National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems: Clarification of Wildlife Hazard Management Requirements for Non-Certificated Federally Obligated Airports, 5861-5864 [2013-00778]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 18 / Monday, January 28, 2013 / Notices
CONTACT section. Members of the public
may present a written statement to the
committee at any time.
Issued in Washington, DC, on January 9,
2013.
David Sicard,
Manager, Business Operations Group, Federal
Aviation Administration.
[FR Doc. 2013–01818 Filed 1–24–13; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
National Plan of Integrated Airport
Systems: Clarification of Wildlife
Hazard Management Requirements for
Non-Certificated Federally Obligated
Airports
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice; extension of comment
period.
AGENCY:
This action extends the
comment period for a Notice that was
published on December 10, 2012.
Nothing has changed from the original
document published on December 10,
2012. In that document, the FAA
proposed to clarify Grant Assurance No.
19, ‘‘Operation and Maintenance,’’
which is required of an airport sponsor
as a condition of receiving a
development grant under the Airport
Improvement Program (AIP). This
clarification would require noncertificated, federally obligated airports
that, after the effective date of this
Federal Register Notice, accept a new
airport development grant funded under
the Airport Improvement Program (AIP),
or accept a transfer of land under the
Surplus Property Act for airport
purposes (‘‘Subject Airports’’), to
conduct Wildlife Hazard Site Visits
(WHSVs) or Wildlife Hazard
Assessments (WHAs). Non-certificated
airports are airports that do not have a
Part 139 certificate, and may include
both commercial service airports as well
as non-primary airports that serve
mostly general aviation traffic. The
Secretary of Transportation is required
to provide notice and comment in the
Federal Register and an opportunity for
the public to comment upon proposals
to modify the assurances or add new
assurances. The FAA has elected to
extend the comment period closing date
to allow respondents additional time to
adequately analyze the Notice and
prepare comments.
DATES: The comment period for the
notice that published on December 10,
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SUMMARY:
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2012 (77 FR 73511) is extended. Send
your comments on or before January 31,
2013. The FAA will consider comments
received on the proposed interpretation
of the existing grant assurances. The
FAA may adopt revisions resulting from
comments as of the date of a subsequent
Notice in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments
[identified by Docket Number FAA–
2012–29591] using any of the following
methods:
• Government-wide rulemaking Web
site: Go to https://www.regulations.gov
and follow the instructions for sending
your comments electronically.
• Mail: Docket Operations, U.S.
Department of Transportation, West
Building, Ground Floor, Room W12–
140, Routing Symbol M–30, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC
20590.
• Fax: 1–202–493–2251.
• Hand Delivery: To Docket
Operations, Room W12–140 on the
ground floor of the West Building, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays.
Privacy: We will post all comments
we receive, without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information you provide.
Docket: To read background
documents or comments received, go to
https://www.regulations.gov at any time
or to Room W12–140 on the ground
floor of the West Building, 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:
Michael J. O’Donnell, Director, Office
Airport Safety and Standards, Room
621, Federal Aviation Administration,
800 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20591; telephone: (202)
267–3053, email:
mike.o’donnell@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
purpose of this notice is to clarify the
FAA’s interpretation of 49 U.S.C.
47107(a)(19) and the corollary Grant
Assurance No. 19, relating to airport
operations and maintenance. The FAA
proposes to require sponsors of federally
obligated, non-certificated airports that,
after the effective date of this Federal
Register Notice, accept a new airport
development grant funded under the
Airport Improvement Program, or accept
a transfer of land under the Surplus
Property Act for airport purposes to
identify and mitigate wildlife hazards at
their airports. These actions will take
the form of initial Wildlife Hazard Site
Visits (WHSVs) or Wildlife Hazard
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5861
Assessments (WHAs), depending on the
size of the airport, potentially followed
by more detailed Wildlife Hazard
Management Plans (WHMPs).
The purpose of a WHSV is for the
sponsor to identify any immediate
hazards and for the FAA to determine
whether a more comprehensive WHA is
necessary. A WHSV is typically
conducted over a period of one to three
days. A WHA is a far more
comprehensive survey, typically
conducted over a 12-month period.
WHMP is the plan the airport proposes
to mitigate any wildlife hazards found.
The Secretary must receive certain
assurances from a sponsor (applicant)
seeking financial assistance under title
49 U.S.C. 47107, as amended. Sponsors
must submit and attest to these
assurances as part of their application
for Federal financial assistance, and the
FAA incorporates these assurances into
all AIP grant agreements. From time to
time, as necessary, the FAA clarifies,
modifies or supplements these
assurances to reflect new requirements
deemed reasonably necessary to carry
out the Airport Improvement Program.
A complete list of the current grant
assurances is available at: https://
www.faa.gov/airports/aip/
grant_assurances/. The FAA amended
and published the current assurances in
the Federal Register on April 13, 2012
(see ‘‘Airport Improvement Program
(AIP) Grant Assurances,’’ 77 FR 22376).
The FAA uses a standard set of
assurances for Airport Sponsors
(owners/operators) called Appendix 1.
The FAA is interpreting 49 U.S.C.
47107(a)(19) and the corollary grant
assurance, No. 19, relating to airport
operation and maintenance, to require
airport sponsors to conduct wildlife
hazard assessments or site visits and
other actions as necessary, as detailed in
this notice, to detect and identify
wildlife hazards. The clarification
relates to Appendix 1, Airport Sponsors
assurances.
Grant Assurance No. 19, ‘‘Operation
and Maintenance,’’ requires a sponsor to
operate ‘‘the airport and all facilities
which are necessary to serve the
aeronautical users of the airport [* * *],
in a safe and serviceable condition and
in accordance with the minimum
standards as may be required or
prescribed by applicable Federal, state
and local agencies for maintenance and
operation.’’ Under Assurance No. 19,
sponsors are also required to ‘‘have in
effect arrangements for [* * *]
promptly notifying airmen of any
condition affecting aeronautical use of
the airport.’’
The airports affected by this
clarification of Grant Assurance No. 19
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 18 / Monday, January 28, 2013 / Notices
(Subject Airports) are non-certificated
airports. Non-certificated airports
include smaller commercial service
airports, as well as non-primary airports
that service mostly general aviation
(GA) operations. These airports are
typically smaller and have less air
traffic, more piston-powered aircraft,
and smaller jet aircraft, than certificated
airports. This notice does not apply to
Part 139 certificated airports. All Part
139 certificated airports will continue to
follow Part 139 regulations for
determining when WHA’s are required.
The FAA has divided the Subject
Airports into four categories based on
based aircraft and total operations. The
four categories are:
a. Subject Airports with 100 or more
based turbine-powered aircraft or 75,000
or more total annual operations. The
WHA must be initiated within three
years of receiving a development grant
after the final Federal Register notice.
The airport sponsor must update its
WHA at least once every 10 years
thereafter.
b. Subject Airports with between 20–
99 based turbine-powered aircraft or
30,000–74,999 total annual operations.
The WHSV must be initiated within
three years of receiving a development
grant after the final Federal Register
notice. The airport sponsor must update
its WHSV at least once every five years
thereafter.
c. Subject Airports with between 0–19
based turbine-powered aircraft or
between 10,000–29,999 total annual
operations. The WHSV must be initiated
within five years of receiving a
development grant after the final
Federal Register notice. The airport
sponsor must update its WHSV at least
once every five years thereafter.
d. Subject Airports with no based
turbine-powered aircraft and fewer than
10,000 total annual operations. The
WHSV must be initiated within eight
years of receiving a development grant
after the final Federal Register notice.
The airport sponsor must update its
WHSV at least once every five years
thereafter.
Data for these categories comes from
the FAA Form 5010–1, Airport Master
Record database. The FAA classifies
airports to fit within the highest
applicable category: That is, if an
airport’s number of based turbinepowered aircraft would place it into one
category, while the airport’s number of
annual operations would place it into a
higher category, the FAA classifies the
airport to be within the higher category.
When a WHSV is completed, the
airport sponsor will provide a letter to
the FAA along with the WHSV report.
This letter will summarize pertinent
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wildlife information, any immediate
mitigation activities the airport can do
to alleviate or reduce wildlife hazards,
and a recommendation as to whether a
more comprehensive WHA is necessary.
The FAA will then determine the need
for a comprehensive WHA. Similarly,
the FAA will determine if the
conclusions and recommendations
within a WHA warrant a WHMP.
The FAA further interprets the
statutory and grant assurance
obligations to require airport sponsors to
update their WHAs every 10 years, and
WHSVs at least once every five years
thereafter. WHAs are granted a longer
time before expiration because they
cover a full year and are more
comprehensive than WHSVs. WHSVs
are one to three days in length, and are
not nearly as comprehensive as WHAs.
Like other WHAs, sponsors must submit
the updated WHAs to the FAA
Administrator for approval and
determination of the need for a WHMP.
The clarification the FAA proposes
represents the FAA’s desire to continue
to enhance safety and prevent accidents
before they occur, and is consistent with
its previous safety enhancement efforts.
These efforts include rulemaking on the
subject of Safety Management Systems
(SMS), as well as Cert Alert No. 09–10
‘‘Wildlife Hazard Assessments in
Accordance with Part 139
Requirements’’ (June 11, 2009), which
the FAA issued to remind Part 139
airport operators of their obligations to
conduct Wildlife Hazard Assessments if
certain criteria are met. In this Cert
Alert, the FAA also recommended that
Part 139 airports that had not
experienced a triggering event
voluntarily conduct a WHA. In addition,
the Cert Alert recommended that
airports update WHAs more than five
years old. The FAA believes sponsors
who accept new grants at Subject
Airports need to be more proactive in
the future and take steps to understand
and alleviate the risks of wildlife strikes.
The FAA published Advisory Circular
5200–33B (‘‘Hazardous Wildlife
Attractants on or Near Airports’’) on
August 28, 2007. Paragraph 2 states,
‘‘Airports that have received Federal
grant-in-aid assistance must use these
standards.’’ The word ‘‘standards’’ in
this section of the AC refers to the
separation criteria for proposed land use
practices, described in Section 1 of the
AC and referenced in Section 4–3 of the
AC. The FAA considers the grant
assurances to require federally funded
airports to adhere to the separation
criteria.
The AC also recommends that
federally funded airports near
woodlands, wetlands, and water prepare
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wildlife hazard assessments (WHAs).
Specifically, Paragraph 2–7(c) states,
‘‘The FAA recommends that operators
of airports surrounded by woodlands,
water, or wetlands refer to Section 2.4
of this AC.’’ The FAA has not
interpreted this statement or the grant
assurances to mean that non-certificated
airports were required to do WHAs.
This interpretation of the AC was
reasonable based on the AC’s plain
language, its history, as well as the
requirements for federally funded
airports under Part 139, which were less
stringent with regard to WHA triggering
events.
The FAA is concurrently publishing
the draft Advisory Circular, No. 5200–
33C, on the FAA’s Web site at https://
www.faa.gov/airports/resources/
draft_advisory_circulars/ for public
comment. To comment on the draft
Advisory Circular, follow the
instructions on the Web site.
Proposed changes to Advisory
Circular 5200–33B include the removal
of Section 2.7(c), ‘‘Airports Surrounded
by Wildlife Habitat.’’ The FAA also
proposes to modify the Applicability
section to be consistent with the FAA’s
interpretation of Grant Assurance No.
19. The FAA proposes interpreting the
grant assurance to require noncertificated, federally obligated airports
that accept a new airport development
grant under the Airport Improvement
Program (AIP), or a new surplus
property conveyance, to monitor,
evaluate, and mitigate risks associated
with wildlife hazards. The FAA also
proposes recommended procedures
concerning off-airport attractants (i.e.,
notification and review of proposed
land-use practice changes in the vicinity
of public-use airports).
We are also clarifying in this Federal
Register Notice that we interpret the
phrase ‘‘farthest edge of the airport’s
AOA’’ in Para 1–4 of Advisory Circular
150/5200–33 (‘‘Hazardous Wildlife
Attractants on or Near Airports’’) to
refer to the edge of the air operations
area (AOA) closest to the wildlife
attractant.
This serves as notice pursuant to 49
U.S.C. 47107(h) that the FAA interprets
Grant Assurance No. 19 to include a
requirement for all Subject Airports to
undertake either a Wildlife Hazard
Assessment (WHA) or Wildlife Hazard
Safety Site Visit (WHSV), and to
mitigate wildlife risks according to
criteria set forth in this notice. This is
done in accordance with the authority
of the Secretary of Transportation to
take such action that the Secretary
considers necessary to carry out the
Airport Improvement Program,
including grant assurance requirements
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 18 / Monday, January 28, 2013 / Notices
for sponsors. 49 U.S.C. 47107(g)(1)(A),
47122(a). To comment on this Notice,
follow the instructions set forth under
‘‘ADDRESSES,’’ above.
Currently, Grant Assurance No. 19
reads, in part, ‘‘[The sponsor] will
suitably operate and maintain the
airport and all facilities thereon or
connected therewith, with due regard to
climatic and flood conditions.’’ To
clarify, the FAA proposes to add
language addressing wildlife hazards to
this sentence, so that it would read:
‘‘[The sponsor] will suitably operate and
maintain the airport and all facilities
thereon or connected therewith, with
due regard to issues including, but not
limited to, climatic and flood
conditions, and wildlife hazards.’’
This Federal Register Notice does not
apply to Part 139 certificated airports.
Specific requirements for certificated
airports to alleviate wildlife hazards
whenever detected are published at 14
CFR 139.337.
Under the Surplus Property Act of
1944, now codified at 49 U.S.C. 47151–
47153, Congress authorized the
conversion of surplus military airports
to civilian public use airports. State or
local governments request the Federal
Government to convey land that is
desirable for developing, improving,
operating, or maintaining a public
airport. The property is transferred to
the new public-entity owner through an
instrument of property conveyance. The
transfer instrument contains deed
covenants similar to the grant
assurances, which the FAA enforces
through 14 CFR Part 16. One of the deed
covenants is a provision substantially
similar to Grant Assurance No. 19 (See
FAA Order 5150.2A, Appendix 3,
paragraph 6(b)). This is to provide
notice that the FAA will be interpreting
this parallel provision of Grant
Assurance No. 19 in a similar manner.
In summary, the FAA proposes to
interpret the statutory and grant
assurance provisions relating to safety,
and the parallel deed covenant included
in instruments of conveyance of surplus
property, on a prospective basis, to
require all Subject Airports to conduct
either a WHA or WHSV, and to prepare
a WHMP if necessary, upon acceptance
of a new grant for a development
project, or a new instrument of
conveyance for surplus property after
the effective date of the final Federal
Register Notice. The FAA believes this
will enhance safety in managing
wildlife hazards at general aviation
airports.
Additional Information: On March 4,
2008, a catastrophic wildlife strike
involving a Cessna 500 Citation and an
unknown number of migratory white
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pelicans resulted in five fatalities near
Wiley Post Airport in Oklahoma City,
OK. Following the National
Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)
investigation, the NTSB recommended
the FAA ‘‘[v]erify that all federally
obligated general aviation airports that
are located near woodlands, water,
wetlands, or other wildlife attractants
are complying with the requirements to
perform wildlife hazard assessments as
specified in Federal Aviation
Administration Advisory Circular 150/
5200–33B, Hazardous Wildlife
Attractants On or Near Airports.’’ In
response, the FAA stated it would:
‘‘[* * *] modify Advisory Circular (AC)
150/5200–33B and our grant assurances to
clarify the responsibility of federally
obligated National Plan of Integrated Airport
System/General Aviation (NPIAS/GA)
airports, to conduct wildlife hazard
assessments (WHA). To assist the airports in
conducting the WHAs, we will make Airport
Improvement Program (AIP) grant funds
available to them and we will prepare a plan
to establish the priority and subsequent
schedule for completing the WHAs * * *.’’
Many populations of wildlife species
commonly involved in aircraft strikes in
the United States have increased
markedly in number in the last few
decades. For example, from 1980 to
2009, the resident (non-migratory)
Canada goose population in the USA
and Canada increased at a mean rate of
13.3 percent per year. Other species
showing significant mean annual rates
of increase included bald eagles (3.6
percent), wild turkeys (11.1 percent),
turkey vultures (2.6 percent), American
white pelicans (8.4 percent), doublecrested cormorants (6.6 percent), and
sandhill cranes (6.4 percent). Thirteen
of the 14 bird species in North America
with mean body masses greater than 8
lbs. have shown significant population
increases over the past three decades.
The white-tailed deer population
increased from about 15 million in 1984
and to over 28 million in 2010.
In May 2009, the FAA authorized a
study through the FAA Airport
Technology Research and Development
Branch to review the National Wildlife
Strike Database and determine the
current level of reporting and if it is
sufficient to determine national trends.
The two parts of this study, ‘‘Trends in
Wildlife Strike Reporting, Part 1—
Voluntary System 1990–2008,’’ DOT/
FAA/AR–09/65 (December 2009) and
‘‘Wildlife Strike Reporting—Sources of
Data in Voluntary System,’’ DOT/FAA/
AR–09/63 (December 2009), also
reviewed whether strike reporting
should be mandated and how the FAA
can increase its data collection.
This study identified an increase in
the total number of strikes reported from
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20 percent of all strikes occurring from
1990 to 1994 to 39 percent of all strikes
occurring from 2004 to 2008 at airports
certificated under 14 Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) Part 139. Although
there was a higher level of reporting, the
total number of damaging strikes did not
increase. The study attributes this to the
successful implementation of
professionally run wildlife hazard
programs to mitigate significant wildlife
hazards at many certificated airports
(See Trends in Wildlife Strike Reporting,
section 6).
The study did identify substantial
reporting gaps in the reporting of bird
strikes among certificated airports, air
carriers, and GA airports. The report
addressed GA airports listed in the
NPIAS (and therefore eligible to receive
grants of federal funding) separately
from other GA airports. Less than 6
percent of all strike reports come from
NPIAS GA airports, and reporting rates
average less than 1⁄20 of the rates at Part
139 airports.
Although the current overall reporting
rate of 39 percent is adequate to: (1)
Track national trends in wildlife strikes;
(2) determine the hazard level of
wildlife species that are being struck;
and (3) provide a scientific foundation
for FAA policies and guidance regarding
the mitigation of risk from wildlife
strikes, the study concluded that NPIAS
GA airport strike reporting is
underrepresented (see ‘‘Trends in
Wildlife Strike Reporting,’’ section 5.2).1
Whereas about 11 percent of the strikes
reported from Part 139 airports
indicated damage to the aircraft, about
50 percent of the strikes reported from
NPIAS GA airports indicated damage.
Thus, even though NPIAS GA airports
report fewer total damaging strikes
compared to Part 139 airports, such
strikes constitute a much higher
percentage of their total reporting. This
raises the concern that non-damaging
strikes are occurring at these airports
but going unreported.
Increased monitoring of general
conditions and reporting of even nondamaging strikes by GA airports is
important because it allows for
identification of potential and minor
hazards before they become major
hazards, which in turn allows airports
to prevent damaging strikes before they
occur.
Turning to strike rates for GA aircraft
at Part 139 compared to NPIAS GA
airports, the reported strike rate for GA
1 This underreporting may be partly due
requirement in part 139 that Class I–III airports
conduct a wildlife hazard assessment and then
implement a wildlife hazard management plan
should one of four specified triggering events occur
at the airport.
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aircraft at Part 139 airports was nine
times higher than the reported strike
rate for GA aircraft at NPIAS GA
airports. ‘‘GA aircraft’’ is defined in the
study as non-commercial private,
business, or government aircraft—see
‘‘Trends in Wildlife Strike Reporting,’’
section 4.3.3. However, the damaging
strike rate for GA aircraft at Part 139
airports was three times higher than it
was for GA aircraft at NPIAS GA
airports. It is notable that of the 49
reported civil aircraft destroyed or
damaged beyond repair because of
wildlife strikes in the U.S. from 1990–
2008, 33 (67 percent) occurred on or
near GA airports.
According to the study, the number of
Part 139 airports reporting at least one
wildlife strike increased from 234 (42
percent of the 552 airports) in 1990 to
333 (60 percent) in 2008. The overall
reported strike rates at individual Part
139 airports were 15 to 47 times higher
compared to NPIAS non-certificated
airports in each year (1990–2009). The
average strike rate of all Part 139
airports compared to NPIAS noncertificated airports was 23 times higher
during this same time. Although this
may be explained by a different mix of
aircraft using these two different
categories of airports, the magnitude of
the difference indicates that actual
reporting rates for NPIAS GA airports
are much lower than for Part 139
airports. This is supported in the study
by an examination of reporting rates for
damaging strikes where the magnitude
of difference is much less. Whereas Part
139 airports had a 23-fold higher
average reporting rate for all strikes
compared to NPIAS GA airports, the
reporting rate for damaging strikes was
only 5-fold higher. Thus, even though
fewer total damaging strikes are
reported compared to Part 139 airports,
there is more of a tendency at NPIAS
GA airports to report damaging strikes
compared to non-damaging strikes. As
stated above, increased monitoring of
wildlife conditions and reporting of
even non-damaging strikes are
important to prevent dangerous
conditions and damaging strikes before
they occur.
Issued in Washington, DC, on January 10,
2013.
Elliott Black,
Acting Director, Office of Airport Planning
and Programming.
[FR Doc. 2013–00778 Filed 1–24–13; 4:15 pm]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
Waiver of Aeronautical Land-Use
Assurance: Outagamie County
Regional Airport (ATW), Appleton, WI
Federal Aviation
Administration, DOT.
ACTION: Notice of intent of waiver with
respect to land.
AGENCY:
The Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) is considering a
proposal from Outagamie County
Regional Airport (Sponsor), Appleton,
WI, to release a 77.5-acre parcel of land
from the federal obligation dedicating it
to aeronautical use and to authorize this
parcel to be used for revenue-producing,
nonaeronautical purposes.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before February 27, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Mr. Daniel J. Millenacker,
Program Manager, Federal Aviation
Administration, Airports District Office,
6020 28th Avenue South, Room 102,
Minneapolis, MN 55450–2706.
Telephone Number (612) 253–4635;
FAX Number (612) 253–4611; email
address Daniel.J.Millenacker
@FAA.GOV. Documents reflecting this
FAA action may be reviewed at the
following locations: Federal Aviation
Administration, Minneapolis Airports
District Office, 6020 28th Avenue South,
Room 102, Minneapolis, MN 55450–
2706; or Office of Airport Director,
Outagamie County Regional Airport,
W6390 Challenger Drive, Suite 201,
Appleton, WI 54914.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Daniel J. Millenacker, Program Manager,
Federal Aviation Administration,
Airports District Office, 6020 28th
Avenue South, Room 102, Minneapolis,
MN 55450–2706. Telephone Number
(612) 253–4635; FAX Number (612)
253–4611; email address
Daniel.J.Millenacker@FAA.GOV.
SUMMARY:
The parcel
of land is located along the southern
boundary of Outagamie County Regional
Airport. The parcel will be used for
construction and operation of a Public
Safety Training Center (PSTC) by the
Fox Valley Technical College (FVTC).
The PSTC is an educational campus
intended to provide degree/diploma/
certificate programs to students enrolled
in public safety disciplines including
fire protection, law enforcement, and
emergency medical services.
No airport landside or airside
facilities are presently located on this
parcel nor is airport development
contemplated in the future.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Development of the parcel for airside or
landside operations is largely restricted
due to significant grade differences
which exist on the land surface. Current
use of the surface of the parcel is for
agricultural purposes. The parcel
presently serves the primary purpose of
protecting airport aeronautical
(imaginary) surfaces. The parcel will
continue to serve in this same capacity
with a proposed change to
nonaeronautical, revenue-producing use
from its present aeronautical use
designation.
The parcel is depicted on the Airport
Layout Plan (ALP) dated January 13,
1993, and the Exhibit ‘‘A’’ property
map. This parcel, as shown on the ALP,
is not needed for aeronautical use.
There are no impacts to the airport by
allowing it to waive the requirement to
maintain the parcel as aeronautical use.
Of the 77.5 acres, approximately 74.5
acres were originally purchased with
sponsor funds. The remaining acres
were acquired under a larger land
acquisition grant, Airport Improvement
Program (AIP) Grant No. 3–55–0002–
30–06.
A fair market value (FMV) appraisal
for the parcel was completed in 2011 in
accordance with FAA Order 5100.37A.
The appraisal concluded that the FMV
for acquisition of the parcel was
$1,369,000. A standard capitalization
rate was applied to the FMV to establish
a base annual rent to be paid by FVTC
for use of the parcel. A lease agreement
established by the airport sponsor
defines leasehold terms and conditions.
The airport sponsor understands that
rent and all other revenue that it collects
in connection with the PSTC campus
will be considered airport revenue and
used in accordance with 49 U.S.C.
Sections 47107 and 47133; FAA’s Policy
and Procedures on the Use of Airport
Revenue; and FAA Order 51960.6B
titled, ‘‘Airport Compliance Manual.’’
The annual income from rent payment
will generate a long-term, revenueproducing stream that will further the
Sponsor’s obligation under FAA Grant
Assurance No. 24 to make the airport as
financially self-sufficient as possible.
The sponsor will control FVTC’s use
of the parcel through the terms and
conditions of the ground lease. The
lease will be subordinate to the
sponsor’s existing grant assurances. This
will ensure that all activities
contemplated on the parcel will be
compatible with FAA requirements and
airport operations.
An environmental assessment
addressing proposed development of the
parcel was prepared. A Federal Finding
of No Significant Impact was issued by
FAA on Dec. 28, 2012.
E:\FR\FM\28JAN1.SGM
28JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 18 (Monday, January 28, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 5861-5864]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-00778]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems: Clarification of
Wildlife Hazard Management Requirements for Non-Certificated Federally
Obligated Airports
AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice; extension of comment period.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This action extends the comment period for a Notice that was
published on December 10, 2012. Nothing has changed from the original
document published on December 10, 2012. In that document, the FAA
proposed to clarify Grant Assurance No. 19, ``Operation and
Maintenance,'' which is required of an airport sponsor as a condition
of receiving a development grant under the Airport Improvement Program
(AIP). This clarification would require non-certificated, federally
obligated airports that, after the effective date of this Federal
Register Notice, accept a new airport development grant funded under
the Airport Improvement Program (AIP), or accept a transfer of land
under the Surplus Property Act for airport purposes (``Subject
Airports''), to conduct Wildlife Hazard Site Visits (WHSVs) or Wildlife
Hazard Assessments (WHAs). Non-certificated airports are airports that
do not have a Part 139 certificate, and may include both commercial
service airports as well as non-primary airports that serve mostly
general aviation traffic. The Secretary of Transportation is required
to provide notice and comment in the Federal Register and an
opportunity for the public to comment upon proposals to modify the
assurances or add new assurances. The FAA has elected to extend the
comment period closing date to allow respondents additional time to
adequately analyze the Notice and prepare comments.
DATES: The comment period for the notice that published on December 10,
2012 (77 FR 73511) is extended. Send your comments on or before January
31, 2013. The FAA will consider comments received on the proposed
interpretation of the existing grant assurances. The FAA may adopt
revisions resulting from comments as of the date of a subsequent Notice
in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments [identified by Docket Number FAA-2012-
29591] using any of the following methods:
Government-wide rulemaking Web site: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and follow the instructions for sending your
comments electronically.
Mail: Docket Operations, U.S. Department of
Transportation, West Building, Ground Floor, Room W12-140, Routing
Symbol M-30, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590.
Fax: 1-202-493-2251.
Hand Delivery: To Docket Operations, Room W12-140 on the
ground floor of the West Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
Privacy: We will post all comments we receive, without change, to
https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information you
provide.
Docket: To read background documents or comments received, go to
https://www.regulations.gov at any time or to Room W12-140 on the ground
floor of the West Building, 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: Michael J. O'Donnell, Director, Office
Airport Safety and Standards, Room 621, Federal Aviation
Administration, 800 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20591;
telephone: (202) 267-3053, email: mike.o'donnell@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The purpose of this notice is to clarify the
FAA's interpretation of 49 U.S.C. 47107(a)(19) and the corollary Grant
Assurance No. 19, relating to airport operations and maintenance. The
FAA proposes to require sponsors of federally obligated, non-
certificated airports that, after the effective date of this Federal
Register Notice, accept a new airport development grant funded under
the Airport Improvement Program, or accept a transfer of land under the
Surplus Property Act for airport purposes to identify and mitigate
wildlife hazards at their airports. These actions will take the form of
initial Wildlife Hazard Site Visits (WHSVs) or Wildlife Hazard
Assessments (WHAs), depending on the size of the airport, potentially
followed by more detailed Wildlife Hazard Management Plans (WHMPs).
The purpose of a WHSV is for the sponsor to identify any immediate
hazards and for the FAA to determine whether a more comprehensive WHA
is necessary. A WHSV is typically conducted over a period of one to
three days. A WHA is a far more comprehensive survey, typically
conducted over a 12-month period. WHMP is the plan the airport proposes
to mitigate any wildlife hazards found.
The Secretary must receive certain assurances from a sponsor
(applicant) seeking financial assistance under title 49 U.S.C. 47107,
as amended. Sponsors must submit and attest to these assurances as part
of their application for Federal financial assistance, and the FAA
incorporates these assurances into all AIP grant agreements. From time
to time, as necessary, the FAA clarifies, modifies or supplements these
assurances to reflect new requirements deemed reasonably necessary to
carry out the Airport Improvement Program. A complete list of the
current grant assurances is available at: https://www.faa.gov/airports/aip/grant_assurances/. The FAA amended and published the current
assurances in the Federal Register on April 13, 2012 (see ``Airport
Improvement Program (AIP) Grant Assurances,'' 77 FR 22376). The FAA
uses a standard set of assurances for Airport Sponsors (owners/
operators) called Appendix 1. The FAA is interpreting 49 U.S.C.
47107(a)(19) and the corollary grant assurance, No. 19, relating to
airport operation and maintenance, to require airport sponsors to
conduct wildlife hazard assessments or site visits and other actions as
necessary, as detailed in this notice, to detect and identify wildlife
hazards. The clarification relates to Appendix 1, Airport Sponsors
assurances.
Grant Assurance No. 19, ``Operation and Maintenance,'' requires a
sponsor to operate ``the airport and all facilities which are necessary
to serve the aeronautical users of the airport [* * *], in a safe and
serviceable condition and in accordance with the minimum standards as
may be required or prescribed by applicable Federal, state and local
agencies for maintenance and operation.'' Under Assurance No. 19,
sponsors are also required to ``have in effect arrangements for [* * *]
promptly notifying airmen of any condition affecting aeronautical use
of the airport.''
The airports affected by this clarification of Grant Assurance No.
19
[[Page 5862]]
(Subject Airports) are non-certificated airports. Non-certificated
airports include smaller commercial service airports, as well as non-
primary airports that service mostly general aviation (GA) operations.
These airports are typically smaller and have less air traffic, more
piston-powered aircraft, and smaller jet aircraft, than certificated
airports. This notice does not apply to Part 139 certificated airports.
All Part 139 certificated airports will continue to follow Part 139
regulations for determining when WHA's are required.
The FAA has divided the Subject Airports into four categories based
on based aircraft and total operations. The four categories are:
a. Subject Airports with 100 or more based turbine-powered aircraft
or 75,000 or more total annual operations. The WHA must be initiated
within three years of receiving a development grant after the final
Federal Register notice. The airport sponsor must update its WHA at
least once every 10 years thereafter.
b. Subject Airports with between 20-99 based turbine-powered
aircraft or 30,000-74,999 total annual operations. The WHSV must be
initiated within three years of receiving a development grant after the
final Federal Register notice. The airport sponsor must update its WHSV
at least once every five years thereafter.
c. Subject Airports with between 0-19 based turbine-powered
aircraft or between 10,000-29,999 total annual operations. The WHSV
must be initiated within five years of receiving a development grant
after the final Federal Register notice. The airport sponsor must
update its WHSV at least once every five years thereafter.
d. Subject Airports with no based turbine-powered aircraft and
fewer than 10,000 total annual operations. The WHSV must be initiated
within eight years of receiving a development grant after the final
Federal Register notice. The airport sponsor must update its WHSV at
least once every five years thereafter.
Data for these categories comes from the FAA Form 5010-1, Airport
Master Record database. The FAA classifies airports to fit within the
highest applicable category: That is, if an airport's number of based
turbine-powered aircraft would place it into one category, while the
airport's number of annual operations would place it into a higher
category, the FAA classifies the airport to be within the higher
category.
When a WHSV is completed, the airport sponsor will provide a letter
to the FAA along with the WHSV report. This letter will summarize
pertinent wildlife information, any immediate mitigation activities the
airport can do to alleviate or reduce wildlife hazards, and a
recommendation as to whether a more comprehensive WHA is necessary. The
FAA will then determine the need for a comprehensive WHA. Similarly,
the FAA will determine if the conclusions and recommendations within a
WHA warrant a WHMP.
The FAA further interprets the statutory and grant assurance
obligations to require airport sponsors to update their WHAs every 10
years, and WHSVs at least once every five years thereafter. WHAs are
granted a longer time before expiration because they cover a full year
and are more comprehensive than WHSVs. WHSVs are one to three days in
length, and are not nearly as comprehensive as WHAs. Like other WHAs,
sponsors must submit the updated WHAs to the FAA Administrator for
approval and determination of the need for a WHMP.
The clarification the FAA proposes represents the FAA's desire to
continue to enhance safety and prevent accidents before they occur, and
is consistent with its previous safety enhancement efforts. These
efforts include rulemaking on the subject of Safety Management Systems
(SMS), as well as Cert Alert No. 09-10 ``Wildlife Hazard Assessments in
Accordance with Part 139 Requirements'' (June 11, 2009), which the FAA
issued to remind Part 139 airport operators of their obligations to
conduct Wildlife Hazard Assessments if certain criteria are met. In
this Cert Alert, the FAA also recommended that Part 139 airports that
had not experienced a triggering event voluntarily conduct a WHA. In
addition, the Cert Alert recommended that airports update WHAs more
than five years old. The FAA believes sponsors who accept new grants at
Subject Airports need to be more proactive in the future and take steps
to understand and alleviate the risks of wildlife strikes.
The FAA published Advisory Circular 5200-33B (``Hazardous Wildlife
Attractants on or Near Airports'') on August 28, 2007. Paragraph 2
states, ``Airports that have received Federal grant-in-aid assistance
must use these standards.'' The word ``standards'' in this section of
the AC refers to the separation criteria for proposed land use
practices, described in Section 1 of the AC and referenced in Section
4-3 of the AC. The FAA considers the grant assurances to require
federally funded airports to adhere to the separation criteria.
The AC also recommends that federally funded airports near
woodlands, wetlands, and water prepare wildlife hazard assessments
(WHAs). Specifically, Paragraph 2-7(c) states, ``The FAA recommends
that operators of airports surrounded by woodlands, water, or wetlands
refer to Section 2.4 of this AC.'' The FAA has not interpreted this
statement or the grant assurances to mean that non-certificated
airports were required to do WHAs. This interpretation of the AC was
reasonable based on the AC's plain language, its history, as well as
the requirements for federally funded airports under Part 139, which
were less stringent with regard to WHA triggering events.
The FAA is concurrently publishing the draft Advisory Circular, No.
5200-33C, on the FAA's Web site at https://www.faa.gov/airports/resources/draft_advisory_circulars/ for public comment. To comment on
the draft Advisory Circular, follow the instructions on the Web site.
Proposed changes to Advisory Circular 5200-33B include the removal
of Section 2.7(c), ``Airports Surrounded by Wildlife Habitat.'' The FAA
also proposes to modify the Applicability section to be consistent with
the FAA's interpretation of Grant Assurance No. 19. The FAA proposes
interpreting the grant assurance to require non-certificated, federally
obligated airports that accept a new airport development grant under
the Airport Improvement Program (AIP), or a new surplus property
conveyance, to monitor, evaluate, and mitigate risks associated with
wildlife hazards. The FAA also proposes recommended procedures
concerning off-airport attractants (i.e., notification and review of
proposed land-use practice changes in the vicinity of public-use
airports).
We are also clarifying in this Federal Register Notice that we
interpret the phrase ``farthest edge of the airport's AOA'' in Para 1-4
of Advisory Circular 150/5200-33 (``Hazardous Wildlife Attractants on
or Near Airports'') to refer to the edge of the air operations area
(AOA) closest to the wildlife attractant.
This serves as notice pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 47107(h) that the FAA
interprets Grant Assurance No. 19 to include a requirement for all
Subject Airports to undertake either a Wildlife Hazard Assessment (WHA)
or Wildlife Hazard Safety Site Visit (WHSV), and to mitigate wildlife
risks according to criteria set forth in this notice. This is done in
accordance with the authority of the Secretary of Transportation to
take such action that the Secretary considers necessary to carry out
the Airport Improvement Program, including grant assurance requirements
[[Page 5863]]
for sponsors. 49 U.S.C. 47107(g)(1)(A), 47122(a). To comment on this
Notice, follow the instructions set forth under ``Addresses,'' above.
Currently, Grant Assurance No. 19 reads, in part, ``[The sponsor]
will suitably operate and maintain the airport and all facilities
thereon or connected therewith, with due regard to climatic and flood
conditions.'' To clarify, the FAA proposes to add language addressing
wildlife hazards to this sentence, so that it would read: ``[The
sponsor] will suitably operate and maintain the airport and all
facilities thereon or connected therewith, with due regard to issues
including, but not limited to, climatic and flood conditions, and
wildlife hazards.''
This Federal Register Notice does not apply to Part 139
certificated airports. Specific requirements for certificated airports
to alleviate wildlife hazards whenever detected are published at 14 CFR
139.337.
Under the Surplus Property Act of 1944, now codified at 49 U.S.C.
47151-47153, Congress authorized the conversion of surplus military
airports to civilian public use airports. State or local governments
request the Federal Government to convey land that is desirable for
developing, improving, operating, or maintaining a public airport. The
property is transferred to the new public-entity owner through an
instrument of property conveyance. The transfer instrument contains
deed covenants similar to the grant assurances, which the FAA enforces
through 14 CFR Part 16. One of the deed covenants is a provision
substantially similar to Grant Assurance No. 19 (See FAA Order 5150.2A,
Appendix 3, paragraph 6(b)). This is to provide notice that the FAA
will be interpreting this parallel provision of Grant Assurance No. 19
in a similar manner.
In summary, the FAA proposes to interpret the statutory and grant
assurance provisions relating to safety, and the parallel deed covenant
included in instruments of conveyance of surplus property, on a
prospective basis, to require all Subject Airports to conduct either a
WHA or WHSV, and to prepare a WHMP if necessary, upon acceptance of a
new grant for a development project, or a new instrument of conveyance
for surplus property after the effective date of the final Federal
Register Notice. The FAA believes this will enhance safety in managing
wildlife hazards at general aviation airports.
Additional Information: On March 4, 2008, a catastrophic wildlife
strike involving a Cessna 500 Citation and an unknown number of
migratory white pelicans resulted in five fatalities near Wiley Post
Airport in Oklahoma City, OK. Following the National Transportation
Safety Board (NTSB) investigation, the NTSB recommended the FAA
``[v]erify that all federally obligated general aviation airports that
are located near woodlands, water, wetlands, or other wildlife
attractants are complying with the requirements to perform wildlife
hazard assessments as specified in Federal Aviation Administration
Advisory Circular 150/5200-33B, Hazardous Wildlife Attractants On or
Near Airports.'' In response, the FAA stated it would:
``[* * *] modify Advisory Circular (AC) 150/5200-33B and our
grant assurances to clarify the responsibility of federally
obligated National Plan of Integrated Airport System/General
Aviation (NPIAS/GA) airports, to conduct wildlife hazard assessments
(WHA). To assist the airports in conducting the WHAs, we will make
Airport Improvement Program (AIP) grant funds available to them and
we will prepare a plan to establish the priority and subsequent
schedule for completing the WHAs * * *.''
Many populations of wildlife species commonly involved in aircraft
strikes in the United States have increased markedly in number in the
last few decades. For example, from 1980 to 2009, the resident (non-
migratory) Canada goose population in the USA and Canada increased at a
mean rate of 13.3 percent per year. Other species showing significant
mean annual rates of increase included bald eagles (3.6 percent), wild
turkeys (11.1 percent), turkey vultures (2.6 percent), American white
pelicans (8.4 percent), double-crested cormorants (6.6 percent), and
sandhill cranes (6.4 percent). Thirteen of the 14 bird species in North
America with mean body masses greater than 8 lbs. have shown
significant population increases over the past three decades. The
white-tailed deer population increased from about 15 million in 1984
and to over 28 million in 2010.
In May 2009, the FAA authorized a study through the FAA Airport
Technology Research and Development Branch to review the National
Wildlife Strike Database and determine the current level of reporting
and if it is sufficient to determine national trends. The two parts of
this study, ``Trends in Wildlife Strike Reporting, Part 1--Voluntary
System 1990-2008,'' DOT/FAA/AR-09/65 (December 2009) and ``Wildlife
Strike Reporting--Sources of Data in Voluntary System,'' DOT/FAA/AR-09/
63 (December 2009), also reviewed whether strike reporting should be
mandated and how the FAA can increase its data collection.
This study identified an increase in the total number of strikes
reported from 20 percent of all strikes occurring from 1990 to 1994 to
39 percent of all strikes occurring from 2004 to 2008 at airports
certificated under 14 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 139.
Although there was a higher level of reporting, the total number of
damaging strikes did not increase. The study attributes this to the
successful implementation of professionally run wildlife hazard
programs to mitigate significant wildlife hazards at many certificated
airports (See Trends in Wildlife Strike Reporting, section 6).
The study did identify substantial reporting gaps in the reporting
of bird strikes among certificated airports, air carriers, and GA
airports. The report addressed GA airports listed in the NPIAS (and
therefore eligible to receive grants of federal funding) separately
from other GA airports. Less than 6 percent of all strike reports come
from NPIAS GA airports, and reporting rates average less than \1/20\ of
the rates at Part 139 airports.
Although the current overall reporting rate of 39 percent is
adequate to: (1) Track national trends in wildlife strikes; (2)
determine the hazard level of wildlife species that are being struck;
and (3) provide a scientific foundation for FAA policies and guidance
regarding the mitigation of risk from wildlife strikes, the study
concluded that NPIAS GA airport strike reporting is underrepresented
(see ``Trends in Wildlife Strike Reporting,'' section 5.2).\1\ Whereas
about 11 percent of the strikes reported from Part 139 airports
indicated damage to the aircraft, about 50 percent of the strikes
reported from NPIAS GA airports indicated damage. Thus, even though
NPIAS GA airports report fewer total damaging strikes compared to Part
139 airports, such strikes constitute a much higher percentage of their
total reporting. This raises the concern that non-damaging strikes are
occurring at these airports but going unreported.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ This underreporting may be partly due requirement in part
139 that Class I-III airports conduct a wildlife hazard assessment
and then implement a wildlife hazard management plan should one of
four specified triggering events occur at the airport.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increased monitoring of general conditions and reporting of even
non-damaging strikes by GA airports is important because it allows for
identification of potential and minor hazards before they become major
hazards, which in turn allows airports to prevent damaging strikes
before they occur.
Turning to strike rates for GA aircraft at Part 139 compared to
NPIAS GA airports, the reported strike rate for GA
[[Page 5864]]
aircraft at Part 139 airports was nine times higher than the reported
strike rate for GA aircraft at NPIAS GA airports. ``GA aircraft'' is
defined in the study as non-commercial private, business, or government
aircraft--see ``Trends in Wildlife Strike Reporting,'' section 4.3.3.
However, the damaging strike rate for GA aircraft at Part 139 airports
was three times higher than it was for GA aircraft at NPIAS GA
airports. It is notable that of the 49 reported civil aircraft
destroyed or damaged beyond repair because of wildlife strikes in the
U.S. from 1990-2008, 33 (67 percent) occurred on or near GA airports.
According to the study, the number of Part 139 airports reporting
at least one wildlife strike increased from 234 (42 percent of the 552
airports) in 1990 to 333 (60 percent) in 2008. The overall reported
strike rates at individual Part 139 airports were 15 to 47 times higher
compared to NPIAS non-certificated airports in each year (1990-2009).
The average strike rate of all Part 139 airports compared to NPIAS non-
certificated airports was 23 times higher during this same time.
Although this may be explained by a different mix of aircraft using
these two different categories of airports, the magnitude of the
difference indicates that actual reporting rates for NPIAS GA airports
are much lower than for Part 139 airports. This is supported in the
study by an examination of reporting rates for damaging strikes where
the magnitude of difference is much less. Whereas Part 139 airports had
a 23-fold higher average reporting rate for all strikes compared to
NPIAS GA airports, the reporting rate for damaging strikes was only 5-
fold higher. Thus, even though fewer total damaging strikes are
reported compared to Part 139 airports, there is more of a tendency at
NPIAS GA airports to report damaging strikes compared to non-damaging
strikes. As stated above, increased monitoring of wildlife conditions
and reporting of even non-damaging strikes are important to prevent
dangerous conditions and damaging strikes before they occur.
Issued in Washington, DC, on January 10, 2013.
Elliott Black,
Acting Director, Office of Airport Planning and Programming.
[FR Doc. 2013-00778 Filed 1-24-13; 4:15 pm]
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