L—Helicopter Air Ambulance
Equipment, Operation, and Training
Requirements
§ 135.601
Applicability and definitions.
(a) Applicability. This subpart
prescribes the requirements applicable
to each certificate holder conducting
helicopter air ambulance operations.
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this
subpart, the following definitions apply.
(1) Helicopter air ambulance means a
helicopter used in helicopter air
ambulance operations by a part 135
certificate holder authorized by the FAA
to conduct helicopter air ambulance
operations.
(2) Helicopter air ambulance
operation means a flight, or sequence of
flights, conducted for the purpose of
transporting a person in need of medical
care, or a donor organ, by helicopter air
ambulance. This includes, but is not
limited to—
(i) Flights conducted to position the
helicopter at the site at which a patient
or donor organ will be picked up;
(ii) Flights conducted to reposition
the helicopter after completing the
patient, or donor organ transport; and
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(iii) Flights initiated for the transport
of a patient or donor organ that are
terminated due to weather or other
reasons.
(3) Medical personnel means persons
with medical training, including but not
limited to a flight physician, a flight
nurse, or a flight paramedic, who are
carried aboard a helicopter during
helicopter air ambulance operations in
order to provide medical care.
(4) Mountainous means designated
mountainous areas as defined in part 95
of this chapter.
(5) Non-mountainous means areas
other than mountainous areas as defined
in part 95 of this chapter.
§ 135.603
Pilot-in-command qualifications.
After [DATE 3 YEARS AFTER
EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE], no certificate holder may use,
nor may any person serve as, a pilot in
command of a helicopter air ambulance
operation unless that person meets the
requirements of § 135.243 and holds a
helicopter instrument rating or an
airline transport pilot certificate with a
category and class rating for that
aircraft, that is not limited to VFR.
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with PROPOSALS-PART 2
§ 135.605 Helicopter terrain awareness
and warning system (HTAWS).
(a) No person may operate a
helicopter in helicopter air ambulance
operations after [DATE 3 YEARS AFTER
EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE], unless that helicopter is
equipped with a helicopter terrain
awareness and warning system
(HTAWS) that meets the requirements
in Technical Standard Order (TSO)–
C194. Technical Standard Order (TSO)–
C194 Helicopter Terrain Awareness and
Warning System, December 17, 2008, is
incorporated by reference into this
section with the approval of the Director
of the Office of the Federal Register
under 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51.
Copies may be obtained from the U.S.
Department of Transportation,
Subsequent Distribution Office, DOT
Warehouse M30, Ardmore East Business
Center, 3341 Q 75th Avenue, Landover,
MD 20785; telephone (301) 322–5377.
Copies are also available on the FAA’s
Web site. Use the following link:
https://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory_
and_Guidance_Library/rgTSO.nsf/0/
532109AB059EC23
D8625762000573A1E?OpenDocument.
All approved material is available for
inspection at the National Archives and
Records Administration (NARA). For
information on the availability of this
material at NARA, call 202–741–6030 or
go to https://www.archives.gov/
federal_register/code_of_federal_
regulations/ibr_locations.html.
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(b) Operators with HTAWS required
by this section that meets a later version
of TSO–C194, or HTAWS with an
approved deviation under § 21.609 of
this chapter, also are in compliance
with this section.
(c) The certificate holder’s Rotorcraft
Flight Manual must contain appropriate
procedures for—
(1) The use of the HTAWS; and
(2) Proper flight crew response to
HTAWS audio and visual warnings.
§ 135.607 VFR minimum altitudes and
visibility requirements.
Unless specified in the certificate
holder’s operations specifications, when
conducting helicopter air ambulance
operations in Class G airspace with
medical personnel on board, the
following weather minima and visibility
requirements apply—
(a) In non-mountainous local flying
areas—
(1) During the day, 800-foot ceiling
and 2 statute miles visibility.
(2) At night—
(i) When equipped with an FAAapproved night-vision imaging system
(NVIS) or an FAA-approved HTAWS,
800-foot ceiling and 3 statute miles
visibility; or
(ii) When not equipped with an FAAapproved NVIS or an FAA-approved
HTAWS, 1,000-foot ceiling and 3 statute
miles visibility.
(b) In non-mountainous cross-country
flying areas—
(1) During the day, 800-foot ceiling
and 3 statute miles visibility.
(2) At night—
(i) When equipped with an FAAapproved NVIS or an FAA-approved
HTAWS, 1,000-foot ceiling and 3 statute
miles visibility; or
(ii) When not equipped with an FAAapproved NVIS or an FAA-approved
HTAWS, 1,000-foot ceiling and 5 statute
miles visibility.
(c) In mountainous local flying
areas—
(1) During the day, 800-foot ceiling
and 3 statute miles visibility.
(2) At night—
(i) When equipped with an FAAapproved NVIS or an FAA-approved
HTAWS, 1,000-foot ceiling and 3 statute
miles visibility; or
(ii) When not equipped with an FAAapproved NVIS or an FAA-approved
HTAWS, 1,500-foot ceiling and 3 statute
miles visibility.
(d) In mountainous cross-country
flying areas—
(1) During the day, 1,000-foot ceiling
and 3 statute miles visibility.
(2) At night—
(i) When equipped with an FAAapproved NVIS or an FAA-approved
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62671
HTAWS, 1,000-foot ceiling and 5 statute
miles visibility; or
(ii) When not equipped with an FAAapproved NVIS or an FAA-approved
HTAWS, 1,500-foot ceiling and 5 statute
miles visibility.
(e) Each certificate holder must
designate a local flying area for each
base of operations at which helicopter
air ambulance services are conducted,
in a manner acceptable to the FAA, that
must—
(1) Not exceed 50 nautical miles in
any direction from the helicopter’s base
of operations;
(2) Take into account man-made and
natural geographic terrain features that
are easily identifiable by the pilot in
command and from which the pilot in
command may visually determine a
position at all times; and
(3) Take into account the operating
environment and capabilities of the
certificate holder’s aircraft.
§ 135.609 IFR operations at locations
without weather reporting.
(a) If a certificate holder is authorized
to conduct helicopter IFR operations,
the FAA may issue operations
specifications to allow that certificate
holder to conduct IFR operations at
airports or heliports with an instrument
approach procedure and at which a
weather report is not available from the
U.S. National Weather Service (NWS), a
source approved by the NWS, or a
source approved by the FAA, subject to
the following limitations:
(1) In Class G airspace, IFR departures
are authorized only after the pilot in
command of the affected flight
determines that the weather conditions
at the departure point are at or above
VFR minima in accordance with
§ 135.607;
(2) The certificate holder must obtain
a weather report from a weather
reporting facility operated by the NWS,
a source approved by the NWS, or a
source approved by the FAA, that is
located within 15 nautical miles of the
destination landing area. In addition,
the certificate holder must obtain the
area forecast from the NWS, a source
approved by the NWS, or a source
approved by the FAA, for information
regarding the weather observed in the
vicinity of the destination landing area;
(3) Flight planning for IFR flights
conducted under this paragraph must
include selection of an alternate airport
that meets the requirements of
§§ 135.221 and 135.223; and
(4) All approaches must be at
Category A approach speeds or those
required for the type of approach being
used.
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(b) Each helicopter air ambulance
operated under this section must be—
(1) Fully equipped and certified to
conduct IFR operations under this part;
(2) Equipped with functioning severe
weather-detection equipment, such as
airborne weather radar or lightning
detection;
(3) Equipped with an operable
autopilot, if used in lieu of the second
in command required by § 135.101; and
(4) Equipped with navigation
equipment appropriate to the approach
to be flown.
(c) Each pilot in command who
conducts operations under this section
must—
(1) Have a current § 135.297 pilot-incommand instrument proficiency check;
(2) Be certificated to conduct the
permitted IFR operations;
(3) Be trained in accordance with the
certificate holder’s approved training
program and annually complete an
approved course that includes, but is
not limited to—
(i) A review of IFR regulations found
in this part and parts 1, 61, and 91 of
this chapter, and IFR operations found
in the Aeronautical Information Manual;
(ii) Interpreting weather, weather
reports, and weather forecasts;
(iii) Reviewing instrument charts;
(iv) Crew resource management;
(v) Methods for determining weather
observations by the pilot in command,
including present visibility and ceilings;
and
(vi) Approaches authorized under this
section;
(4) Be qualified in accordance with
the requirements of this part;
(5) Be current in all requirements to
perform operations under IFR in the
make or model of helicopter being used;
and
(6) Be tested and checked on IFR
operations at uncontrolled airports.
(d) Pilots conducting operations
pursuant to this section may use the
weather information obtained in
paragraph (a) to satisfy the weather
report and forecast requirements of
§ 135.213 and § 135.225(a).
(e) After completing a landing at the
destination airport or heliport at which
a weather report is not available, the
pilot in command is authorized to
determine if the weather meets the
takeoff requirements of part 97 of this
chapter or the certificate holder’s
operations specification, as applicable.
§ 135.611 VFR/visual transitions from
instrument approaches.
approach procedure, the appropriate
associated minima on the approach
chart apply.
(2) Unless authorized by the FAA, the
following VFR weather minima apply
when conducting an authorized IFR
Point in Space (PinS) Copter Special
Instrument Approach Procedure—
(i) If the proceed-VFR segment to the
heliport of intended landing is within 1
nautical mile of the missed approach
point, and is within the obstacle
evaluation area, visibility must be at
least 1 statute mile.
(ii) If the proceed-VFR segment is 3
nautical miles or less from the heliport
or landing area and does not meet the
requirements of paragraph (a)(1)(i) of
this section, then—
(A) Day Operations: 600-foot ceiling/
2 statute miles visibility.
(B) Night Operations: 600-foot ceiling/
3 statute miles visibility.
(3) Unless authorized by the FAA, the
following VFR weather minima apply
when conducting an authorized IFR
Standard or Special Instrument
Approach Procedure and transitions to
VFR at the missed approach point that
is 3 nautical miles or less from the
heliport or landing area—
(i) Day Operations: 600-foot ceiling/2
statute miles visibility.
(ii) Night Operations: 600-foot ceiling/
3 statute miles visibility.
(4) If the distance from the missed
approach point to the heliport or
landing area exceeds 3 nautical miles,
the minimum altitudes and visibility
requirements of § 135.607 apply.
(b) Transitions from VFR to IFR upon
departure from a heliport or landing
area—
(1) A pilot may use the VFR weather
minima of paragraph (a)(1) or (a)(2) of
this section to depart a heliport or
landing area if—
(i) The operator follows an FAAapproved obstacle departure procedure;
(ii) The operator has filed an IFR
flight plan and obtains an IFR clearance
upon reaching a predetermined
location; and
(iii) The distance from the departure
location to the point at which IFR
clearance will be obtained does not
exceed 3 nautical miles.
(2) If the operator cannot meet the
departure requirements of paragraph
(b)(1) of this section then the minimum
altitudes and visibility requirements of
§ 135.607 apply.
§ 135.613
(a) Transitions from IFR flight to VFR
flight on approach to a heliport or
landing area—
(1) If an approved visual segment
exists as part of an approved instrument
(a) Pre-flight: Prior to conducting VFR
operations, the pilot in command
must—
(1) Determine the minimum safe
cruise altitude by evaluating the terrain
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and obstacles along the planned route of
flight;
(2) Identify and document the highest
obstacle along the planned route of
flight; and
(3) Using the minimum safe cruise
altitudes, determine the minimum
required ceiling and visibility to
conduct the planned flight by applying
the weather minima appropriate to the
conditions of the planned flight,
including the requirements of this
subpart and the visibility and cloud
clearance requirements of § 91.155(a) of
this chapter, as applicable to the class
of airspace for the planned flight.
(b) During flight: While conducting
VFR operations, the pilot in command
must ensure that all terrain and
obstacles along the route of flight,
except for takeoff and landing, can be
cleared vertically by no less than the
following:
(1) 300 feet for day operations.
(2) 500 feet for night operations.
(c) Re-routing the planned flight path:
A pilot in command may deviate from
the planned flight path as required by
conditions or operational
considerations. During such deviations,
the pilot in command is not relieved
from the weather or terrain/obstruction
clearance requirements of this part and
part 91 of this chapter. Re-routing,
change in destination, or other changes
to the planned flight that occur while
the aircraft is on the ground at an
intermediate stop require evaluation of
the new route in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section.
(d) Operations manual: Each
certificate holder must document its
VFR flight planning procedures in its
operations manual.
§ 135.615
Pre-flight risk analysis.
(a) Each certificate holder conducting
helicopter air ambulance operations
must establish, and document in its
operations manual, an FAA-approved
procedure for conducting pre-flight risk
analyses that include at least the
following items—
(1) Flight considerations, to include
obstacles and terrain along the planned
route of flight, landing zone conditions,
and fuel requirements;
(2) Human factors, such as crew
fatigue, life events, and other stressors;
(3) Weather, including departure, en
route, destination, and forecasted;
(4) Whether another helicopter air
ambulance operator has refused or
rejected a flight request; and
(5) Strategies and procedures for
mitigating identified risks, including
procedures for obtaining and
documenting approval of the certificate
holder’s management personnel to
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release a flight when a risk exceeds a
level predetermined by the certificate
holder.
(b) Each certificate holder must
develop a pre-flight risk analysis
worksheet to include, at a minimum, the
items in paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Prior to the first leg of each
helicopter air ambulance operation, the
pilot in command must conduct and
document on the risk analysis
worksheet a pre-flight risk analysis in
accordance with the certificate holder’s
FAA-approved procedures. The pilot in
command must sign the risk analysis
worksheet and specify the date and time
it was completed.
(d) The certificate holder must retain
the original or a copy of each completed
pre-flight risk analysis worksheet at a
location specified in its operations
manual for at least 90 days from the date
of the operation.
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with PROPOSALS-PART 2
§ 135.617
Operations control centers.
(a) After [DATE 2 YEARS AFTER THE
EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE] certificate holders authorized to
conduct helicopter air ambulance
operations, with 10 or more helicopter
air ambulances assigned to the
certificate holder’s operations
specifications, must have an operations
control center, staffed by operations
control specialists who, at a minimum—
(1) Provide two-way communications
with pilots;
(2) Provide pilots with weather
briefings, to include current and
forecasted weather along the planned
route of flight;
(3) Monitor the progress of the flight;
and
(4) Participate in the pre-flight risk
analysis required under § 135.615 to
include the following:
(i) Ensure pilot has completed all
required items on the FAA-approved
pre-flight risk analysis form;
(ii) Confirm and verify all entries on
pre-flight risk analysis form;
(iii) Assist the pilot in mitigating any
identified risk prior to takeoff; and
(iv) Acknowledge in writing,
specifying the date and time, that the
risk analysis worksheet has been
accurately completed and that,
according to their professional
judgment, the flight can be conducted
safely.
(b) Each certificate holder conducting
helicopter air ambulance operations
must provide enough operations control
specialists at each operations control
center to ensure proper operational
control of each flight.
(c) Each certificate holder must
describe in its operations manual the
duties and responsibilities of operations
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Jkt 223001
control specialists, including pre-flight
risk mitigation strategies and control
measures, shift change checklist, and its
training and testing procedures to hold
the position, including procedures for
retesting.
(d) No certificate holder may use, nor
may any person serve as, an operations
control specialist unless that person has
satisfactorily completed the training
required by paragraph (e) of this section.
(e) No person may perform the duties
of an operations control specialist before
completing the certificate holder’s FAAapproved operations control specialist
training program and passing an FAAapproved written knowledge and a
practical test given by the certificate
holder as required by this paragraph. No
person may continue performing the
duties of an operations control specialist
unless that person has completed the
certificate holder’s FAA-approved
recurrent training program and passed
an FAA-approved written knowledge
test and a practical test given by the
certificate holder as required by this
paragraph.
(1) Initial training must include a
minimum of 80 hours of training on the
topics listed in paragraph (g) of this
section. A certificate holder may reduce
the number of hours of initial training
to a minimum of 40 hours for persons
who have obtained, at the time of
beginning initial training, a total of at
least 2 years of experience during the
last 5 years in any one or in any
combination of the following areas—
(i) In military aircraft operations as a
pilot, flight navigator, or meteorologist;
(ii) In air carrier operations as a pilot,
flight engineer, certified aircraft
dispatcher, or meteorologist; or
(iii) In aircraft operations as an air
traffic controller or a flight service
specialist.
(2) Each operations control specialist
must receive a minimum of 40 hours of
recurrent training on the topics listed in
paragraph (g) of this section and pass an
FAA approved written knowledge test
and practical test given by the certificate
holder on those topics within the
calendar month of the anniversary of
passing the initial practical test.
Recurrent training and examinations
may be completed in the calendar
month before, the calendar month of, or
the calendar month after they are due.
(f) The certificate holder must
maintain a training record for each
operations control specialist employed
by the certificate holder for the duration
of that individual’s employment and for
90 days thereafter. Each training record
must include a chronological log of all
instructors, subjects covered, and course
examinations and results.
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
62673
(g) Each certificate holder must have
an FAA-approved operations control
specialist training program that covers
at least the following topics—
(1) Aviation weather, to include:
(i) General meteorology;
(ii) Prevailing weather;
(iii) Adverse and deteriorating
weather;
(iv) Windshear;
(v) Icing conditions;
(vi) Use of aviation weather products;
(vii) Available sources of information;
and
(viii) Weather minima;
(2) Navigation, to include:
(i) Navigation aids;
(ii) Instrument approach procedures;
(iii) Navigational publications; and
(iv) Navigation techniques;
(3) Flight monitoring, to include:
(i) Available flight-monitoring
procedures; and
(ii) Alternate flight-monitoring
procedures;
(4) Air traffic control, to include:
(i) Airspace;
(ii) Air traffic control procedures;
(iii) Aeronautical charts; and
(iv) Aeronautical data sources;
(5) Aviation communication, to
include:
(i) Available aircraft communications
systems;
(ii) Normal communication
procedures;
(iii) Abnormal communication
procedures; and
(iv) Emergency communication
procedures;
(6) Aircraft systems, to include:
(i) Communications systems;
(ii) Navigation systems;
(iii) Surveillance systems;
(iv) Fueling systems;
(v) Specialized systems;
(vi) General maintenance
requirements; and
(vii) Minimum equipment lists;
(7) Aircraft limitations and
performance, to include:
(i) Aircraft operational limitations;
(ii) Aircraft performance;
(iii) Weight and balance procedures
and limitations; and
(iv) Landing zone and landing facility
requirements;
(8) Aviation policy and regulations, to
include:
(i) 14 CFR parts 1, 27, 29, 61, 71, 91,
and 135;
(ii) 49 CFR part 830;
(iii) Company operations
specifications;
(iv) Company general operations
policies;
(v) Enhanced operational control
policies;
(vi) Aeronautical decisionmaking and
risk management;
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(vii) Lost procedures; and
(viii) Emergency and search and
rescue procedures, including plotting
coordinates in degrees, minutes,
seconds format, and degrees, decimal
minutes format;
(9) Crew resource management, to
include:
(i) Concepts and practical application;
(ii) Risk management and risk
mitigation; and
(iii) Pre-flight risk analysis procedures
required under § 135.615;
(10) Local flying area orientation, to
include:
(i) Terrain features;
(ii) Obstructions;
(iii) Weather phenomena for local
area;
(iv) Airspace and air traffic control
facilities;
(v) Heliports, airports, landing zones,
and fuel facilities;
(vi) Instrument approaches;
(vii) Predominant air traffic flow;
(viii) Landmarks and cultural features,
including areas prone to white out or
brown out conditions; and
(ix) Local aviation and safety
resources and contact information; and
(11) Any other requirements as
determined by the FAA to ensure safe
operations.
(h) Operations control specialist duty
time limitations.
(1) Each certificate holder must
establish the daily duty period for an
operations control specialist so that it
begins at a time that allows that person
to become thoroughly familiar with
operational considerations, including
existing and anticipated weather
conditions in the area of operations,
helicopter operations in progress, and
helicopter maintenance status, before
performing duties associated with any
helicopter air ambulance operation. The
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operations control specialist must
remain on duty until each helicopter air
ambulance monitored by that person
has completed its flight, has gone
beyond that person’s jurisdiction, or the
operations control specialist is relieved
by another qualified operations control
specialist.
(2) Except in cases where
circumstances or emergency conditions
beyond the control of the certificate
holder require otherwise—
(i) No certificate holder may schedule
an operations control specialist for more
than 10 consecutive hours of duty;
(ii) If an operations control specialist
is scheduled for more than 10 hours of
duty in 24 consecutive hours, the
certificate holder must provide that
person a rest period of at least 8 hours
at or before the end of 10 hours of duty;
(iii) If an operations control specialist
is on duty for more than 10 consecutive
hours, the certificate holder must
provide that person a rest period of at
least 8 hours before that person’s next
duty period;
(iii) Each operations control specialist
must be relieved of all duty with the
certificate holder for at least 24
consecutive hours during any 7
consecutive days.
(i) Drug and Alcohol Testing.
Operations control specialists must be
tested for drugs and alcohol according
to the certificate holder’s Drug and
Alcohol Testing Program administered
under part 120 of this chapter.
§ 135.619 Medical personnel briefing
requirements.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, prior to each
helicopter air ambulance operation,
each pilot in command, or other flight
crewmember designated by the
certificate holder, must ensure that all
medical personnel have been—
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
(1) Briefed on the topics included in
§ 135.117(a) and (b); and
(2) Briefed on the following topics—
(i) Physiological aspects of flight;
(ii) Patient loading and unloading;
(iii) Safety in and around the aircraft;
(iv) In-flight emergency procedures;
(v) Emergency landing procedures;
(vi) Emergency evacuation
procedures;
(vii) Efficient and safe
communications with the pilot; and
(viii) Operational differences between
day and night operations, if appropriate.
(b) The briefing required in paragraph
(a)(2) of this section may be omitted if
all medical personnel on board have
satisfactorily completed the certificate
holder’s FAA-approved medical
personnel training program within the
preceding 24 calendar months. Each
training program must include a
minimum of 4 hours of ground training,
and 4 hours of training in and around
an air ambulance helicopter, on the
topics set forth in paragraph (a)(2) of
this section.
(c) Each certificate holder must
maintain a record for each person
trained under this section that—
(1) Contains the individual’s name,
the most recent training completion
date, and a description, copy, or
reference to training materials used to
meet the training requirement; and
(2) Is maintained for 24 calendar
months following the individual’s
completion of training, and for 60 days
thereafter.
Issued in Washington, DC, on September
28, 2010.
Raymond Towles,
Acting Director, Flight Standards Service.
[FR Doc. 2010–24862 Filed 10–7–10; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
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[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 196 (Tuesday, October 12, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 62640-62674]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-24862]
[[Page 62639]]
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Part II
Department of Transportation
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Federal Aviation Administration
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14 CFR Parts 1, 91, 120, and 135
Air Ambulance and Commercial Helicopter Operations, Part 91 Helicopter
Operations, and Part 135 Aircraft Operations; Safety Initiatives and
Miscellaneous Amendments; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 75 , No. 196 / Tuesday, October 12, 2010 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 62640]]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Parts 1, 91, 120, and 135
[Docket No. FAA-2010-0982; Notice No. 10-13]
RIN 2120-AJ53
Air Ambulance and Commercial Helicopter Operations, Part 91
Helicopter Operations, and Part 135 Aircraft Operations; Safety
Initiatives and Miscellaneous Amendments
AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This proposed rule addresses air ambulance and commercial
helicopter operations, part 91 helicopter operations, and load manifest
requirements for all part 135 aircraft. From 2002 to 2008, there has
been an increase in fatal helicopter air ambulance accidents. To
address these safety concerns, the FAA is proposing to implement
operational procedures and require additional equipment on board
helicopter air ambulances. Many of these proposed requirements
currently are found in agency guidance publications and would address
National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) safety recommendations.
Some of these safety concerns are not unique to the helicopter air
ambulance industry and affect all commercial helicopter operations.
Accordingly, the FAA also is proposing to amend regulations pertaining
to all commercial helicopter operations conducted under part 135 to
include equipment requirements, pilot training, and alternate airport
weather minima. The changes are intended to provide certificate holders
and pilots with additional tools and procedures that will aid in
preventing accidents.
DATES: Send your comments on or before January 10, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments identified by docket number FAA-2010-
0982 using any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and follow the online instructions for sending your
comments electronically.
Mail: Send comments to Docket Operations, M-30; U.S.
Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., Room W12-
140, West Building Ground Floor, Washington, DC 20590-0001.
Hand Delivery or Courier: Take comments to Docket
Operations in Room W12-140 of the West Building Ground Floor at 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Fax: Fax comments to Docket Operations at 202-493-2251.
For more information on the rulemaking process, see the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document.
Privacy: We will post all comments we receive, without change, to
https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information you
provide. Using the search function of our docket web site, anyone can
find and read the electronic form of all comments received into any of
our dockets, including the name of the individual sending the comment
(or signing the comment for an association, business, labor union,
etc.). You may review DOT's complete Privacy Act Statement in the
Federal Register published on April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477-78) or you
may visit https://DocketsInfo.dot.gov.
Docket: To read background documents or comments received, go to
https://www.regulations.gov at any time and follow the online
instructions for accessing the docket, or, the Docket Operations in
Room W12-140 of the West Building Ground Floor at 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical questions concerning
this proposed rule contact Edwin Miller, Flight Standards Service, Part
135 Air Carrier Operations Branch, AFS-250, Federal Aviation
Administration, 800 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20591;
telephone (202) 267-8166; facsimile (202) 267-5229; e-mail
edwin.miller@faa.gov.
For legal questions concerning this proposed rule contact Dean
Griffith, Office of the Chief Counsel, AGC-220, Federal Aviation
Administration, 800 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20591;
telephone (202) 267-3073; facsimile (202) 267-7971; e-mail
dean.griffith@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Later in this preamble under the Additional Information section, we
discuss how you can comment on this proposal and how we will handle
your comments. Included in this discussion is related information about
the docket, privacy, and the handling of proprietary or confidential
business information. We also discuss how you can get a copy of related
rulemaking documents.
Authority for This Rulemaking
The FAA's authority to issue rules on aviation safety is found in
Title 49 of the United States Code. This rulemaking is promulgated
under the authority described in 49 U.S.C. 44701(a)(4), which requires
the Administrator to promulgate regulations in the interest of safety
for the maximum hours or periods of service of airmen and other
employees of air carriers, and 49 U.S.C. 44701(a)(5), which requires
the Administrator to promulgate regulations and minimum standards for
other practices, methods, and procedures necessary for safety in air
commerce and national security.
List of Terms and Acronyms Frequently Used in This Document
AC--Advisory Circular
ARC--Aviation Rulemaking Committee
CFIT--Controlled flight into terrain
CVR--Cockpit voice recorder
EMS--Emergency medical service
FDR--Flight data recorder
GPS--Global positioning system
HTAWS--Helicopter Terrain Awareness and Warning System
IFR--Instrument flight rules
IMC--Instrument meteorological conditions
LARS--Light-weight aircraft recording system
NM--Nautical mile
NTSB--National Transportation Safety Board
NVG--Night vision goggles
NVIS--Night-vision imaging system
SAFO--Safety Alert for Operators
TAWS--Terrain Avoidance and Warning System
TSO--Technical Standard Order
VFR--Visual flight rules
VMC--Visual meteorological conditions
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Statement of the Problem
B. Helicopter Air Ambulance Operations
C. FAA Actions
D. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Safety
Recommendations
E. Congressional Action
III. Discussion of the Proposal
A. Helicopter Air Ambulance Operations
1. Operational Procedures
a. Part 135 Applicability (Sec. 135.1)
b. Operations Control Centers (Sec. 135.617)
c. VFR/IFR Procedures
i. Increase VFR Weather Minima (Sec. 135.607)
ii. IFR Operations at Airports and Heliports Without Weather
Reporting (Sec. 135.609)
iii. IFR to VFR/Visual Transitions (Sec. 135.611)
iv. VFR Flight Planning (Sec. 135.613)
d. Pre-Flight Risk Analysis (Sec. 135.615)
e. Medical Personnel Pre-Flight Briefing (Sec. 135.619)
2. Equipment Requirements
a. Helicopter Terrain Awareness and Warning Systems (HTAWS)
(Sec. 135.605)
b. Light-Weight Aircraft Recording System (LARS)
[[Page 62641]]
3. Pilot Requirements
a. Instrument Rating (Sec. 135.603)
b. Flight and Duty Time Limitations (Sec. Sec. 135.267 and
135.271)
B. Commercial Helicopter Operations (Including Air Ambulance
Operations)
1. Operational Procedures
a. IFR Alternate Airport Weather Minima (Sec. 135.221)
2. Equipment Requirements
a. Radio Altimeter (Sec. 135.160)
b. Safety Equipment for Over-Water Flights (Sec. Sec. 1.1,
135.167, and 135.168)
3. Training--Recovery From Inadvertent Flight Into IMC (Sec.
135.293)
C. Miscellaneous
1. Part 91 Weather Minima (Sec. 91.155)
2. Load Manifest Requirements for all Part 135 Aircraft (Sec.
135.63)
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
V. International Compatibility
VI. Regulatory Evaluation, Regulatory Flexibility Determination,
International Trade Impact Assessment, and Unfunded Mandates
Assessment
VII. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
VIII. Regulations Affecting Intrastate Aviation in Alaska
IX. Environmental Analysis
X. Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
XI. Availability of Rulemaking Documents
XII. Additional Information
Appendix to the Preamble--Additional Accident Discussions
The Proposed Amendment
I. Executive Summary
This NPRM proposes requirements for all part 135 aircraft, part 91
helicopter operations, and air ambulance and commercial helicopter
operations. The proposal aims to address safety concerns arising from
an increase in air ambulance related fatalities from 2002 to 2008.
As described in further detail throughout this document, the NPRM
proposes the following requirements:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Affected entities Proposal
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Part 135--All Aircraft....... Permit operators to transmit a
copy of load manifest documentation to
their base of operations, in lieu of
preparing a duplicate copy.
Specify requirements for
retaining a copy of the load manifest in
the event that the documentation is
destroyed in an aircraft accident.
Part 91--Helicopter Revision of part 91 Visual
Operations. Flight Rules (VFR) weather minimums.
All Commercial Helicopter Revision of commercial
Operations (Operating helicopter instrument flight rules (IFR)
Requirements). alternate airport weather minimums.
Require helicopter pilots to
demonstrate competency in recovery from
inadvertent instrument meteorological
conditions.
Require all commercial
helicopters to be equipped with radio
altimeters.
Change definition of ``extended
over-water operation,'' and require
additional equipment for these
operations.
Air Ambulance Operations Require air ambulance flights
(Operating Requirements and with medical personnel on board to be
Equipage). conducted under part 135, including
flight crew time limitation and rest
requirements.
Require certificate holders with
10 or more helicopter air ambulances to
establish operations control centers.
Require helicopter air ambulance
certificate holders to implement pre-
flight risk-analysis programs.
Require safety briefings for
medical personnel on helicopter air
ambulances.
Amend helicopter air ambulance
operational requirements to include VFR
weather minimums, IFR operations at
airports/heliports without weather
reporting, procedures for VFR
approaches, and VFR flight planning.
Require pilots in command to
hold an instrument rating.
Require equipage with Helicopter
Terrain Awareness and Warning Systems
(HTAWS), and possibly light-weight
aircraft recording systems (LARS).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In aggregate, the FAA estimates the mean present value of the total
monetizable costs of these proposals (over 10 years, 7% discount rate)
to be $225 million, with a range of total monetizable benefits from $83
million to $1.98 billion (over 10 years, 7% discount rate).
The table below summarizes the present value range of total
aggregate monetizable costs and benefits the FAA estimates as a result
of this rule:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summary of monetizable costs Range (in millions) (over 10 years, 7%
and benefits \1\ discount rate)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air Ambulance................ $62 to $1,500.
Commercial................... $21 to $480.
------------------------------------------
Total Benefits........... $83 to $1,980.
Air Ambulance................ $136.
Commercial................... $89.
------------------------------------------
Total Costs.............. $225.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAA requests comments on the analysis underlying these
estimates, as well as possible approaches to reduce the costs of this
rule while maintaining or increasing the benefits. While the FAA has
concluded that the aggregate benefits justify the aggregate costs,
under some scenarios, the monetizable benefits may fall short of the
monetizable costs. The FAA seeks comments on possible changes or
flexibilities that might improve the rule.
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\1\ ``Air ambulance'' applies to helicopter air ambulance
operations. ``Commercial'' applies to all part 135 aircraft
operations, excluding helicopter air ambulance operations.
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II. Background
A. Statement of the Problem
The helicopter air ambulance industry experienced a significant
increase in fatal accidents in 2008, making it the deadliest year on
record for the industry. During that year, six accidents claimed 24
lives, including those of
[[Page 62642]]
pilots, patients, and medical personnel. In addition, there were three
non-fatal accidents in 2008. However, helicopter air accidents were not
confined to 2008. From 1992 through 2009, there were 135 helicopter air
ambulance accidents, including one midair collision with another
helicopter engaged in an air ambulance operation. These helicopter air
ambulance accidents resulted in 126 fatalities. In a 2009 report, the
U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) recognized that air
ambulance accidents reached historic levels from 2003 through 2008.\2\
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\2\ GAO, Aviation Safety: Potential Strategies to Address Air
Ambulance Safety Concerns (2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Helicopter accidents, however, have not been limited to the air
ambulance industry. The FAA identified 75 commercial helicopter
accidents, occurring from 1994 through 2008 with causal factors that
are addressed in this proposal. These accidents involving commercial
helicopter operations resulted in 88 fatalities. These accidents do not
include the helicopter air ambulance accidents discussed above.
After reviewing the accident data, the FAA identified controlled
flight into terrain (CFIT), loss of control (LOC), inadvertent flight
into instrument meteorological conditions (IMC), and accidents during
night conditions as four common factors in helicopter air ambulance
accidents. A review of commercial helicopter accidents also
demonstrated that these accidents may have been prevented if pilots and
helicopters were better equipped for encounters with inadvertent flight
into IMC, flat-light,\3\ whiteout,\4\ and brownout \5\ conditions, and
for flights over water. The FAA also determined that enhancements to
safety equipment for over-water operations and establishing more
stringent instrument flight rules (IFR) alternate airport weather
minima would enhance the safety of all part 135 helicopter operations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The NTSB describes flat-light conditions in NTSB Safety
Recommendation A-02-33 as ``the diffuse lighting that occurs under
cloudy skies especially when the ground is snow covered. Under flat
light conditions, there are no shadows cast, and the topography of
snow-covered surfaces is impossible to judge. Flat light greatly
impairs a pilot's ability to perceive depth, distance, altitude, or
topographical features when operating under visual flight rules
(VFR).''
\4\ AC 00-6A, Aviation Weather for Pilots and Flight Operations
Personnel, describes whiteout conditions as a ``visibility
restricting phenomenon that occurs in the Arctic when a layer of
cloudiness of uniform thickness overlies a snow or ice-covered
surface. Parallel rays of the sun are broken up and diffused when
passing through the cloud layer so that they strike the snow surface
from many angles. The diffused light then reflects back and forth
countless times between the snow and the cloud eliminating all
shadows. The result is a loss of depth perception.''
\5\ Brownout conditions occur when sand or other particles
restrict visibility and depth perception.
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Prior to developing this proposed rule, the FAA undertook
initiatives to address the common factors that contribute to helicopter
air ambulance accidents including issuing notices, handbook bulletins,
operations specifications, and advisory circulars (ACs); this proposed
rule would codify many of these initiatives.
Additionally, this proposal addresses National Transportation
Safety Board (NTSB) safety recommendations and recommendations made by
the Part 125/135 Aviation Rulemaking Committee (ARC) concerning
helicopter air ambulance and commercial helicopter operations. This
includes a proposal to adopt amendments to load manifest requirements
for single-engine part 135 operations, consistent with an NTSB Safety
Recommendation developed in response to a 1997 accident.
B. Helicopter Air Ambulance Operations
The helicopter air ambulance industry is relatively young but has
experienced rapid growth during its existence. The industry's evolution
has not produced a uniform model of operations; rather certificate
holders vary in size and scope of operations. In addition, as discussed
below, helicopter air ambulance operations present unique challenges
meriting regulation beyond that traditionally applied to part 135
commercial helicopter operations.
Helicopter air medical transportation was first used prominently
during the Korean War to move injured soldiers from the battlefield.
Since then, helicopters have been used to transport critically injured
patients and donor organs to hospitals because of their capability to
provide rapid transportation over long distances from remote locations.
The first commercial helicopter air ambulance program began operation
in 1972. The industry grew significantly in the 1980s, and is
continuing to grow.\6\ Between 2003 and 2008, the Association of Air
Medical Services reported a 54 percent increase in the number of
helicopters used by its members in helicopter air ambulance
operations.\7\ The NTSB estimates that 400,000 patients and transplant
organs are now transported by helicopter each year.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ National Transportation Safety Board: Safety Study--
Commercial Emergency Medical Service Helicopter Operations, NTSB/SS-
88/01 (Jan. 28, 1988), available at https://www.ntsb.gov/Dockets/Aviation/DCA09SH001/410702.pdf.
\7\ See GAO, Aviation Safety: Potential Strategies to Address
Air Ambulance Safety Concerns 4 (2009).
\8\ Testimony of the Hon. Robert L. Sumwalt, III, Board Member
NTSB, Before the Subcommittee on Aviation, Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure, U.S. House of Representatives,
April 22, 2009, available at https://transportation.house.gov/hearings/hearingDetail.aspx?NewsID=865; transcript URL: https://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=111_house_hearings&docid=f:49001.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As of February 2009, the FAA authorized 74 certificate holders to
conduct helicopter air ambulance operations. These certificate holders
operate approximately 850 helicopters in air ambulance operations. The
size of these operations varies greatly. The smallest operators only
have one or two helicopters and operate in one region; the largest
operators may have hundreds of helicopters across the United States. Of
the 50 largest certificate holders operating under part 121 or 135, as
measured by the number of aircraft operated, six conduct helicopter air
ambulance operations. The tenth largest air carrier in the United
States, Air Methods Corporation, is a helicopter air ambulance
operator.
The following is a breakdown of the number of helicopter air
ambulances operated by the 74 certificate holders permitted to conduct
helicopter air ambulance operations as of February, 2009: 38
certificate holders have 5 or fewer helicopters; 14 certificate holders
have 6 to 10 helicopters; 6 certificate holders have 11 to 15
helicopters; and 16 certificate holders have more than 16 helicopters.
Certificate holders' air ambulance programs and operational
practices vary as to whether they conduct IFR or VFR operations,
perform formal pre-flight risk analyses, or use operations control
centers. In addition, certificate holders equip their helicopters
differently. For example, some helicopters are permanently configured
for full-time air ambulance operations while others are not; some are
equipped for IFR operations while others are equipped for VFR-only
operations; and helicopter air ambulances have varying situational-
awareness technology (such as night vision goggles, HTAWS, radio
altimeters, etc.) on board.
Helicopter air ambulance operations present several unique
operating characteristics that make them distinct from other types of
part 135 helicopter operations. Such operations are often time-
sensitive and crucial to getting a critically ill or injured patient to
a medical facility as efficiently as possible, which may influence
flight crews to fly under circumstances that they otherwise would not.
In addition,
[[Page 62643]]
these operations often are conducted under challenging conditions. For
example, helicopter air ambulances operate generally at low altitudes
and under varied weather conditions. Operations are conducted year-
round, in rural and urban settings, in mountainous and non-mountainous
terrain, during the day and at night, and in IFR and visual
meteorological conditions (VMC). Remote-site landings pose additional
challenges. These remote sites are often unfamiliar to a pilot and,
unlike an airport or heliport, may contain hazards such as trees,
buildings, towers, wires, and uneven terrain. Additionally, in an
emergency, patients cannot choose which operator provides
transportation, and because of their injuries, may not be able to
participate in the decision to use helicopter transport. These patients
are often transported by the first company to accept the flight
assignment from an emergency medical service dispatcher. The FAA
believes that these individuals should therefore be afforded the
protection of an enhanced regulation for helicopter air ambulances.
As described in the section below, the FAA has taken steps through
non-regulatory means to improve helicopter air ambulance safety;
however, in consideration of the industry's accident history,
characteristics unique to helicopter air ambulance operations, and the
lack of standardization among certificate holders' practices, the FAA
believes that additional regulations are necessary to ensure the safety
of these flights.
C. FAA Actions
In response to the increasing number of accidents involving
helicopter air ambulances, the FAA has developed standards over the
years for weather minima and for helicopter terrain awareness and
warning systems (HTAWS), and formalized dispatch procedures. In
addition, the FAA has issued guidance for operational improvements in
areas that address Crew Resource Management (CRM), CFIT, inadvertent
flight into IMC, operational control, improved access to weather
information, risk management, improvement of organizational safety
culture, and aeronautical decisionmaking skills. The following provides
a summary of many of the actions taken by the FAA.
On April 8, 2003, the FAA formed the Part 125/135 ARC to perform a
comprehensive review of parts 125 and 135 and provide recommendations
on rule changes. ARC members included aviation associations, industry
representatives, employee groups, the FAA, and other participants to
obtain a balance of views, interests, and expertise. The ARC made
recommendations pertaining to helicopter air ambulance operations and
other commercial helicopter operations that form the basis of several
of the proposals in this NPRM, including equipping helicopters with
radio altimeters, increasing weather minima for helicopter air
ambulance operations, requiring additional safety equipment for over-
water operations, requiring pilot testing on recovery from inadvertent
flight into IMC, and revising IFR alternate airport weather
requirements.
In August 2004, the FAA established a task force to review and
guide government and industry efforts to reduce helicopter air
ambulance accidents. The task force review of commercial helicopter air
ambulance accidents for the period of January 1998 through December
2004 revealed that CFIT, night operations, and inadvertent flight into
IMC were the predominant factors contributing to those accidents.
On January 28, 2005, the FAA issued Notice 8000.293, Helicopter
Emergency Medical Services Operations, addressing CRM, adherence to
procedures, and pilot decisionmaking skills in helicopter air ambulance
operations. This notice was later incorporated into Safety Alert for
Operators (SAFO) 06001, Helicopter Emergency Medical Services (HEMS)
Operations (Jan. 28, 2006). On August 1, 2005, the FAA issued Notice
8000.301, Operational Risk Assessment Programs for Helicopter Emergency
Medical Services, providing guidance on operational risk assessment
programs, including training of flightcrews and medical personnel.
In AC 00-64, Air Medical Resource Management, issued September 22,
2005, the FAA recommended minimum guidelines for air medical resource
management training for all air medical service operations team
members, including pilots, maintenance personnel, medical personnel,
communications specialists, and other air medical team members. In
Notice 8000.307, Special Emphasis Inspection Program For Helicopter
Emergency Medical Services, issued September 27, 2005, the FAA
addressed a special emphasis inspection program for helicopter air
ambulance operators, focusing on operational control, risk assessment,
and training programs. On January 24, 2006, the FAA issued handbook
bulletin HBAT 06-02, Helicopter Emergency Services (HEMS) Loss of
Control (LOC) and Controlled Flight into Terrain (CFIT) Accident
Avoidance Programs, to FAA inspectors describing acceptable models for
LOC and CFIT accident avoidance programs.
In January 2006, the FAA amended Operations Specification A021,
which is issued to all certificate holders conducting helicopter air
ambulance operations, to establish VFR weather requirements, including
consideration of adverse effects of ambient lighting at night and
mountainous terrain. Following the 2008 accidents, the FAA again
amended Operations Specification A021 to address VFR weather
requirements, applied those weather requirements to all flights with
medical personnel on board, required a flight planning requirement, and
allowed IFR approaches when a pilot could consult a weather reporting
source within 15 miles of the landing location.
In 2006, RTCA, Inc.,\9\ at the FAA's request, established a special
committee to develop HTAWS standards. In December 2008, the FAA issued
Technical Standard Order (TSO)-C194, Helicopter Terrain Awareness and
Warning System (HTAWS), based on the minimum operational performance
standards developed by the committee. This TSO establishes the
technical baseline for the HTAWS requirement in this proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ RTCA, Inc. is a private, not-for-profit corporation that
develops consensus-based recommendations regarding communications,
navigation, surveillance, and air traffic management (CNS/ATM)
system issues. RTCA, Inc. functions as a Federal Advisory Committee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAA issued AC 120-96, Integration of Operations Control Centers
into Helicopter Emergency Medical Services Operations (May 5, 2008),
that provides guidance to certificate holders for establishing
operations control and dispatch centers. The information in AC 120-96
formed the foundation of this proposal's requirement for certain
certificate holders to establish operations control centers.
In 2008, through Notice 8900.57, Part 135 Helicopter Training
Program and Manual Revisions, the FAA implemented several pilot
training program revisions applicable to part 135 helicopter training
programs in response to NTSB safety recommendations A-02-34 and A-02-
35, including procedures for mitigating and recovering from brownout,
whiteout, and flat-light conditions.
On January 12, 2009, through Notice 8900.63, Validation of HEMS
Safety Initiatives, the FAA, in an effort to identify how well its
voluntary programs had been accepted, surveyed the operators through
their Principal Operations Inspectors. Survey results indicated that 94
percent of the
[[Page 62644]]
operators had established risk-assessment programs, 89 percent had
training in LOC and CFIT, 89 percent were using operations control
centers, 41 percent were using terrain awareness and warning systems
(TAWS), 11 percent were using flight data recorders (FDR), and 94
percent were using radio altimeters.
D. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Safety Recommendations
In 1988, the NTSB conducted a safety study of emergency medical
service operations that examined 59 accidents.\10\ This study
determined that the helicopter air ambulance accident rate was almost
twice the estimated accident rate of non-scheduled part 135 helicopter
air taxi operations, and were 3.5 times more likely to be fatal.\11\
The NTSB found reduced visibility to be the most common factor
associated with such crashes.
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\10\ Commercial Emergency Medical Service Helicopter Operations,
Safety Study NTSB/SS-88/01 (Washington, DC: National Transportation
Safety Board, 1988).
\11\ Id. at 7.
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In January 2006, the NTSB conducted a special investigation of
emergency medical services operations and issued four recommendations
to the FAA.\12\ These recommendations are discussed in sections
III.A.1.a., III.A.1.b., III.A.1.d., III.A.2.a., and III.A.3.b.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ NTSB, Special Investigation Report on Emergency Medical
Services Operations (NTSB/SIR-06/01) (Jan. 25, 2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In February 2009, the NTSB held a public hearing on ``Helicopter
Emergency Medical Services'' to examine the safety issues associated
with these operations and gather testimony from government, operators,
industry associations, manufacturers, and hospitals.\13\ In September
2009, the NTSB issued a series of safety recommendations based on the
findings of the February hearing. The recommendations that are
addressed by this rulemaking are discussed in sections III.A.1.b.,
III.A.1.d., III.A.2.b., and III.B.3. The FAA has determined that the
remaining September 2009 recommendations are not ready for rulemaking
at this time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ NTSB, Public Hearing Summary, available at https://www.ntsb.gov/Events/Hearing-HEMS/HEMS_Summary.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NTSB also made recommendations to public aircraft operators,
the Federal Interagency Emergency Medical Services Committee, and the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
As a result of its investigations and studies, the NTSB identified
several probable causes of helicopter accidents, such as spatial
disorientation, lack of general awareness, loss of control, poor
decision making, failure to maintain clearance of obstacles, inadequate
planning, and improper execution of standard operating procedures.
NTSB safety recommendations addressed by this rulemaking include
the following:
Recommendations on Helicopter Air Ambulance Operations
A-06-12: Recommends that the FAA require all emergency medical
services operators to comply with 14 CFR part 135 operations
specifications during the conduct of all flights with medical personnel
on board. (Discussed in sections III.A.1.a. and III.A.3.b.)
A-06-13: Recommends that the FAA require all emergency medical
services operators to develop and implement flight-risk evaluation
programs that include training all employees involved in the operation,
procedures that support the systematic evaluation of flight risks, and
consultation with others in emergency medical service (EMS) flight
operations if the risks reach a predefined level. (Discussed in section
III.A.1.d.)
A-06-14: Recommends that the FAA require emergency medical services
operators to use formalized dispatch and flight-monitoring procedures
that include up-to-date weather information and assistance in flight
risk assessment decisions. (Discussed in section III.A.1.b.)
A-06-15: Recommends that the FAA require emergency medical services
operators to install terrain awareness and warning systems on their
aircraft and to provide adequate training to ensure that flight crews
are capable of using the systems to safely conduct EMS operations.
(Discussed in section III.A.2.a.)
A-09-87: Recommends that the FAA develop criteria for scenario-
based helicopter emergency medical services pilot training that
includes inadvertent flight into instrument meteorological conditions
and hazards unique to helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS)
operations, and determine how frequently this training is required to
ensure proficiency. (Discussed in section III.B.3.)
A-09-89: Recommends that the FAA require helicopter air ambulance
operators implement a safety management system program that includes
sound risk management practices. (Discussed in sections III.A.1.b.,
III.A.1.d, and III.A.2.b.)
A-09-90: Recommends that the FAA require helicopter air ambulance
operators install flight data recording devices and establish a
structured flight data monitoring program that reviews all available
data sources to identify deviations from established norms and
procedures and other potential safety issues. (Discussed in section
III.A.2.b.)
The FAA notes that the NTSB used the term ``emergency medical
services operators'' or ``EMS operators'' in its recommendations.
However, the FAA uses the term ``helicopter air ambulance operators''
in this proposed rulemaking. The FAA also notes that NTSB Safety
Recommendations A-06-12 through A-06-14 addressed both fixed-wing and
helicopter air ambulance operations. As previously noted, while some
provisions of the proposal extend to other types of aircraft and
commercial helicopter operations more broadly, the FAA is focusing
largely on helicopter air ambulance safety in this rulemaking. Although
this proposed rule primarily focuses on helicopter air ambulance
safety, it also addresses additional NTSB recommendations, listed
below.
Recommendations on Commercial Helicopter Operations
A-02-33: Recommends that the FAA require all helicopter pilots who
conduct commercial, passenger-carrying flights in areas where flat-
light or whiteout conditions routinely occur to possess a helicopter-
specific instrument rating and to demonstrate their competency during
initial and recurrent 14 CFR 135.293 evaluation check rides. (Discussed
in section III.B.3.)
A-02-34: Recommends that the FAA require all commercial helicopter
operators conducting passenger-carrying flights in areas where flat-
light or whiteout conditions routinely occur to include safe practices
for operating in flat-light or whiteout conditions in their approved
training programs. (Discussed in section III.B.3.)
A-02-35: Recommends that the FAA require the installation of radio
altimeters in all helicopters conducting commercial, passenger-carrying
operations in areas where flat-light or whiteout conditions routinely
occur. (Discussed in section III.B.2.a.)
A-06-17: Recommends that the FAA require all rotorcraft operating
under [14 CFR] parts 91 and 135 with a transport-category certification
to be equipped with a cockpit voice recorder (CVR) and flight data
recorder (FDR). (Discussed in section III.A.2.b.)
A-07-87: Recommends that the FAA require all existing and new
turbine-powered helicopters operating in the Gulf of Mexico and
certificated with five or more seats to be equipped with externally
mounted life rafts large
[[Page 62645]]
enough to accommodate all occupants. (Discussed in section III.B.2.b.)
A-07-88: Recommends that the FAA require all offshore helicopter
operators in the Gulf of Mexico provide their flight crews with
personal flotation devices equipped with a waterproof, global-
positioning-system-enabled 406 megahertz personal locater beacon, as
well as one other signaling device, such as a signaling mirror or
strobe light. (Discussed in section III.B.2.b.)
Other Recommendations
A-99-61: Recommends that the FAA amend recordkeeping requirements
in Sec. 135.63(c) to apply to single-engine as well as multiengine
aircraft. (Discussed in section III.C.2.)
E. Congressional Action
Legislation has been introduced in both the House of
Representatives and the Senate in the 111th Congress, and in earlier
Congresses, addressing several of the issues raised in this rulemaking.
In addition, on April 22, 2009, the House Transportation and
Infrastructure's Subcommittee on Aviation held a hearing on oversight
of helicopter medical services. The Subcommittee heard from a variety
of government, industry, and public representatives who testified on
the House helicopter air ambulance safety legislation, NTSB safety
recommendations, and FAA actions to mitigate helicopter air ambulance
accidents.
III. Discussion of the Proposal
In determining how to improve the safety of helicopter air
ambulance operations, as well as all other commercial helicopter
operations, the FAA reviewed approximately 4,000 accidents that
involved helicopters in the United States (excluding U.S. territories).
Of those accidents, the FAA identified 75 commercial helicopter
accidents and 127 helicopter air ambulance accidents that occurred
between 1994 and 2008 with causal factors that are addressed in this
proposal. The accidents involving commercial helicopter operations
resulted in 88 fatalities, 29 serious injuries, and 42 minor injuries;
28 (approximately 37 percent) involved one or more fatalities, and 47
had no fatalities. The accidents involving helicopter air ambulance
operations resulted in 126 fatalities, 50 serious injuries, and 42
minor injuries; 46 (approximately 36 percent) involved one or more
fatalities, and 81 had no fatalities. In addition to injuries and
fatalities, there also was significant damage or complete hull loss for
these accidents.
A comparison of the accidents that occurred between 2000 and 2008
reveals that there were 66 commercial helicopter accidents (including
23 fatal accidents resulting in 65 fatalities) and 98 helicopter air
ambulance accidents (including 35 fatal accidents resulting in 94
fatalities) during that time. The percentage of fatalities between the
two categories was essentially the same. Given the equivalent risk of
fatality if involved in an accident, the FAA has determined that it
must focus its efforts on reducing the higher risk of helicopter air
ambulances being involved in an accident in the first place.
This proposal, if adopted, would implement new regulations, and
revise existing regulations, to address the causes and factors of
commercial and helicopter air ambulance accidents identified by the FAA
and the NTSB. The FAA notes that compliance dates of the proposed
regulations would vary, as noted in discussions below. The FAA believes
that many of the accidents reviewed could have been prevented if these
proposals had been in place during this 19-year period.
The FAA has also determined that the safety of commercial air
operations could be enhanced by requiring a load manifest for all part
135 operations and is proposing to amend its rules accordingly.
A. Helicopter Air Ambulance Operations
The following provisions would apply to all helicopter air
ambulance operations, conducted under part 135. These proposals include
new operational and equipment requirements for these certificate
holders. This rule does not address fixed-wing air ambulance
operations. The FAA chose to focus on helicopter air ambulance
operations because a predominance of the accidents involved helicopter
air ambulances,\14\ and approximately 74 percent of the air ambulance
fleet is composed of helicopters.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ 41 of the 55 air ambulance accidents highlighted by the
NTSB in its 2006 Special Investigation Report involved helicopters.
See NTSB, Special Investigation Report on Emergency Medical Services
Operations, App'x B (2006).
\15\ See GAO, Aviation Safety: Potential Strategies to Address
Air Ambulance Safety Concerns 1 (2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Operational Procedures
a. Part 135 Applicability (Sec. 135.1)
The FAA is proposing to amend Sec. 135.1 to require that all
helicopter air ambulance operations with medical personnel on board be
conducted under the operating rules of part 135. This includes
instances where the medical personnel are employees of the operator.
The safety of helicopter air ambulance flights, including the welfare
of the medical personnel and patients on those flights, would be
increased if operators were required to comply with the more stringent
part 135 rules.
Helicopter air ambulance operations generally consist of two- or
three-leg flights. Currently, the non-patient-carrying legs of those
operations may be conducted under part 91 because certificate holders
consider medical personnel on board the aircraft to be crewmembers and
the non-patient transport legs to be positioning flights. This approach
is consistent with current FAA guidance to inspectors, which notes that
if medical personnel are crewmembers, they are not considered
passengers, and that flights with only crewmembers on board may be
conducted under part 91.\16\
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\16\ Order 8900.1, vol. 4, chapter 5, section 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, the FAA notes that the primary purpose of having medical
personnel on board helicopter air ambulance flights is to provide
medical care to the patients being transported, and they ``cannot be
expected to meaningfully participate in the decision-making process to
enhance flight safety or to significantly contribute to operational
control of the flight.'' \17\ Accordingly, the FAA believes these
individuals should be afforded the same safety protections of part 135
as those given to patients on board helicopter air ambulance flights.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ NTSB, Special Investigation Report on Emergency Medical
Services Operations (2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air ambulance accidents have occurred during all phases of flight.
The NTSB found that 35 of the 55 accidents it studied for its Special
Investigation Report occurred during part 91 operations with medical
personnel, but no patient, on board.\18\ The NTSB cited two examples of
fatal accidents that may have been prevented if the operations had been
conducted according to the weather minima contained in the part 135
operations specifications issued to certificate holders conducting
helicopter air ambulance operations in effect at the time of the
investigation. The first accident, which took place in Salt Lake City,
UT, in 2003, involved a helicopter air ambulance that crashed into
terrain when weather conditions were below part 135 minima. The other
accident occurred in Redwood Valley, CA, when a helicopter air
ambulance crashed into mountainous terrain during high winds and heavy
rain. The NTSB concluded
[[Page 62646]]
that air ambulance operations would be improved if required to operate
under the part 135 operating rules and that the minimal contribution of
medical personnel to the safe operation of air ambulance flights is not
sufficient to justify operating under the less-stringent part 91
requirements. Those accidents formed the basis for the NTSB Safety
Recommendation A-06-12 that the FAA should require all air ambulance
operators to comply with part 135 operations specifications while
conducting flights with medical personnel on board. This proposal would
implement that recommendation for helicopter air ambulance operators.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ NTSB, Special Investigation Report on Emergency Medical
Services Operations (2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The major differences between operations conducted under part 91
and part 135 are the applicable weather minima and flightcrew rest
requirements. The FAA acknowledges that these more stringent
requirements may result in operators turning down air ambulance flights
that would meet part 91 weather requirements but not part 135 weather
requirements, or if the flight would put a flightcrew member over the
maximum daily hours of flight time. Helicopter air ambulance operations
are a form of air transportation, and the improvements in air
transportation safety that would result from this proposal justifies
the more stringent part 135 requirement. This proposal should not
require helicopter air ambulance certificate holders to make major
operational changes because their operations generally include a part
135 leg on each flight. Nevertheless, the FAA calls for comments on
measures that it could take to address this proposed rule's impact on
the availability of air ambulance services.
The FAA is proposing in Sec. 135.601 to define the term
``helicopter air ambulance operation'' to clarify that helicopter air
ambulance operations include more than just patient-transport legs. The
definition would establish that any flight, including a positioning or
repositioning flight, conducted for the purpose of transportation of
patients or donor organs is a helicopter air ambulance flight, and
clarify, through a non-exclusive list, the types of operations
considered to be helicopter air ambulance operations. For example, a
flight initiated for patient transport but terminated before patient
pick up would be considered a helicopter air ambulance operation.
However, maintenance, service flights for refueling, or training
flights could still be conducted under part 91 when no medical
personnel are on board.
The FAA also is proposing to define the term ``medical personnel''
in Sec. 135.601 with language based on that found in AC 135-14A, with
modifications. Unlike AC 135-14A, the proposed definition does not
address the types of duties performed by medical personnel on the
helicopter other than providing medical care. The proposal would not
preclude medical personnel from participating in or assisting the pilot
with certain duties (for example, reading checklists, tuning radios,
and securing doors) as long as the individuals have been trained by the
certificate holder in accordance with its FAA-approved training
program. Additionally, the FAA notes that such medical personnel would
not be considered to be performing safety-sensitive functions under 14
CFR part 120 Industry Drug and Alcohol Testing Program, and would
therefore not be required to undergo drug testing.
Certificate holders would be required to comply with this provision
by the effective date of the final rule.
b. Operations Control Centers (Sec. 135.617)
The FAA is proposing to add Sec. 135.617 to require certificate
holders with 10 or more helicopters engaged in helicopter air ambulance
operations to establish operations control centers. Certificate holders
would be required to staff these operations control centers with
operations control specialists trained and equipped to communicate with
pilots, advise pilots of weather conditions, and monitor the progress
of each flight. Each certificate holder covered by this requirement
would be responsible for establishing its own individual operations
control center. Each certificate holder would be required to provide
enough operations control specialists at each operations control center
to ensure proper operational control of each flight.
FAA regulations currently do not require helicopter air ambulance
operators to have an operations control center. In 2008, the FAA issued
AC 120-96, which provides recommendations to assist helicopter air
ambulance operators with the development, implementation, and
integration of an operations control center, and enhanced operational
control procedures similar to those found in part 121. Members of the
helicopter air ambulance industry have noted that the AC is a ``product
of a survey of best practices in the air medical industry and gives
guidance to other air medical services as to the benefits of this type
of operation.'' \19\ In developing this proposal, the FAA sought to
standardize operations control centers by codifying the concepts of AC
120-96 into a framework appropriate for helicopter air ambulance
operations. The FAA notes that a January 2009 FAA survey of inspectors
with oversight of helicopter air ambulance operations showed that 89
percent of helicopter air ambulance operators have voluntarily
established some type of operations control center.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Statement from the Association of Air Medical Services,
Helicopter Association International, and Air Medical Operators
Association to the NTSB 14 (Jan. 13, 2009), available at https://www.ntsb.gov/Dockets/Aviation/DCA09SH001/default.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NTSB, in its 2006 Special Investigation Report on Emergency
Medical Services Operations, identified the following four fatal
accidents, which may have been prevented if formalized dispatch and
flight-monitoring procedures had been in place.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ NTSB, Special Investigation Report on Emergency Medical
Services Operations (NTSB/SIR-06/01) 7 (Jan. 25, 2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) In a 2004 Pyote, TX, accident in which a helicopter air
ambulance transporting a patient crashed into terrain while maneuvering
in reduced-visibility conditions, the pilot was not aware of expected
thunderstorm activity in the area because he did not obtain a weather
briefing before departure.
(2) In the 2003 Salt Lake City, UT, accident in which a helicopter
air ambulance crashed into terrain when weather conditions were below
part 135 minima, the operator's dispatcher encouraged the pilot to
accept the flight in spite of the fact that another company had refused
it because of low visibility conditions. The NTSB stated that a flight
dispatcher with specific knowledge of flight requirements would likely
have been able to more fully comprehend the importance of the other
company's refusal, independently gathered and correctly interpreted
pertinent weather information from all available sources, and provided
appropriate advice to the pilot.
(3) In a 2004 accident in Newberry, SC, a helicopter air ambulance
collided with trees in poor weather conditions. Three flightcrews had
declined the mission based on their awareness of unsafe weather
conditions, specifically the presence of fog. A 911 dispatcher that
communicated with the pilot did not inform the pilot that the other
three flightcrews had declined the mission because of fog.
(4) A helicopter air ambulance that crashed into mountainous
terrain in 2004 in Battle Mountain, NV, was not reported overdue until
approximately four hours after its departure. The flight crossed from
one county to another, and 911 dispatch centers from the two
[[Page 62647]]
counties were not required to communicate with each other directly.
Responsibility for initiating communications when crossing into another
county dispatch center was placed on the pilot. Because the aircraft
was not reported missing in a timely manner, the opportunity for
potentially life-saving search and rescue operations was lost.
The NTSB concluded that ``[f]ormalized dispatch and flight-
monitoring procedures, including a dedicated dispatcher with aviation-
specific knowledge and experience, would enhance the safety of
emergency medical services flight operations by providing the pilot
with consistent and critical weather information, assisting in go/no go
decisions, and monitoring the flight's position.'' This resulted in
NTSB Safety Recommendation A-06-14 that air ambulance operators be
required to ``use formalized dispatch and flight-following procedures
that include up-to-date weather information and assistance in flight
risk assessment decisions.'' This proposal would address that safety
recommendation.
This proposed regulation, which would also partially address NTSB
Safety Recommendation A-09-89 regarding the implementation of sound
risk management practices, could contribute to a certificate holder's
overall safety program because it would be a method of incorporating
risk management practices into a company's flight operations. In
particular, an operations control specialist would provide additional
input on proposed operations and be able to monitor flights,
potentially helping pilots avoid dangerous situations.
Under this proposal, operations control specialists would perform
the following functions: (1) Maintain two-way communications with
pilots; \21\ (2) provide pilots with weather information to include
current and forecasted weather along the planned route of flight; (3)
monitor the flight progress; and (4) participate in pre-flight risk
analysis.\22\ This proposal is intended to provide an additional
measure to help prevent CFIT, loss of control, inadvertent flight into
IMC, and accidents at night.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ The FAA notes that this proposal is not intended to limit
two-way communication between the operations control specialist and
the pilot to traditional two-way radio communication. Rather, other
means of communication, such as satellite phone or data link, also
would be acceptable.
\22\ See section III.A.1.d. of the preamble to this NPRM.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAA is proposing to require certificate holders with 10 or more
air ambulance helicopters to establish operations control centers for
several reasons. The FAA's analysis of current helicopter air ambulance
operators shows that the vast majority of operations are conducted by
operators with these larger fleets. The FAA's review of operations
specifications issued to the 74 certificate holders authorized to
conduct helicopter air ambulance operations shows that, as of February
2009, there were 24 certificate holders with 10 or more helicopters in
their fleets. Those certificate holders operated 620 of the 884 total
helicopters in helicopter air ambulance operations. Additionally, the
level of operational complexity and management detail required for safe
operations is greater for certificate holders with 10 or more
helicopter air ambulances.
Although certificate holders with nine or fewer helicopter air
ambulances are not covered by this provision, the FAA finds that the
pre-flight risk analysis requirement proposed under Sec. 135.615 may
provide a sufficient alternative for these operators because of their
limited scope of operations.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See section III.A.1.d. of the preamble to this NPRM.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAA requests comments on whether the requirement should be
dependent on fleet size or number of operations conducted. The agency
asks that comments be accompanied by data regarding the number of
operations conducted by helicopter air ambulances and/or the typical
number of hours flown per aircraft.
The FAA is proposing in Sec. 135.617 to require the staffing of
operations control centers with operations control specialists, rather
than certificated aircraft dispatchers.\24\ The training program
associated with FAA-certificated aircraft dispatcher licensing is
primarily focused on large, fixed-wing, transport category aircraft
operating under part 121. While aspects of this training, such as
weather information and radio communication, are relevant to helicopter
operations, this proposal is designed to permit certificate holders to
create training programs directly applicable to helicopter air
ambulance operations. Accordingly, the FAA sought to incorporate the
more general elements of part 65-certificated aircraft dispatcher
training into the proposed requirements for training operations control
specialists. Although the FAA is not proposing to require formal
certification of operations control specialists, it may consider formal
FAA certification of these individuals in the future if appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Aircraft dispatchers, certificated under part 65, generally
are employed by part 121 air carriers and specialize in scheduled
air carrier transportation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAA notes that certificate holders could be subject to
enforcement action for using inadequately trained operations control
specialists, or may be responsible for errors committed by an
operations control specialist. Likewise, an operations control
specialist also could be subject to enforcement action or civil
penalties if he or she failed a drug test, functioned as an operations
control specialist without completing training or passing examinations,
or verified false entries on a pre-flight analysis worksheet.
Certificate holders may want to hire certificated aircraft
dispatchers, or others with general aviation or weather knowledge, to
serve as operations control specialists. This proposal would allow a
certificate holder to offer individuals with recent, relevant
experience an initial training course that features a reduced number of
hours of initial training, focusing on the certificate holder-specific
training topics addressed below. A reduced training program would be
permissible because of the knowledge these individuals have obtained
through training for other positions that is applicable to the
operations control specialist position. This benefit would be extended
to the following persons with specific aviation-related training--(1)
Military pilots, flight navigators, and meteorologists; (2) civilian
pilots, flight engineers, meteorologists, air traffic controllers, and
flight service specialists involved in air carrier operations; and (3)
certificated aircraft dispatchers involved in part 121 operations. This
provision is similar to 14 CFR 65.57, which permits individuals who
have not graduated from an aircraft dispatcher school, but who have
relevant aviation experience, to apply for an aircraft dispatcher
certificate.
In addition, with respect to the pre-flight risk analysis that
would be required under this proposal for all helicopter air ambulance
operations,\25\ the operations control specialist would ensure that the
pilot completed the pre-flight risk analysis worksheet, confirm and
verify the entries on the worksheet, and work with the pilot to
mitigate any identified risk. The operations control specialist, along
with the pilot in command, would be required to acknowledge in writing
(by signing, initialing, or another method as defined in the
certificate holder's operations manual) that the worksheet had been
completed accurately. The FAA believes that the operations control
specialist's
[[Page 62648]]
review of the risk assessment will provide an additional measure of
safety to helicopter air ambulance flights. By signing the worksheet,
the operations control specialist will be indicating that he or she
agrees with the level of risk associated with that flight.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Id.
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Operations control specialists would be performing safety-sensitive
functions such as providing pre-flight weather assessment, assisting
with fuel planning, alternate airport weather minima, and communicating
with pilots regarding operational concerns during flight. These duties
are similar to those of an aircraft dispatcher, and therefore,
operations control specialists would be subject to the restrictions on
drug and alcohol use, and to a certificate holder's drug and alcohol
testing program as described in 14 CFR part 120.
To ensure opera