25-Hour Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) Requirement, New Aircraft Production, 84090-84098 [2023-26144]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 231 / Monday, December 4, 2023 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Parts 91, 121, 125, and 135
[Docket No.: FAA–2023–2270; Notice No.
24–04]
RIN 2120–AL92
25-Hour Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR)
Requirement, New Aircraft Production
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
AGENCY:
This rulemaking would
increase the recording time of cockpit
voice recorders from the mandated 2
hours to a proposed 25-hour recording
time for all future manufactured aircraft.
This rulemaking would provide
accident investigators, aircraft operators,
and civil aviation authorities with
substantially more cockpit voice
recorder data to help find the probable
causes of incidents and accidents,
prevent future incidents and accidents,
and make the FAA’s regulations more
consistent with existing international
requirements.
SUMMARY:
Send comments on or before
February 2, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Send comments identified
by docket number FAA–2023–2270
using any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
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 (DOT), 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.
Privacy: In accordance with 5 U.S.C.
553(c), DOT solicits comments from the
public to better inform its rulemaking
process. DOT posts these comments,
without edit, including any personal
information the commenter provides, to
www.regulations.gov, as described in
the system of records notice (DOT/ALL–
14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at
www.dot.gov/privacy.
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Docket: Background documents or
comments received may be read at
www.regulations.gov/ at any time.
Follow the online instructions for
accessing the docket or go to 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:
Charisse Green, AFS–340, Aircraft
Maintenance Division, Office of Safety
Standards, Federal Aviation
Administration, 800 Independence Ave.
SW, Washington, DC 20591; telephone
(202) 267–1675; email Charisse.green@
faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority for This Rulemaking
The FAA’s authority to issue rules on
aviation safety is found in title 49 of the
United States Code. Subtitle I, section
106 describes the authority of the FAA
Administrator. Subtitle VII, Aviation
Programs, describes in more detail the
scope of the FAA’s authority.
This rulemaking is issued under the
authority described in subtitle VII, part
A, subpart III, section 44701. Under that
section, the FAA is charged with
prescribing regulations providing
minimum standards for other practices,
methods, and procedures necessary for
safety in air commerce. This regulation
is within the scope of that authority
since flight data recorders are the only
means available to account for aircraft
movement and flight crew actions
critical to finding the probable cause of
incidents or accidents, including data
that could prevent future incidents or
accidents.
I. Executive Summary
A. Overview of Proposed Rule
This rulemaking effort proposes to
amend the cockpit voice recorder (CVR)
regulations to increase the recording
duration of CVRs. Currently, CVRs are
required to retain the last two hours of
recorded information. Once this 2-hour
limit is reached, a CVR overwrites the
oldest data to maintain a rolling 2-hour
recording. This proposal would increase
the minimum duration of CVR
recordings to 25 hours. The proposed
change would affect all newly
manufactured aircraft operating under
title 14 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (14 CFR) parts 91, 121, 125,
and 135, one year after the effective date
of the final rule.
B. Statement of the Problem
The current 2-hour recording duration
requirement does not meet the NTSB’s
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needs for investigations and subsequent
safety recommendations. Since the
NTSB issued Safety Recommendation
A–18–030, it has investigated numerous
accidents and incidents where CVR data
relevant to the accident or incident has
been overwritten because the relevant
recording occurred earlier than the
available two hours of recording.
C. Summary of the Costs and Benefits
Benefits of the proposed rule are
expected to stem from a reduction in
accident risk and time savings.
Specifically, the additional audio of
longer duration CVRs would provide
authorities with more information on
events and procedures undertaken in
the flight deck in investigated incidents.
This increased data may lead to new or
more fully informed FAA
recommendations or policy changes that
could further enhance safety and reduce
the risk that an incident becomes an
accident. In addition, updated CVR
models have also revamped the CVR
interface tools, resulting in time-saving
benefits. The simplified and more
intuitive tools allow personnel to be
trained quicker on operation, retrieve
audio data faster, and perform
additional diagnostic services to shorten
downtime. The FAA currently lacks
data to predict the exact reduction in
accident risk and labor hours and
requests comments on the expected
value of these benefits.
The FAA has assessed projected
compliance costs using the incremental
cost of equipping a 25-hour capable
CVR over a comparable 2-hour unit to
all applicable newly produced aircraft.
Market research indicates that the
difference between these units is
minimal, ranging from near parity to an
upper bound of approximately $4,500.
Using that upper bound, the total cost
over 20 years is estimated to be $102.42
million at 7 percent present value, with
annualized costs of $9.67 million. As
operational procedures are expected to
be similar between the older 2-hour and
newer 25-hour capable models, the FAA
anticipates no other notable costs. The
FAA invites comments on the cost
estimates and assumptions.
II. Background
A. CVRs: National Transportation
Safety Board (NTSB) Recommendations
and FAA Responses
The FAA previously has engaged in
rulemaking to address past NTSB
recommendations concerning CVRs.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 231 / Monday, December 4, 2023 / Proposed Rules
In December 1996, the NTSB issued
Safety Recommendation A–96–171 as a
result of its investigation of an accident
in January 1996.1 In this accident, an
aircraft touched down hard in the
approach light area short of a runway at
the Nashville International Airport,
resulting in minor injuries to passengers
and crew and substantial damage to the
aircraft’s tail section, nose gear, and
engines. During the investigation, the
NTSB was hampered by the fact that the
30-minute closed-loop CVR tape did not
include recordings of the initial
approach to the runway, the hard
landing event, or the go-around because
that information had been recorded over
and permanently lost after the airplane
safely stopped on the ground.2 As a
result, the NTSB recommended that the
recording limitation for newly
manufactured CVRs meet a minimum
recording duration of two hours.3 The
FAA adopted this recommendation in
2008.
In August 2002, the NTSB issued a
safety recommendation letter to the
FAA, identifying delays or failures by
the operator to deactivate CVRs after
reportable events as a major factor in the
systemic problem of retaining data, as
information was overwritten in the
remainder of a flight with an incident or
accident.4 The NTSB recommended that
the FAA require the CVR be deactivated
immediately upon completion of flight
after a reportable incident or accident
has occurred. In response, the FAA
issued Notice 8400.48, ‘‘Cockpit Voice
Recorder Deactivation After a
Reportable Event,’’ on April 25, 2003.
This notice advised air carriers to add
a checklist item to deactivate the CVR,
manually or automatically, immediately
upon completion of a flight with a
reportable accident or incident. On
October 6, 2003, the NTSB considered
Notice 8400.48 to have met the intent of
Safety Recommendation A–02–24 for
aircraft operating under parts 121 and
135 requirements, but not part 91
requirements as the notice did not
address part 91 operators.5
On March 7, 2008, the FAA amended
the CVR regulations in accordance with
NTSB Safety Recommendation A–96–
171.6 The final rule, ‘‘Revisions to
Cockpit Voice Recorder and Digital
Flight Data Recorder Regulations,’’
increased the duration of certain CVR
1 NTSB. Safety Recommendation A–96–171,
December 11, 1996.
2 Id.
3 Id.
4 NTSB. Safety Recommendation A–02–24,
August 29, 2002.
5 NTSB. Safety Recommendation Report A–18–04
at 3, October 2, 2018.
6 73 FR 12541 (2008).
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recordings, increased the data recording
rate for certain digital flight data
recorder (DFDR) parameters, physically
separated DFDRs and CVRs, improved
power supply to both CVRs and DFDRs,
and required certain datalink
communications received on an aircraft
to be recorded if datalink
communication equipment was
installed.7
On October 10, 2018, the NTSB
published an Aviation Safety
Recommendation Report titled
‘‘Extended Duration Cockpit Voice
Recorders.’’ Within this safety report,
Safety Recommendation A–18–030
recommended that the FAA require all
newly manufactured aircraft that must
have a CVR to be fitted with and operate
a CVR capable of recording the last 25
hours of audio. This recommendation
stemmed from an aircraft incident that
occurred in July 2017 at San Francisco
International Airport, in which the
flight crew of an Airbus A320 was
cleared to land on a set runway but
instead lined up with a parallel taxiway.
After descending to an altitude of 100
feet above ground level (AGL), the
aircraft overflew an airplane on the
taxiway. The incident aircraft
subsequently overflew a second airplane
on the taxiway before starting to climb.
During the investigation of the
incident, the NTSB found it difficult to
gather relevant information as the CVR
data was overwritten before Air Canada
officials learned of the severity of the
event. The report stated that had the
NTSB been able to obtain the
overwritten data, investigators would
have been able to assess the timing and
content of the flight crew’s
conversations during final approach,
conversations during and after the goaround, and the flight crew’s crew
resource management (CRM), workload,
and fatigue based on verbalizations or
flight deck sounds. In this instance, the
NTSB identified several serious safety
issues; however, this investigation
lacked direct evidence of the flight
crew’s decision making, coordination,
and perception of its environment.
B. FAA Aviation Safety Summit of 2023
On March 15, 2023, the FAA
convened an aviation safety summit,
where approximately 200 safety leaders
from the aviation industry met to
discuss safety improvements in
response to several recent near-miss
incidents and runway incursions.8 The
summit focused on ways to enhance
7 Id.
8 The FAA. Readout from the FAA Aviation
Safety Summit Breakout Panels. March 15, 2023.
Accessed from www.faa.gov/newsroom/readout-faaaviation-safety-summit-breakout-panels.
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flight safety for commercial operations,
the air traffic system, airport and ground
operations, and general aviation
operations.
As a result of discussions at the
summit, the FAA committed to initiate
rulemaking that would require CVRs to
capture 25 hours of information for
newly manufactured aircraft.
C. ICAO and EASA Adoption of a 25Hour Cockpit Voice Recorder
Requirement
In 2013, the European Union Aviation
Safety Agency (EASA) proposed an
amendment that would have required
large commercial aircraft manufactured
after January 1, 2019, to carry a CVR
capable of recording the last 15 hours of
aircraft operation.9 In 2015, after
considering the comments received on
the proposed amendment and after
technical review, EASA extended the
recording duration requirement to 25
hours.10 The 25-hour mandate took
effect on January 1, 2021. The regulation
requires any aircraft with a maximum
takeoff weight of 27,000 kg (60,000
pounds) or more, manufactured after
January 1, 2021, to be equipped with a
CVR with at least a 25-hour recording
capability.11
In 2016, the International Civil
Aviation Organization (ICAO) also
adopted a new standard calling for the
installation of CVRs capable of
recording the last 25 hours of aircraft
operation on all aircraft manufactured
after January 1, 2021, with a maximum
certificated takeoff mass of over 27,000
kg and engaged in commercial
transport.12 In adopting this standard,
ICAO emphasized the value of CVR
recordings in analyzing human factors
and other sounds.13 ICAO noted that
extending the recording duration of
CVRs was necessary to cover the longest
flight duration, including pre- and
postflight activities, delays, and the time
required to secure the recordings.14
Since September 2013, the CVR
technical standard in European
Organization for Civil Aviation
Equipment (EUROCAE) ED–112A,
‘‘Minimum Operational Performance
Specification for Crash Protected
Airborne Recorder Systems,’’ used by all
9 ‘‘Amendment of requirements for flight
recorders and underwater locating devices,’’ Notice
of Proposed Amendment 2013–26, European Union
Aviation Safety Agency, December 20, 2013.
10 Commission Regulation 2015/2338, 2015 O.J.
Amending Regulation (EU) No 965/2012 as regards
requirements for flight recorders, underwater
locating devices and aircraft tracking systems.
11 Id.
12 NTSB. Aviation Safety Recommendation
Report. ASR–18–04 at 2. October 2, 2018.
13 Id.
14 Id.
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manufacturers,15 already provides
design standards for a 25-hour CVR.16
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III. Discussion of the Proposal
Since the FAA updated the CVR
regulations in 2008, the NTSB has
reported issues with accessing relevant
CVR data with existing 2-hour recording
duration. Numerous aircraft incidents
have occurred in which relevant CVR
data was overwritten and thereby made
unavailable because of the time it took
to retrieve the CVR. The lack of relevant
CVR data hampers NTSB investigations
and its ability to provide appropriate
safety recommendations that can help
prevent future accidents and
incidents.17
In response to Safety
Recommendation A–18–030, the FAA
proposes to amend all CVR operational
regulations related to CVR recording
time by expanding the recording
duration from two hours to 25 hours for
aircraft manufactured one year after the
date of publication of the final rule.
The NTSB’s Safety Recommendation
also included the recommendation to
retrofit the current fleet. While
retrofitting the current fleet would more
expeditiously increase the number of
aircraft fitted with the newer 25-hour
CVR units and, thereby, the projected
benefits to safety, the costs would be
significant. Specifically, retrofitting the
current fleet would increase by twothirds the number of aircraft required to
install 25-hour CVRs (estimated 29,561
aircraft in the current fleet added to the
estimated 43,470 aircraft being built in
the next 20 years). Further, the cost to
retrofit existing aircraft with 25-hour
CVRs would be several times higher
than the cost to equip future-built
aircraft with a 25-hour CVR instead of
a 2-hour model. Assuming no
replacement, applying a $25,000 CVR
unit cost spread across the estimated
29,651 current fleet would result in
roughly $741.28 million (undiscounted)
in equipment cost compared to the
$195.62 million (undiscounted) in
incremental upgrade costs from the
proposed rule. Retrofitting current
aircraft would also incur additional
costs, such as aircraft downtime and
labor hours required to replace the CVR
unit, which would further increase the
15 All manufacturers, regardless of US-based or
foreign, are required to use this standard in order
to meet the carriage requirements in §§ 91.609,
121.359, 125.227, and 135.151, which reference
TSO–C123, which in turn specifies ED–112A.
16 GlobalSpec. ‘‘EUROCAE ED 112.’’ Accessible at
standards.globalspec.com/std/1629860/EUROCAE
%20ED%20112.
17 NTSB. (March 15, 2023). Transcript of NTSB
Chair’s Remarks at the FAA Safety Summit.
www.ntsb.gov/Advocacy/Activities/Pages/
Homendy-20230315.aspx.
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total cost. Therefore, in an effort to
provide the increased benefit of making
more substantive data available to
accident investigators while
maintaining the lowest economic
impact on operators, this proposed rule
would apply to newly manufactured
aircraft only. For more information,
please see the regulatory impact
analysis in the docket.
The proposed change would affect the
following regulations:
• Section 91.609(i)(2);
• Section 121.359(i)(2);
• Section 121.359(j)(2);
• Section 125.227(g)(2);
• Section 125.227(h)(2);
• Section 135.151(g)(1)(iii); and
• Section 135.151(g)(2)(iii).
Certificate holders operating under
part 129 requirements would be affected
because, in accordance with § 129.24,
their CVRs are required to record as if
the aircraft were operated under parts
121, 125, or 135.
A. Cockpit Voice Recorder Capabilities
and Investigative Use
Aircraft operating under parts 91, 121,
125, and 135 are required to be
equipped with a CVR that records radio
transmissions and sounds in the flight
deck to aid subsequent investigation
should an accident or incident occur.
The recorder’s flight deck area
microphone is usually located on the
overhead instrument panel between the
two pilots.
CVRs preserve the recent history of
sounds in the flight deck and provide
unique information such as engine
noise, stall warnings, landing gear
extension and retraction, and other
clicks and pops. These sounds may help
an investigator to determine parameters
such as engine rpm, system failures,
speed, and the time at which certain
events occur. The CVR also records
communications with Air Traffic
Control, automated radio weather
briefings, conversations between the
pilots and ground or cabin crew, flight
crew verbalizations of intentions and
coordination, as well as the pilots’
awareness of the aircraft and flight deck
information.18 Access to this
information allows investigators to more
thoroughly investigate accident and
incident factors. Incident factors include
the flight crew’s procedural compliance,
distraction, decision-making, workload,
fatigue, and situational awareness.
A CVR starts recording when an
aircraft is powered up and will continue
to record until the aircraft is powered
18 NTSB. (2023) ‘‘Cockpit Voice Recorders (CVR)
and Flight Data Recorders (FDR).’’ www.ntsb.gov/
news/Pages/cvr_fdr.aspx.
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down or the CVR is deactivated. Once
a CVR reaches the end of its recording
limit, it will overwrite existing data
with a new recording.
CVRs typically deactivate due to two
forms of power loss. The first occurs
when the CVR is deactivated after a
major or catastrophic event causing a
loss of electrical power. When this event
occurs, the CVR preserves relevant
audio recorded in the two hours prior to
the accident. The second form occurs
during less severe incidents, such as
when the flight crew manually
deactivates the CVR immediately upon
landing in order to prevent the relevant
audio from being overwritten.
After an accident or incident, the CVR
data is transferred to an NTSB lab for
retrieval. The NTSB will eventually
receive a readout from the CVR
software.
Since CVRs were implemented in
1966, recording capabilities have
significantly increased from the original
30 minutes. The latest designs employ
more easily expandable solid-state
memory and use fault tolerant digital
recording technique with an
incorporated battery so that recording
can continue until the end of flight,
even when the aircraft’s electrical
system fails.
The technical limit for recording time
has expanded such that 25 hours is now
well within CVR capability. In addition,
because both EASA and ICAO have
adopted a 25-hour CVR recording
duration minimum for aircraft
manufactured after January 1, 2021,
multiple manufacturers already produce
CVRs capable of recording for 25 hours.
B. National Transportation Safety Board
Since 2008, the NTSB has expressed
concerns regarding the availability of
CVR information, the length of CVR
recording time, and how to prevent
relevant information from being
overwritten after an incident or
accident. The current 2-hour recording
requirement has not fully resolved the
issue of overwritten data, which
continues to negatively impact NTSB
investigations.
There are two common causes for
CVR data to be overwritten. First, there
may be a delay between a safety event
and the flight crew recognizing that
event to be a serious incident or
accident, resulting in the relevant CVR
data being overwritten as the CVR
continued to record throughout the
delay. Second, the recording of a safety
event may be overwritten during the
course of the flight itself (e.g., where
flight duration exceeds the 2-hour CVR
recording duration).
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The NTSB reported that, in 2017,
approximately 56 percent of U.S. block
times 19 consisted of long and medium
flights with durations longer than two
hours, including some international
flights lasting over 12 hours.20 When
ICAO adopted the standard for the
installation of 25-hour CVRs in 2016, it
noted that extended duration of CVRs is
necessary to cover the longest duration
of flights, including pre- and postflight
activities, delays, and the time required
to secure the recordings.21
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Since the 2-hour standard came into
effect in 2008, numerous accidents and
incidents have occurred where the CVR
data was overwritten and, had it been
available, would have positively
contributed to NTSB investigations.
Notable incidents include the following:
TABLE 1—SAFETY EVENTS FOR WHICH PERTINENT CVR DATA WERE OVERWRITTEN
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[Up to 2018]
Date
Event type
NTSB No.
Location
Event description
6/21/2018 .......
4/18/2018 .......
7/07/2017 .......
Incident ..........
Accident .........
Incident ..........
OPS18IA015 ..
DCA18LA163
DCA17IA148 ..
Chicago, IL .................
Atlanta, GA ................
San Francisco, CA .....
5/09/2014 .......
9/12/2013 .......
7/31/2012 .......
12/1/2011 .......
6/21/2011 .......
2/09/2011 .......
11/23/2010 .....
6/28/2010 .......
12/31/2009 .....
6/29/2007 .......
3/21/2006 .......
10/16/2003 .....
6/03/2002 .......
Accident .........
Incident ..........
Incident ..........
Accident .........
Incident ..........
Incident ..........
Accident .........
Accident .........
Incident ..........
Incident ..........
Incident ..........
Accident .........
Accident .........
CEN14LA239
CEN13IA563 ..
CEN12IA502 ..
WPR12LA053
ENG11IA035 ..
ENG11IA016 ..
WPR11LA058
CEN10LA363
DCA10IA015 ..
LAX07IA198 ...
DEN06IA051 ..
MIA04LA004 ..
DCA02MA039
Columbus, OH ...........
Austin, TX ..................
Denver, CO ................
Oakland, CA ..............
Atlanta, GA ................
Minneapolis, MN ........
Salt Lake City, UT .....
Pioneer, LA ................
Charlotte, NC .............
Los Angeles, CA ........
Denver, CO ................
Tampa, FL .................
Subic Bay, Philippines
6/02/2002 .......
Accident .........
DCA02MA042
Subic Bay, Philippines
Runway excursion.
Engine fire.
Taxiway line-up and overflight of 4 air carrier airplanes by an Airbus
A320 (46-hour notification delay).
Ground engine fire.
Loss of pitch control during takeoff (4-day notification delay).
Bird strike.
Enroute turbulence.
Engine fire.
Tailpipe fire following push back.
On ground collision with tow tractor.
En route turbulence.
Wing tip strike during landing.
Blown tires on takeoff.
Tail strike on landing.
Taxiway excursion.
Abrupt maneuver due to ground proximity warning system alert and
elevator damage.
Flight control malfunction during approach.
In addition to the incidents noted by
the NTSB, CVR data overwrites have
hampered several other investigations.
For example, on October 21, 2009, an
incident occurred on a 4-hour flight
where the flight crew did not
communicate with air traffic control for
about 1 hour and 17 minutes, during
which time the airplane overflew its
intended location at a cruise altitude of
27,000 ft.22 The flight crew later
reported that ‘‘cockpit distractions’’ led
to the event. The airplane’s CVR had a
30-minute recording duration; upon
review, the NTSB discovered that all
pertinent information had been
overwritten by the remaining two hours
and 11 minutes of the 4-hour flight.23
Even if the airplane had been equipped
with a CVR recording for two hours, the
information still would have been
overwritten. Having lost this CVR data
to overwriting, the NTSB was unable to
determine the nature of the flight crew’s
distraction, the events that led to the
distraction, why the distraction lasted
for as long as it did, and what mitigating
procedures or actions could have
prevented that distraction.
More recently, on January 13, 2023, a
runway incursion incident occurred at
John F. Kennedy (JFK) Airport in New
York, New York. The incursion
involved a taxiing Boeing 777–200 and
a Boeing 737–900ER cleared for takeoff.
The Boeing 777–200 accessed a taxiway
without Air Traffic Control (ATC)
clearance, crossing the runway that the
Boeing 737–900ER was utilizing for
takeoff. ATC was notified of the
potential conflict, cancelled the Boeing
737–900ER’s takeoff clearance, and the
flight crew aborted the flight. Because
the incident did not result in any
damage or injuries, the two flights
eventually took off to their respective
destinations. During its investigation,
the NTSB discovered the CVR data for
both flights had been overwritten.
On February 4, 2023, a runway
incursion occurred at Austin Bergstrom
International Airport (AUS) when a
Boeing 767F freighter attempted to land
on a runway from which a Boeing 737–
700 was also cleared to depart.24 Due to
poor weather conditions, the Boeing
767F crew did not see the conflict until
late in the approach, and the two planes
came close to colliding; specifically, the
Boeing 767F needed to overfly the
Boeing 737–700 to avoid a collision.
There were no injuries reported to the
128 passengers and crew onboard the
Boeing 737–700 or to the 3 crew
members onboard the Boeing 767F.
During its investigation, the NTSB
discovered the CVR data for both flights
had been overwritten.
The FAA had sought to prevent such
recording issues by creating the
retention requirements found in
§§ 91.609(g), 121.343(i), and 135.152(e),
where an operator must remove the
recording media following an accident
or incident and keep the recorded data
for at least 60 days, or longer if
necessary. The FAA also provided
guidance in Advisory Circular 20–186,
‘‘Airworthiness and Operational
Approval of Cockpit Voice Recorder
Systems,’’ 25 which recommended the
operator to address CVR recording
retention after an accident or incident in
its maintenance and operational
programs, such as inclusion in a flight
crew checklist, or in the company
standard operating procedures or
emergency procedures. However, since
recording issues continue to occur, the
19 ICAO defines block time to include the moment
an aircraft is pushed back from the gate to the
moment it comes to a final stop at a gate or parking
stand after landing.
20 NTSB. Aviation Safety Recommendation
Report. ASR–18–04 at 5. October 2, 2018.
21 Id. NTSB Report, citing ‘‘Minimum Operational
Performance Specification for Crash Protected
Airborne Recorder Systems,’’ ED–112A, European
Organization for Civil Aviation Equipment.
22 Id. at 4.
23 Id.
24 NTSB. Aviation Investigation Preliminary
Report No. DCA23LA149. Feb. 4, 2023.
25 Advisory Circular 20–186, Paragraph 3.2.4. July
22, 2016. www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/media/
Advisory_Circular/AC_20-186.pdf.
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FAA agrees with the NTSB that an
extension to the CVR recording duration
requirement to 25 hours is warranted.
C. Privacy Concerns
The FAA acknowledges that pilotfocused organizations may have
concerns regarding how the NTSB or the
FAA would use the CVR data collected
for investigative purposes.
This issue previously arose when the
FAA increased the CVR recording
duration from 30 minutes to 2 hours. At
that time, the FAA determined that the
investigative need and benefit of this
information outweighed these privacy
concerns.26 The FAA maintains this
stance. The proposed increase to a 25hour CVR recording duration would
further improve current investigative
capabilities. It would also provide
investigating bodies, such as the NTSB,
with more complete context
surrounding the accidents and incidents
under investigation and support their
safety analyses.
Importantly, this proposed increase is
designed to provide more context for
any flight deck activity that might be
pertinent to an investigation.
Specifically, this increase expands the
possible range of data available to
investigators. This proposal does not
alter or modify the existing processes for
requesting or use of this data. Sections
91.609(g), 121.359(h), 121.227(f), and
135.151(c) specify that the information
obtained from the CVR recording is to
be used for investigation purposes and
that the FAA will not use the CVR
record in any civil penalty or certificate
action. This proposal does not modify
these regulations.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
D. International Requirements
ICAO and EASA both require the
carriage of CVRs with 25-hour recording
duration on airplanes with a maximum
certificated takeoff mass of more than
27,000 kg. These are aircraft that have
the capability to fly transatlantic or
international flights, i.e., long-haul
flights that can last ten or more hours.
In contrast, the FAA requirement would
apply to all newly manufactured aircraft
required to carry a CVR, based on
existing operating rules. This distinction
reflects differences between the FAA
and ICAO/EASA regulatory schemes:
the FAA’s existing regulatory scheme
differentiates aircraft by operation type,
not by weight. This rulemaking would
not change that regulatory scheme.
With both EASA and ICAO amending
their CVR rules to require 25 hours of
26 Revisions
to Cockpit Voice Recorder and
Digital Flight Data Recorder Regulations. 73 FR
12541, 12544 (March 7, 2008).
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audio recording time, this proposed
change also presents an opportunity to
ensure U.S. regulations are consistent in
intent with international authorities.
This should lead to a reduction of risk
for some operators who would
otherwise face conflicting requirements
and the cumbersome task of ascertaining
guidance for the appropriate authorities
in an attempt to satisfy differing
regulations. Historically, the FAA has
implemented CVR regulations by
operation unlike ICAO and EASA,
which put forth their standards and
regulations by aircraft weight. As a
result, the FAA’s proposal would
encompass more aircraft than
international requirements would
because newly manufactured aircraft
with less than a maximum takeoff
weight of 27,000 kg would be affected.
E. Conclusion and Compliance
The FAA concurs with the NTSB’s
recommendation and believes that
extending CVR recording duration to 25
hours would increase aviation safety by
providing investigative bodies with
more thorough context and background
surrounding accidents and incidents.
This proposal would also make FAA
regulations more consistent with ICAO
recommendations and EASA
requirements.
Given that the technology already
exists to implement this proposal, the
FAA proposes a compliance deadline
for newly manufactured aircraft of one
year after the effective date of the final
regulation. Any aircraft with a newly
issued airworthiness certificate dated on
or after that compliance date would be
required to be equipped with a CVR
with 25-hour recording duration.
In addition, the FAA will update the
version of the technical standard order
(TSO) referenced in the regulatory text
from TSO–C123a to the latest version,
TSO–C123c, for newly manufactured
aircraft.
IV. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
Federal agencies consider impacts of
regulatory actions under a variety of
Executive orders and other
requirements. First, Executive Order
12866 and Executive Order 13563, as
amended by Executive Order 14094
(‘‘Modernizing Regulatory Review’’),
direct that each Federal agency shall
propose or adopt a regulation only upon
a reasoned determination that the
benefits of the intended regulation
justify the 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)
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prohibits agencies from setting
standards that create unnecessary
obstacles to the foreign commerce of the
United States. 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
that may result in the expenditure by
State, local, and tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million or more (adjusted annually
for inflation) in any one year. The
current threshold after adjustment for
inflation is $177 million using the most
current (2022) Implicit Price Deflator for
the Gross Domestic Product. The FAA
has provided a detailed Regulatory
Impact Analysis (RIA) in the docket for
this rulemaking. This portion of the
preamble summarizes the FAA’s
analysis of the economic impacts of this
proposed rule.
In conducting these analyses, the FAA
has determined that this proposed rule:
will result in benefits that justify costs;
is not an economically ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ as defined in section
3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866; will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities; will not create unnecessary
obstacles to the foreign commerce of the
United States; and will not impose an
unfunded mandate on State, local, or
tribal governments, or on the private
sector.
A. Summary of the Regulatory Impact
Analysis
Benefits for the proposed rule were
assessed qualitatively as the FAA
currently lacks data to make projections
on the benefit totals. The primary
expected benefit is changes in safety
from a potential reduction in accident
risk. The expanded available audio from
this proposed rule would provide
authorities with more information on
events and procedures undertaken in
the flight deck in investigated incidents.
This increased data may lead to new
FAA recommendations or policy
changes that could further enhance
safety and reduce the risk that a future
incident becomes an accident. The
reduction in the risk of one fatality
generates benefits equal to the value of
statistical life (VSL), approximately
$12.5 million in 2022 according to the
Department of Transportation (DOT).27
Given the annualized costs of $9.67
million from this proposed rule,
27 DOT. Treatment of the Value of Preventing
Fatalities and Injuries in Preparing Economic
Analyses. Office of the Secretary of Transportation.
2022.
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reducing the risk of a single fatality in
any year due to effective safety
measures resulting from the ability to
gather additional CVR data would
generate benefits greater than the
expected costs.
Additionally, there are some potential
time-saving benefits associated with the
updated CVR model deployment. In
updating their CVR models,
manufacturers also have revamped the
CVR interface tools. These simplified
and more intuitive tools allow
personnel to be trained quicker on
operation, retrieve audio data faster, and
perform additional diagnostic services
to shorten downtime. The FAA does not
currently have enough data to predict
the value of these benefits and invites
public comments on the expected totals.
The FAA assessed the costs for the
proposed rule as the incremental cost
increase of equipping a 25-hour capable
CVR instead of a comparable 2-hour
unit to all applicable new aircraft being
produced. The total aircraft that will be
built and equipped with the 25-hour
CVR includes projected new aircraft
needed to handle future demand
increases as well as estimated
replacements for the current fleet.
Market research indicates the cost
84095
increase between comparable 2 and 25hour CVRs to be minimal, ranging from
near parity to an upper bound of
approximately $4,500. Using that upper
bound as the incremental cost to equip
all applicable projected new aircraft
with a 25-hour capable CVR, the
estimated highest total cost over 20
years, at seven percent present value, is
$102.42 million with an annualized cost
of $9.67 million (table 2). At three
percent present value, the total cost is
$144.77 million with an annualized cost
of $9.73 million.
TABLE 2—SUMMARY OF COSTS OVER 20 YEARS
[Millions of 2021$]
7% Present value
14 CFR operational part
Part
Part
Part
Part
91 1
121
125
135
Annualized
costs
3% Present value
Total costs
Annualized
costs
Total costs
...........................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................
...........................................................................................................
$3.55
3.18
0.16
2.79
$37.57
33.66
1.65
29.55
$3.56
3.19
0.16
2.83
$52.98
47.41
2.32
42.06
Total 2 ........................................................................................................
9.67
102.42
9.73
144.77
1 Consists
of Part 91 turbine powered and Part 91K aircraft.
reflects combined costs of each CFR part.
Note: Columns may not sum to total due to rounding.
2 Total
The FAA does not anticipate other
costs besides the incremental costs of
forward fitting 25-hour capable CVRs to
comply with the proposed rule. Based
on the technical standards for CVRs,
market research indicates that 25-hour
models tend to match the older 2-hour
variants in a manner that allows them
to be swapped without much difficulty.
This compatibility implies that other
operational procedures and costs should
be similar and not result in notable
change. The FAA invites comments on
the expected costs for this proposed
rule.
Please see the RIA available in the
docket for more details.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
of 1980, Public Law 96–354, 94 Stat.
1164 (5 U.S.C. 601–612), as amended by
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (Pub.
L. 104–121, 110 Stat. 857, Mar. 29,
1996) and the Small Business Jobs Act
of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–240, 124 Stat. 2504
Sept. 27, 2010), requires Federal
agencies to consider the effects of the
regulatory action on small business and
other small entities and to minimize any
significant economic impact. The term
‘‘small entities’’ comprises small
businesses and not-for-profit
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organizations that are independently
owned and operated and are not
dominant in their fields, and
governmental jurisdictions with
populations of less than 50,000.
The proposed rule affects CVR
manufacturers by requiring the
development and certification of 25hour capable models. A major change to
the CVR components, such as in this
case, would require a manufacturer to
go through the development and
certification of a new model, which
could involve extra cost and time.
However, due to EASA and ICAO
standards for 25-hour capability taking
effect in 2021, market research shows
that manufacturers already have
developed 25-hour compliant variants
that meet FAA TSO–C123 compliance.
Therefore, the proposed regulation is
not expected to result in new or
significant impacts on CVR
manufacturers. The FAA invites
comments on the expected effects of the
proposed rule on CVR manufacturers.
As described in the RIA, the FAA
identified six U.S. manufacturers that
would be affected by the proposed rule.
Based on the Small Business
Administration (SBA) 2023 size
standard for Other Aircraft Part and
Auxiliary Equipment Manufacturing
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(NAICS 336413),28 and on publicly
available data on employment for these
entities, all six identified manufacturers
are large businesses that exceed the
1,250-employee size maximum for a
small business. Therefore, the FAA
certifies that the proposed rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
because the proposed rule does not
impact any small entity. The FAA
welcomes comments on the number of
U.S. CVR manufacturers and this
certification.
C. International Trade Impact
Assessment
The Trade Agreements Act of 1979
(Pub. L. 96–39), as amended by the
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
28 Small Business Administration (SBA) Size
Standards, effective March 17, 2023, can be found
at www.sba.gov/document/support-table-sizestandards.
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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 promotes the
safety of the American public and does
not exclude imports that meet the
recording length requirement. As a
result, the FAA does not consider this
proposed rule as creating an
unnecessary obstacle to foreign
commerce.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
D. Unfunded Mandates Assessment
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 that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation) in any
one year. The current threshold after
adjustment for inflation is $177 million
using the most current (2022) Implicit
Price Deflator for the Gross Domestic
Product.
The FAA determined that the
proposed rule will not result in the
expenditure of $177 million or more by
State, local, or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or the private sector, in any
one year.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) requires that the
FAA consider the impact of paperwork
and other information collection
burdens imposed on the public.
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
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) control number.
This action contains the following
proposed amendments to the existing
information collection requirements
previously approved under OMB
Control Number 2120–0700. As required
by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3507(d)), the FAA has
submitted these proposed information
collection amendments to OMB for its
review.
Summary: This notice proposes to
amend parts 91, 121, 125, and 135
requirements so aircraft manufactured
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on or after [ONE YEAR THE EFFECTIVE
DATE OF THE FINAL RULE] that are
required to be installed with a cockpit
voice recorder would be required to
have a recording limit of 25 hours,
expanded from the current requirement
of 2 hours.
Use: Such a record would provide
additional information to accident and
incident investigators to determine
flight crew’s procedural compliance,
distraction, decision-making, workload,
fatigue, and situational awareness. The
expansion to 25 hours would address
the issue in which data is overwritten
because the relevant recording occurred
earlier than the available two hours of
recording.
Respondents (including number of):
The respondents all would be certificate
holders operating the above-referenced
U.S.-registered aircraft under parts 91,
121, 125, 129, and 135. Certificate
holders operating under part 129
requirements would be affected because,
in accordance with § 129.24, a cockpit
voice recorder would be required to
record as if the aircraft were operated
under parts 121, 125, or 135.
Frequency: The 25 hours of recorded
data would be overwritten on a
continuing basis and would only be
accessed following an accident or
incident.
Annual Burden Estimate: This
proposed requirement would not change
the current information collection
activity; therefore, it does not contain a
measurable hour burden.
The FAA is soliciting comments to—
(1) Evaluate whether the proposed
information requirement is necessary for
the proper performance of the functions
of the FAA, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of the FAA’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 to the address
listed in the ADDRESSES section at the
beginning of this preamble by February
2, 2024. 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 Office
Building, Room 10202, 725 17th Street
NW, Washington, DC 20053.
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F. 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 the following
differences with these proposed
regulations. The proposed rule would
harmonize with ICAO regarding the
required length of the CVR recordings at
25 hours. However, the U.S. does not
regulate carriage requirements of CVRs
based on the aircraft gross weight, as do
the ICAO and EASA, and the proposed
rule change would not change this. If
this proposal is adopted, the FAA
intends to amend its currently filed
difference on this topic with ICAO.
G. Environmental Analysis
FAA Order 1050.1F identifies FAA
actions that are categorically excluded
from the preparation of an
environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement under
the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) in the absence of extraordinary
circumstances. The FAA has
determined this proposed rulemaking
action qualifies for the categorical
exclusion identified in paragraph 5–6.6f
for regulations and involves no
extraordinary circumstances.
V. Executive Order Determinations
A. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
The FAA has analyzed this proposed
rule under the principles and criteria of
Executive Order (E.O.) 13132,
Federalism. The FAA has determined
that this proposed action would not
have a substantial direct effect on the
States, or the relationship between the
Federal 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.
B. Executive Order 13175, Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
Consistent with Executive Order
13175, Consultation and Coordination
with Indian Tribal Governments,29 and
FAA Order 1210.20, American Indian
and Alaska Native Tribal Consultation
Policy and Procedures,30 the FAA
ensures that Federally Recognized
29 65
FR 67249 (Nov. 6, 2000).
FAA. (Jan. 28, 2004). FAA Order No.
1210.20. www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/media/
1210.pdf.
30 The
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Tribes (Tribes) are given the opportunity
to provide meaningful and timely input
regarding proposed Federal actions that
have the potential to affect uniquely or
significantly their respective Tribes. At
this point, the FAA has not identified
any unique or significant effects,
environmental or otherwise, on tribes
resulting from this proposed rule.
on this proposal, the FAA will consider
all comments it receives on or before the
closing date for comments. The FAA
will consider comments filed after the
comment period has closed if it is
possible to do so without incurring
expense or delay. The FAA may change
this proposal in light of the comments
it receives.
C. Executive Order 13211, Regulations
That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
B. Confidential Business Information
Confidential Business Information
(CBI) is commercial or financial
information that is both customarily and
actually treated as private by its owner.
Under the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) (5 U.S.C. 552), CBI is exempt
from public disclosure. If your
comments responsive to this NPRM
contain commercial or financial
information that is customarily treated
as private, that you actually treat as
private, and that is relevant or
responsive to this NPRM, it is important
that you clearly designate the submitted
comments as CBI. Please mark each
page of your submission containing CBI
as ‘‘PROPIN.’’ The FAA will treat such
marked submissions as confidential
under the FOIA, and they will not be
placed in the public docket of this
NPRM. Submissions containing CBI
should be sent to the person in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this document. Any commentary that
the FAA receives that is not specifically
designated as CBI will be placed in the
public docket for this rulemaking.
The FAA analyzed this proposed rule
under E.O. 13211, Actions Concerning
Regulations that Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
(May 18, 2001). The FAA has
determined that it would not be a
‘‘significant energy action’’ under the
Executive order and would not be likely
to have a significant adverse effect on
the supply, distribution, or use of
energy.
D. Executive Order 13609, Promoting
International Regulatory Cooperation
Executive Order 13609, Promoting
International Regulatory Cooperation,
promotes international regulatory
cooperation to meet shared challenges
involving health, safety, labor, security,
environmental, and other issues and to
reduce, eliminate, or prevent
unnecessary differences in regulatory
requirements. The FAA has analyzed
this proposed action under the policies
and agency responsibilities of E.O.
13609 and has determined that this
proposed action would have no effect
on international regulatory cooperation.
VI. Additional Information
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
A. Comments Invited
The FAA invites interested persons to
participate in this rulemaking by
submitting written comments, data, or
views. The FAA also invites 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,
commenters should submit only one
time if comments are filed
electronically, or commenters should
send only one copy of written
comments if comments are filed in
writing.
The FAA will file in the docket all
comments it receives, as well as a report
summarizing each substantive public
contact with FAA personnel concerning
this proposed rulemaking. Before acting
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C. Electronic Access and Filing
A copy of this NPRM, all comments
received, any final rule, and all
background material may be viewed
online at www.regulations.gov using the
docket number listed above. A copy of
this proposed rule will be placed in the
docket. Electronic retrieval help and
guidelines are available on the website.
It is available 24 hours each day, 365
days each year. An electronic copy of
this document may also be downloaded
from the Office of the Federal Register’s
website at www.federalregister.gov and
the Government Publishing Office’s
website at www.govinfo.gov. A copy
may also be found at the FAA’s
Regulations and Policies website at
www.faa.gov/regulations_policies.
Copies may also be obtained 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) 267–9677. Commenters
must identify the docket or notice
number of this rulemaking.
All documents the FAA considered in
developing this proposed rule,
including economic analyses and
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technical reports, may be accessed in
the electronic docket for this
rulemaking.
D. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of
1996 requires the FAA to comply with
small entity requests for information or
advice about compliance with statutes
and regulations within its jurisdiction.
A small entity with questions regarding
this document may contact its local
FAA official or the person listed under
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
heading at the beginning of the
preamble. To find out more about
SBREFA on the internet, visit
www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/
rulemaking/sbre_act/.
List of Subjects
14 CFR Part 91
Aircraft, Aviation safety.
14 CFR Part 121
Air carriers, Aircraft, Aviation safety,
Charter flights, Safety, Transportation.
14 CFR Part 125
Aircraft, Aviation safety.
14 CFR Part 135
Air taxis, Aircraft, Aviation safety.
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 91—GENERAL OPERATING AND
FLIGHT RULES
1. The authority citation for part 91
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g), 40101,
40103, 40105, 40113, 40120, 44101, 44111,
44701, 44704, 44709, 44711, 44712, 44715,
44716, 44717, 44722, 46306, 46315, 46316,
46504, 46506–46507, 47122, 47508, 47528–
47531, 47534, Pub. L. 114–190, 130 Stat. 615
(49 U.S.C. 44703 note); articles 12 and 29 of
the Convention on International Civil
Aviation (61 Stat. 1180), (126 Stat. 11).
2. Amend § 91.609 by revising
paragraph (i)(2) to read as follows:
■
§ 91.609 Flight data recorders and cockpit
voice recorders.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(2) Retains at least—
(i) The last 2 hours of recorded
information using a recorder that meets
the standards of TSO–C123a, or later
revision; or
(ii) If manufactured on or after [ONE
YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
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OF THE FINAL RULE,] the last 25 hours
of recorded information using a recorder
that meets the standards of TSO–C123c,
or later revision.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 121—OPERATING
REQUIREMENTS: DOMESTIC, FLAG,
AND SUPPLEMENTAL OPERATIONS
3. The authority citation for part 121
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g), 40103,
40113, 40119, 41706, 42301 preceding note
added by Pub. L. 112–95, sec. 412, 126 Stat.
89, 44101, 44701–44702, 44705, 44709–
44711, 44713, 44716–44717, 44722, 44729,
44732; 46105; Pub. L. 111–216, 124 Stat.
2348 (49 U.S.C. 44701 note); Pub. L. 112–95,
126 Stat. 62 (49 U.S.C. 44732 note); Pub. L.
115–254, 132 Stat. 3186 (49 U.S.C. 44701
note).
4. Amend § 121.359 by revising
paragraphs (i)(2) and (j)(2) to read as
follows:
■
§ 121.359
Cockpit voice recorders.
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(2) Retains at least—
(i) The last 2 hours of recorded
information using a recorder that meets
the standards of TSO–C123a, or later
revision; or
(ii) If manufactured on or after [ONE
YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours
of recorded information using a recorder
that meets the standards of TSO–C123c,
or later revision; and
*
*
*
*
*
(j) * * *
(2) Retains at least—
(i) The last 2 hours of recorded
information using a recorder that meets
the standards of TSO–C123a, or later
revision; or
(ii) If manufactured on or after [ONE
YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours
of recorded information using a recorder
that meets the standards of TSO–C123c,
or later revision; and
*
*
*
*
*
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
*
PART 125—CERTIFICATION AND
OPERATIONS: AIRCRAFT HAVING A
SEATING CAPACITY OF 20 OR MORE
PASSENGERS OR A MAXIMUM
PAYLOAD CAPACITY OF 6,000
POUNDS OR MORE; AND RULES
GOVERNING PERSONS ON BOARD
SUCH AIRCRAFT
5. The authority citation for part 125
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g), 40113,
44701–44702, 44705, 44710–44711, 44713,
44716–44717, 44722.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:03 Dec 01, 2023
Jkt 262001
6. Amend § 125.227 by revising
paragraphs (g)(2) and (h)(2) to read as
follows:
■
§ 125.227
Cockpit voice recorders.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(2) Retains at least—
(i) The last 2 hours of recorded
information using a recorder that meets
the standards of TSO–C123a, or later
revision; or
(ii) If manufactured on or after [ONE
YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours
of recorded information using a recorder
that meets the standards of TSO–C123c,
or later revision; and
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(2) Retains at least—
(i) The last 2 hours of recorded
information using a recorder that meets
the standards of TSO–C123a, or later
revision; or
(ii) If manufactured on or after [ONE
YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours
of recorded information using a recorder
that meets the standards of TSO–C123c,
or later revision; and
*
*
*
*
*
PART 135—OPERATING
REQUIREMENTS: COMMUTER AND
ON DEMAND OPERATIONS AND
RULES GOVERNING PERSONS ON
BOARD SUCH AIRCRAFT
7. The authority citation for part 135
continue to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g), 40113,
41706, 44701–44702, 44705, 44709, 44711–
44713, 44715–44717, 44722, 44730, 45101–
45105; Pub. L. 112–95, 126 Stat. 58 (49 U.S.C.
44730).
8. Amend § 135.151 by revising
paragraphs (g)(1)(iii) and (g)(2)(iii) to
read as follows:
■
§ 135.151
Cockpit voice recorders.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) Retains at least—
(A) The last 2 hours of recorded
information using a recorder that meets
the standards of TSO–C123a, or later
revision; or
(B) If manufactured on or after [ONE
YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours
of recorded information using a recorder
that meets the standards of TSO–C123c,
or later revision.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) * * *
(iii) Retains at least—
(A) The last 2 hours of recorded
information using a recorder that meets
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
the standards of TSO–C123a, or later
revision; or
(B) If manufactured on or after [ONE
YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours
of recorded information using a recorder
that meets the standards of TSO–C123c,
or later revision.
*
*
*
*
*
Issued under authority provided by 49
U.S.C. 106(f) and 44701(a) in Washington,
DC.
Lawrence Fields,
Acting Executive Director, Flight Standards
Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–26144 Filed 12–1–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG–118492–23]
RIN 1545–BQ99
Section 30D Excluded Entities
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
This document contains
proposed regulations that would
provide guidance regarding the
excluded entity provisions with respect
to the clean vehicle credit as amended
by the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022.
The proposed regulations would also
provide clarity on definitions with
respect to new clean vehicles eligible for
the clean vehicle credit. The proposed
regulations would affect qualified
manufacturers of new clean vehicles
and taxpayers who purchase and place
in service new clean vehicles.
DATES: Written or electronic comments
and requests for a public hearing must
be received by January 18, 2024.
Requests for a public hearing must be
submitted as prescribed in the
‘‘Comments and Requests for a Public
Hearing’’ section.
ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly
encouraged to submit public comments
electronically via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and
REG–118492–23) by following the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Requests for a public hearing
must be submitted as prescribed in the
‘‘Comments and Requests for a Public
Hearing’’ section. Once submitted to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments
cannot be edited or withdrawn. The
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\04DEP1.SGM
04DEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 231 (Monday, December 4, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 84090-84098]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-26144]
[[Page 84090]]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Parts 91, 121, 125, and 135
[Docket No.: FAA-2023-2270; Notice No. 24-04]
RIN 2120-AL92
25-Hour Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) Requirement, New Aircraft
Production
AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This rulemaking would increase the recording time of cockpit
voice recorders from the mandated 2 hours to a proposed 25-hour
recording time for all future manufactured aircraft. This rulemaking
would provide accident investigators, aircraft operators, and civil
aviation authorities with substantially more cockpit voice recorder
data to help find the probable causes of incidents and accidents,
prevent future incidents and accidents, and make the FAA's regulations
more consistent with existing international requirements.
DATES: Send comments on or before February 2, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Send comments identified by docket number FAA-2023-2270
using any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to 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 (DOT), 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.
Privacy: In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c), DOT solicits comments
from the public to better inform its rulemaking process. DOT posts
these comments, without edit, including any personal information the
commenter provides, to www.regulations.gov, as described in the system
of records notice (DOT/ALL-14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at
www.dot.gov/privacy.
Docket: Background documents or comments received may be read at
www.regulations.gov/ at any time. Follow the online instructions for
accessing the docket or go to 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: Charisse Green, AFS-340, Aircraft
Maintenance Division, Office of Safety Standards, Federal Aviation
Administration, 800 Independence Ave. SW, Washington, DC 20591;
telephone (202) 267-1675; email [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority for This Rulemaking
The FAA's authority to issue rules on aviation safety is found in
title 49 of the United States Code. Subtitle I, section 106 describes
the authority of the FAA Administrator. Subtitle VII, Aviation
Programs, describes in more detail the scope of the FAA's authority.
This rulemaking is issued under the authority described in subtitle
VII, part A, subpart III, section 44701. Under that section, the FAA is
charged with prescribing regulations providing minimum standards for
other practices, methods, and procedures necessary for safety in air
commerce. This regulation is within the scope of that authority since
flight data recorders are the only means available to account for
aircraft movement and flight crew actions critical to finding the
probable cause of incidents or accidents, including data that could
prevent future incidents or accidents.
I. Executive Summary
A. Overview of Proposed Rule
This rulemaking effort proposes to amend the cockpit voice recorder
(CVR) regulations to increase the recording duration of CVRs.
Currently, CVRs are required to retain the last two hours of recorded
information. Once this 2-hour limit is reached, a CVR overwrites the
oldest data to maintain a rolling 2-hour recording. This proposal would
increase the minimum duration of CVR recordings to 25 hours. The
proposed change would affect all newly manufactured aircraft operating
under title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations (14 CFR) parts 91,
121, 125, and 135, one year after the effective date of the final rule.
B. Statement of the Problem
The current 2-hour recording duration requirement does not meet the
NTSB's needs for investigations and subsequent safety recommendations.
Since the NTSB issued Safety Recommendation A-18-030, it has
investigated numerous accidents and incidents where CVR data relevant
to the accident or incident has been overwritten because the relevant
recording occurred earlier than the available two hours of recording.
C. Summary of the Costs and Benefits
Benefits of the proposed rule are expected to stem from a reduction
in accident risk and time savings. Specifically, the additional audio
of longer duration CVRs would provide authorities with more information
on events and procedures undertaken in the flight deck in investigated
incidents. This increased data may lead to new or more fully informed
FAA recommendations or policy changes that could further enhance safety
and reduce the risk that an incident becomes an accident. In addition,
updated CVR models have also revamped the CVR interface tools,
resulting in time-saving benefits. The simplified and more intuitive
tools allow personnel to be trained quicker on operation, retrieve
audio data faster, and perform additional diagnostic services to
shorten downtime. The FAA currently lacks data to predict the exact
reduction in accident risk and labor hours and requests comments on the
expected value of these benefits.
The FAA has assessed projected compliance costs using the
incremental cost of equipping a 25-hour capable CVR over a comparable
2-hour unit to all applicable newly produced aircraft. Market research
indicates that the difference between these units is minimal, ranging
from near parity to an upper bound of approximately $4,500. Using that
upper bound, the total cost over 20 years is estimated to be $102.42
million at 7 percent present value, with annualized costs of $9.67
million. As operational procedures are expected to be similar between
the older 2-hour and newer 25-hour capable models, the FAA anticipates
no other notable costs. The FAA invites comments on the cost estimates
and assumptions.
II. Background
A. CVRs: National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Recommendations
and FAA Responses
The FAA previously has engaged in rulemaking to address past NTSB
recommendations concerning CVRs.
[[Page 84091]]
In December 1996, the NTSB issued Safety Recommendation A-96-171 as
a result of its investigation of an accident in January 1996.\1\ In
this accident, an aircraft touched down hard in the approach light area
short of a runway at the Nashville International Airport, resulting in
minor injuries to passengers and crew and substantial damage to the
aircraft's tail section, nose gear, and engines. During the
investigation, the NTSB was hampered by the fact that the 30-minute
closed-loop CVR tape did not include recordings of the initial approach
to the runway, the hard landing event, or the go-around because that
information had been recorded over and permanently lost after the
airplane safely stopped on the ground.\2\ As a result, the NTSB
recommended that the recording limitation for newly manufactured CVRs
meet a minimum recording duration of two hours.\3\ The FAA adopted this
recommendation in 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ NTSB. Safety Recommendation A-96-171, December 11, 1996.
\2\ Id.
\3\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In August 2002, the NTSB issued a safety recommendation letter to
the FAA, identifying delays or failures by the operator to deactivate
CVRs after reportable events as a major factor in the systemic problem
of retaining data, as information was overwritten in the remainder of a
flight with an incident or accident.\4\ The NTSB recommended that the
FAA require the CVR be deactivated immediately upon completion of
flight after a reportable incident or accident has occurred. In
response, the FAA issued Notice 8400.48, ``Cockpit Voice Recorder
Deactivation After a Reportable Event,'' on April 25, 2003. This notice
advised air carriers to add a checklist item to deactivate the CVR,
manually or automatically, immediately upon completion of a flight with
a reportable accident or incident. On October 6, 2003, the NTSB
considered Notice 8400.48 to have met the intent of Safety
Recommendation A-02-24 for aircraft operating under parts 121 and 135
requirements, but not part 91 requirements as the notice did not
address part 91 operators.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ NTSB. Safety Recommendation A-02-24, August 29, 2002.
\5\ NTSB. Safety Recommendation Report A-18-04 at 3, October 2,
2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On March 7, 2008, the FAA amended the CVR regulations in accordance
with NTSB Safety Recommendation A-96-171.\6\ The final rule,
``Revisions to Cockpit Voice Recorder and Digital Flight Data Recorder
Regulations,'' increased the duration of certain CVR recordings,
increased the data recording rate for certain digital flight data
recorder (DFDR) parameters, physically separated DFDRs and CVRs,
improved power supply to both CVRs and DFDRs, and required certain
datalink communications received on an aircraft to be recorded if
datalink communication equipment was installed.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 73 FR 12541 (2008).
\7\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On October 10, 2018, the NTSB published an Aviation Safety
Recommendation Report titled ``Extended Duration Cockpit Voice
Recorders.'' Within this safety report, Safety Recommendation A-18-030
recommended that the FAA require all newly manufactured aircraft that
must have a CVR to be fitted with and operate a CVR capable of
recording the last 25 hours of audio. This recommendation stemmed from
an aircraft incident that occurred in July 2017 at San Francisco
International Airport, in which the flight crew of an Airbus A320 was
cleared to land on a set runway but instead lined up with a parallel
taxiway. After descending to an altitude of 100 feet above ground level
(AGL), the aircraft overflew an airplane on the taxiway. The incident
aircraft subsequently overflew a second airplane on the taxiway before
starting to climb.
During the investigation of the incident, the NTSB found it
difficult to gather relevant information as the CVR data was
overwritten before Air Canada officials learned of the severity of the
event. The report stated that had the NTSB been able to obtain the
overwritten data, investigators would have been able to assess the
timing and content of the flight crew's conversations during final
approach, conversations during and after the go-around, and the flight
crew's crew resource management (CRM), workload, and fatigue based on
verbalizations or flight deck sounds. In this instance, the NTSB
identified several serious safety issues; however, this investigation
lacked direct evidence of the flight crew's decision making,
coordination, and perception of its environment.
B. FAA Aviation Safety Summit of 2023
On March 15, 2023, the FAA convened an aviation safety summit,
where approximately 200 safety leaders from the aviation industry met
to discuss safety improvements in response to several recent near-miss
incidents and runway incursions.\8\ The summit focused on ways to
enhance flight safety for commercial operations, the air traffic
system, airport and ground operations, and general aviation operations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ The FAA. Readout from the FAA Aviation Safety Summit
Breakout Panels. March 15, 2023. Accessed from www.faa.gov/newsroom/readout-faa-aviation-safety-summit-breakout-panels.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As a result of discussions at the summit, the FAA committed to
initiate rulemaking that would require CVRs to capture 25 hours of
information for newly manufactured aircraft.
C. ICAO and EASA Adoption of a 25-Hour Cockpit Voice Recorder
Requirement
In 2013, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) proposed
an amendment that would have required large commercial aircraft
manufactured after January 1, 2019, to carry a CVR capable of recording
the last 15 hours of aircraft operation.\9\ In 2015, after considering
the comments received on the proposed amendment and after technical
review, EASA extended the recording duration requirement to 25
hours.\10\ The 25-hour mandate took effect on January 1, 2021. The
regulation requires any aircraft with a maximum takeoff weight of
27,000 kg (60,000 pounds) or more, manufactured after January 1, 2021,
to be equipped with a CVR with at least a 25-hour recording
capability.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ ``Amendment of requirements for flight recorders and
underwater locating devices,'' Notice of Proposed Amendment 2013-26,
European Union Aviation Safety Agency, December 20, 2013.
\10\ Commission Regulation 2015/2338, 2015 O.J. Amending
Regulation (EU) No 965/2012 as regards requirements for flight
recorders, underwater locating devices and aircraft tracking
systems.
\11\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2016, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) also
adopted a new standard calling for the installation of CVRs capable of
recording the last 25 hours of aircraft operation on all aircraft
manufactured after January 1, 2021, with a maximum certificated takeoff
mass of over 27,000 kg and engaged in commercial transport.\12\ In
adopting this standard, ICAO emphasized the value of CVR recordings in
analyzing human factors and other sounds.\13\ ICAO noted that extending
the recording duration of CVRs was necessary to cover the longest
flight duration, including pre- and postflight activities, delays, and
the time required to secure the recordings.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ NTSB. Aviation Safety Recommendation Report. ASR-18-04 at
2. October 2, 2018.
\13\ Id.
\14\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since September 2013, the CVR technical standard in European
Organization for Civil Aviation Equipment (EUROCAE) ED-112A, ``Minimum
Operational Performance Specification for Crash Protected Airborne
Recorder Systems,'' used by all
[[Page 84092]]
manufacturers,\15\ already provides design standards for a 25-hour
CVR.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ All manufacturers, regardless of US-based or foreign, are
required to use this standard in order to meet the carriage
requirements in Sec. Sec. 91.609, 121.359, 125.227, and 135.151,
which reference TSO-C123, which in turn specifies ED-112A.
\16\ GlobalSpec. ``EUROCAE ED 112.'' Accessible at
standards.globalspec.com/std/1629860/EUROCAE%20ED%20112.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Discussion of the Proposal
Since the FAA updated the CVR regulations in 2008, the NTSB has
reported issues with accessing relevant CVR data with existing 2-hour
recording duration. Numerous aircraft incidents have occurred in which
relevant CVR data was overwritten and thereby made unavailable because
of the time it took to retrieve the CVR. The lack of relevant CVR data
hampers NTSB investigations and its ability to provide appropriate
safety recommendations that can help prevent future accidents and
incidents.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ NTSB. (March 15, 2023). Transcript of NTSB Chair's Remarks
at the FAA Safety Summit. www.ntsb.gov/Advocacy/Activities/Pages/Homendy-20230315.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to Safety Recommendation A-18-030, the FAA proposes to
amend all CVR operational regulations related to CVR recording time by
expanding the recording duration from two hours to 25 hours for
aircraft manufactured one year after the date of publication of the
final rule.
The NTSB's Safety Recommendation also included the recommendation
to retrofit the current fleet. While retrofitting the current fleet
would more expeditiously increase the number of aircraft fitted with
the newer 25-hour CVR units and, thereby, the projected benefits to
safety, the costs would be significant. Specifically, retrofitting the
current fleet would increase by two-thirds the number of aircraft
required to install 25-hour CVRs (estimated 29,561 aircraft in the
current fleet added to the estimated 43,470 aircraft being built in the
next 20 years). Further, the cost to retrofit existing aircraft with
25-hour CVRs would be several times higher than the cost to equip
future-built aircraft with a 25-hour CVR instead of a 2-hour model.
Assuming no replacement, applying a $25,000 CVR unit cost spread across
the estimated 29,651 current fleet would result in roughly $741.28
million (undiscounted) in equipment cost compared to the $195.62
million (undiscounted) in incremental upgrade costs from the proposed
rule. Retrofitting current aircraft would also incur additional costs,
such as aircraft downtime and labor hours required to replace the CVR
unit, which would further increase the total cost. Therefore, in an
effort to provide the increased benefit of making more substantive data
available to accident investigators while maintaining the lowest
economic impact on operators, this proposed rule would apply to newly
manufactured aircraft only. For more information, please see the
regulatory impact analysis in the docket.
The proposed change would affect the following regulations:
Section 91.609(i)(2);
Section 121.359(i)(2);
Section 121.359(j)(2);
Section 125.227(g)(2);
Section 125.227(h)(2);
Section 135.151(g)(1)(iii); and
Section 135.151(g)(2)(iii).
Certificate holders operating under part 129 requirements would be
affected because, in accordance with Sec. 129.24, their CVRs are
required to record as if the aircraft were operated under parts 121,
125, or 135.
A. Cockpit Voice Recorder Capabilities and Investigative Use
Aircraft operating under parts 91, 121, 125, and 135 are required
to be equipped with a CVR that records radio transmissions and sounds
in the flight deck to aid subsequent investigation should an accident
or incident occur. The recorder's flight deck area microphone is
usually located on the overhead instrument panel between the two
pilots.
CVRs preserve the recent history of sounds in the flight deck and
provide unique information such as engine noise, stall warnings,
landing gear extension and retraction, and other clicks and pops. These
sounds may help an investigator to determine parameters such as engine
rpm, system failures, speed, and the time at which certain events
occur. The CVR also records communications with Air Traffic Control,
automated radio weather briefings, conversations between the pilots and
ground or cabin crew, flight crew verbalizations of intentions and
coordination, as well as the pilots' awareness of the aircraft and
flight deck information.\18\ Access to this information allows
investigators to more thoroughly investigate accident and incident
factors. Incident factors include the flight crew's procedural
compliance, distraction, decision-making, workload, fatigue, and
situational awareness.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ NTSB. (2023) ``Cockpit Voice Recorders (CVR) and Flight
Data Recorders (FDR).'' www.ntsb.gov/news/Pages/cvr_fdr.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A CVR starts recording when an aircraft is powered up and will
continue to record until the aircraft is powered down or the CVR is
deactivated. Once a CVR reaches the end of its recording limit, it will
overwrite existing data with a new recording.
CVRs typically deactivate due to two forms of power loss. The first
occurs when the CVR is deactivated after a major or catastrophic event
causing a loss of electrical power. When this event occurs, the CVR
preserves relevant audio recorded in the two hours prior to the
accident. The second form occurs during less severe incidents, such as
when the flight crew manually deactivates the CVR immediately upon
landing in order to prevent the relevant audio from being overwritten.
After an accident or incident, the CVR data is transferred to an
NTSB lab for retrieval. The NTSB will eventually receive a readout from
the CVR software.
Since CVRs were implemented in 1966, recording capabilities have
significantly increased from the original 30 minutes. The latest
designs employ more easily expandable solid-state memory and use fault
tolerant digital recording technique with an incorporated battery so
that recording can continue until the end of flight, even when the
aircraft's electrical system fails.
The technical limit for recording time has expanded such that 25
hours is now well within CVR capability. In addition, because both EASA
and ICAO have adopted a 25-hour CVR recording duration minimum for
aircraft manufactured after January 1, 2021, multiple manufacturers
already produce CVRs capable of recording for 25 hours.
B. National Transportation Safety Board
Since 2008, the NTSB has expressed concerns regarding the
availability of CVR information, the length of CVR recording time, and
how to prevent relevant information from being overwritten after an
incident or accident. The current 2-hour recording requirement has not
fully resolved the issue of overwritten data, which continues to
negatively impact NTSB investigations.
There are two common causes for CVR data to be overwritten. First,
there may be a delay between a safety event and the flight crew
recognizing that event to be a serious incident or accident, resulting
in the relevant CVR data being overwritten as the CVR continued to
record throughout the delay. Second, the recording of a safety event
may be overwritten during the course of the flight itself (e.g., where
flight duration exceeds the 2-hour CVR recording duration).
[[Page 84093]]
The NTSB reported that, in 2017, approximately 56 percent of U.S.
block times \19\ consisted of long and medium flights with durations
longer than two hours, including some international flights lasting
over 12 hours.\20\ When ICAO adopted the standard for the installation
of 25-hour CVRs in 2016, it noted that extended duration of CVRs is
necessary to cover the longest duration of flights, including pre- and
postflight activities, delays, and the time required to secure the
recordings.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ ICAO defines block time to include the moment an aircraft
is pushed back from the gate to the moment it comes to a final stop
at a gate or parking stand after landing.
\20\ NTSB. Aviation Safety Recommendation Report. ASR-18-04 at
5. October 2, 2018.
\21\ Id. NTSB Report, citing ``Minimum Operational Performance
Specification for Crash Protected Airborne Recorder Systems,'' ED-
112A, European Organization for Civil Aviation Equipment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the 2-hour standard came into effect in 2008, numerous
accidents and incidents have occurred where the CVR data was
overwritten and, had it been available, would have positively
contributed to NTSB investigations. Notable incidents include the
following:
Table 1--Safety Events for Which Pertinent CVR Data Were Overwritten
[Up to 2018]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date Event type NTSB No. Location Event description
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6/21/2018............. Incident.............. OPS18IA015............ Chicago, IL........ Runway excursion.
4/18/2018............. Accident.............. DCA18LA163............ Atlanta, GA........ Engine fire.
7/07/2017............. Incident.............. DCA17IA148............ San Francisco, CA.. Taxiway line-up and
overflight of 4
air carrier
airplanes by an
Airbus A320 (46-
hour notification
delay).
5/09/2014............. Accident.............. CEN14LA239............ Columbus, OH....... Ground engine fire.
9/12/2013............. Incident.............. CEN13IA563............ Austin, TX......... Loss of pitch
control during
takeoff (4-day
notification
delay).
7/31/2012............. Incident.............. CEN12IA502............ Denver, CO......... Bird strike.
12/1/2011............. Accident.............. WPR12LA053............ Oakland, CA........ Enroute turbulence.
6/21/2011............. Incident.............. ENG11IA035............ Atlanta, GA........ Engine fire.
2/09/2011............. Incident.............. ENG11IA016............ Minneapolis, MN.... Tailpipe fire
following push
back.
11/23/2010............ Accident.............. WPR11LA058............ Salt Lake City, UT. On ground collision
with tow tractor.
6/28/2010............. Accident.............. CEN10LA363............ Pioneer, LA........ En route
turbulence.
12/31/2009............ Incident.............. DCA10IA015............ Charlotte, NC...... Wing tip strike
during landing.
6/29/2007............. Incident.............. LAX07IA198............ Los Angeles, CA.... Blown tires on
takeoff.
3/21/2006............. Incident.............. DEN06IA051............ Denver, CO......... Tail strike on
landing.
10/16/2003............ Accident.............. MIA04LA004............ Tampa, FL.......... Taxiway excursion.
6/03/2002............. Accident.............. DCA02MA039............ Subic Bay, Abrupt maneuver due
Philippines. to ground
proximity warning
system alert and
elevator damage.
6/02/2002............. Accident.............. DCA02MA042............ Subic Bay, Flight control
Philippines. malfunction during
approach.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the incidents noted by the NTSB, CVR data overwrites
have hampered several other investigations. For example, on October 21,
2009, an incident occurred on a 4-hour flight where the flight crew did
not communicate with air traffic control for about 1 hour and 17
minutes, during which time the airplane overflew its intended location
at a cruise altitude of 27,000 ft.\22\ The flight crew later reported
that ``cockpit distractions'' led to the event. The airplane's CVR had
a 30-minute recording duration; upon review, the NTSB discovered that
all pertinent information had been overwritten by the remaining two
hours and 11 minutes of the 4-hour flight.\23\ Even if the airplane had
been equipped with a CVR recording for two hours, the information still
would have been overwritten. Having lost this CVR data to overwriting,
the NTSB was unable to determine the nature of the flight crew's
distraction, the events that led to the distraction, why the
distraction lasted for as long as it did, and what mitigating
procedures or actions could have prevented that distraction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Id. at 4.
\23\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
More recently, on January 13, 2023, a runway incursion incident
occurred at John F. Kennedy (JFK) Airport in New York, New York. The
incursion involved a taxiing Boeing 777-200 and a Boeing 737-900ER
cleared for takeoff. The Boeing 777-200 accessed a taxiway without Air
Traffic Control (ATC) clearance, crossing the runway that the Boeing
737-900ER was utilizing for takeoff. ATC was notified of the potential
conflict, cancelled the Boeing 737-900ER's takeoff clearance, and the
flight crew aborted the flight. Because the incident did not result in
any damage or injuries, the two flights eventually took off to their
respective destinations. During its investigation, the NTSB discovered
the CVR data for both flights had been overwritten.
On February 4, 2023, a runway incursion occurred at Austin
Bergstrom International Airport (AUS) when a Boeing 767F freighter
attempted to land on a runway from which a Boeing 737-700 was also
cleared to depart.\24\ Due to poor weather conditions, the Boeing 767F
crew did not see the conflict until late in the approach, and the two
planes came close to colliding; specifically, the Boeing 767F needed to
overfly the Boeing 737-700 to avoid a collision. There were no injuries
reported to the 128 passengers and crew onboard the Boeing 737-700 or
to the 3 crew members onboard the Boeing 767F. During its
investigation, the NTSB discovered the CVR data for both flights had
been overwritten.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ NTSB. Aviation Investigation Preliminary Report No.
DCA23LA149. Feb. 4, 2023.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAA had sought to prevent such recording issues by creating the
retention requirements found in Sec. Sec. 91.609(g), 121.343(i), and
135.152(e), where an operator must remove the recording media following
an accident or incident and keep the recorded data for at least 60
days, or longer if necessary. The FAA also provided guidance in
Advisory Circular 20-186, ``Airworthiness and Operational Approval of
Cockpit Voice Recorder Systems,'' \25\ which recommended the operator
to address CVR recording retention after an accident or incident in its
maintenance and operational programs, such as inclusion in a flight
crew checklist, or in the company standard operating procedures or
emergency procedures. However, since recording issues continue to
occur, the
[[Page 84094]]
FAA agrees with the NTSB that an extension to the CVR recording
duration requirement to 25 hours is warranted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Advisory Circular 20-186, Paragraph 3.2.4. July 22, 2016.
www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/media/Advisory_Circular/AC_20-186.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Privacy Concerns
The FAA acknowledges that pilot-focused organizations may have
concerns regarding how the NTSB or the FAA would use the CVR data
collected for investigative purposes.
This issue previously arose when the FAA increased the CVR
recording duration from 30 minutes to 2 hours. At that time, the FAA
determined that the investigative need and benefit of this information
outweighed these privacy concerns.\26\ The FAA maintains this stance.
The proposed increase to a 25-hour CVR recording duration would further
improve current investigative capabilities. It would also provide
investigating bodies, such as the NTSB, with more complete context
surrounding the accidents and incidents under investigation and support
their safety analyses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ Revisions to Cockpit Voice Recorder and Digital Flight Data
Recorder Regulations. 73 FR 12541, 12544 (March 7, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Importantly, this proposed increase is designed to provide more
context for any flight deck activity that might be pertinent to an
investigation. Specifically, this increase expands the possible range
of data available to investigators. This proposal does not alter or
modify the existing processes for requesting or use of this data.
Sections 91.609(g), 121.359(h), 121.227(f), and 135.151(c) specify that
the information obtained from the CVR recording is to be used for
investigation purposes and that the FAA will not use the CVR record in
any civil penalty or certificate action. This proposal does not modify
these regulations.
D. International Requirements
ICAO and EASA both require the carriage of CVRs with 25-hour
recording duration on airplanes with a maximum certificated takeoff
mass of more than 27,000 kg. These are aircraft that have the
capability to fly transatlantic or international flights, i.e., long-
haul flights that can last ten or more hours. In contrast, the FAA
requirement would apply to all newly manufactured aircraft required to
carry a CVR, based on existing operating rules. This distinction
reflects differences between the FAA and ICAO/EASA regulatory schemes:
the FAA's existing regulatory scheme differentiates aircraft by
operation type, not by weight. This rulemaking would not change that
regulatory scheme.
With both EASA and ICAO amending their CVR rules to require 25
hours of audio recording time, this proposed change also presents an
opportunity to ensure U.S. regulations are consistent in intent with
international authorities. This should lead to a reduction of risk for
some operators who would otherwise face conflicting requirements and
the cumbersome task of ascertaining guidance for the appropriate
authorities in an attempt to satisfy differing regulations.
Historically, the FAA has implemented CVR regulations by operation
unlike ICAO and EASA, which put forth their standards and regulations
by aircraft weight. As a result, the FAA's proposal would encompass
more aircraft than international requirements would because newly
manufactured aircraft with less than a maximum takeoff weight of 27,000
kg would be affected.
E. Conclusion and Compliance
The FAA concurs with the NTSB's recommendation and believes that
extending CVR recording duration to 25 hours would increase aviation
safety by providing investigative bodies with more thorough context and
background surrounding accidents and incidents. This proposal would
also make FAA regulations more consistent with ICAO recommendations and
EASA requirements.
Given that the technology already exists to implement this
proposal, the FAA proposes a compliance deadline for newly manufactured
aircraft of one year after the effective date of the final regulation.
Any aircraft with a newly issued airworthiness certificate dated on or
after that compliance date would be required to be equipped with a CVR
with 25-hour recording duration.
In addition, the FAA will update the version of the technical
standard order (TSO) referenced in the regulatory text from TSO-C123a
to the latest version, TSO-C123c, for newly manufactured aircraft.
IV. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
Federal agencies consider impacts of regulatory actions under a
variety of Executive orders and other requirements. First, Executive
Order 12866 and Executive Order 13563, as amended by Executive Order
14094 (``Modernizing Regulatory Review''), direct that each Federal
agency shall propose or adopt a regulation only upon a reasoned
determination that the benefits of the intended regulation justify the
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. 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 that
may result in the expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments,
in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation) in any one year. The current
threshold after adjustment for inflation is $177 million using the most
current (2022) Implicit Price Deflator for the Gross Domestic Product.
The FAA has provided a detailed Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) in the
docket for this rulemaking. This portion of the preamble summarizes the
FAA's analysis of the economic impacts of this proposed rule.
In conducting these analyses, the FAA has determined that this
proposed rule: will result in benefits that justify costs; is not an
economically ``significant regulatory action'' as defined in section
3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866; will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities; will not create
unnecessary obstacles to the foreign commerce of the United States; and
will not impose an unfunded mandate on State, local, or tribal
governments, or on the private sector.
A. Summary of the Regulatory Impact Analysis
Benefits for the proposed rule were assessed qualitatively as the
FAA currently lacks data to make projections on the benefit totals. The
primary expected benefit is changes in safety from a potential
reduction in accident risk. The expanded available audio from this
proposed rule would provide authorities with more information on events
and procedures undertaken in the flight deck in investigated incidents.
This increased data may lead to new FAA recommendations or policy
changes that could further enhance safety and reduce the risk that a
future incident becomes an accident. The reduction in the risk of one
fatality generates benefits equal to the value of statistical life
(VSL), approximately $12.5 million in 2022 according to the Department
of Transportation (DOT).\27\ Given the annualized costs of $9.67
million from this proposed rule,
[[Page 84095]]
reducing the risk of a single fatality in any year due to effective
safety measures resulting from the ability to gather additional CVR
data would generate benefits greater than the expected costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ DOT. Treatment of the Value of Preventing Fatalities and
Injuries in Preparing Economic Analyses. Office of the Secretary of
Transportation. 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, there are some potential time-saving benefits
associated with the updated CVR model deployment. In updating their CVR
models, manufacturers also have revamped the CVR interface tools. These
simplified and more intuitive tools allow personnel to be trained
quicker on operation, retrieve audio data faster, and perform
additional diagnostic services to shorten downtime. The FAA does not
currently have enough data to predict the value of these benefits and
invites public comments on the expected totals.
The FAA assessed the costs for the proposed rule as the incremental
cost increase of equipping a 25-hour capable CVR instead of a
comparable 2-hour unit to all applicable new aircraft being produced.
The total aircraft that will be built and equipped with the 25-hour CVR
includes projected new aircraft needed to handle future demand
increases as well as estimated replacements for the current fleet.
Market research indicates the cost increase between comparable 2 and
25-hour CVRs to be minimal, ranging from near parity to an upper bound
of approximately $4,500. Using that upper bound as the incremental cost
to equip all applicable projected new aircraft with a 25-hour capable
CVR, the estimated highest total cost over 20 years, at seven percent
present value, is $102.42 million with an annualized cost of $9.67
million (table 2). At three percent present value, the total cost is
$144.77 million with an annualized cost of $9.73 million.
Table 2--Summary of Costs Over 20 Years
[Millions of 2021$]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
7% Present value 3% Present value
---------------------------------------------------------------
14 CFR operational part Annualized Annualized
costs Total costs costs Total costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Part 91 \1\..................................... $3.55 $37.57 $3.56 $52.98
Part 121........................................ 3.18 33.66 3.19 47.41
Part 125........................................ 0.16 1.65 0.16 2.32
Part 135........................................ 2.79 29.55 2.83 42.06
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total \2\................................... 9.67 102.42 9.73 144.77
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Consists of Part 91 turbine powered and Part 91K aircraft.
\2\ Total reflects combined costs of each CFR part.
Note: Columns may not sum to total due to rounding.
The FAA does not anticipate other costs besides the incremental
costs of forward fitting 25-hour capable CVRs to comply with the
proposed rule. Based on the technical standards for CVRs, market
research indicates that 25-hour models tend to match the older 2-hour
variants in a manner that allows them to be swapped without much
difficulty. This compatibility implies that other operational
procedures and costs should be similar and not result in notable
change. The FAA invites comments on the expected costs for this
proposed rule.
Please see the RIA available in the docket for more details.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) of 1980, Public Law 96-354, 94
Stat. 1164 (5 U.S.C. 601-612), as amended by the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-121, 110 Stat.
857, Mar. 29, 1996) and the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 (Pub. L.
111-240, 124 Stat. 2504 Sept. 27, 2010), requires Federal agencies to
consider the effects of the regulatory action on small business and
other small entities and to minimize any significant economic impact.
The term ``small entities'' comprises small businesses and not-for-
profit organizations that are independently owned and operated and are
not dominant in their fields, and governmental jurisdictions with
populations of less than 50,000.
The proposed rule affects CVR manufacturers by requiring the
development and certification of 25-hour capable models. A major change
to the CVR components, such as in this case, would require a
manufacturer to go through the development and certification of a new
model, which could involve extra cost and time. However, due to EASA
and ICAO standards for 25-hour capability taking effect in 2021, market
research shows that manufacturers already have developed 25-hour
compliant variants that meet FAA TSO-C123 compliance. Therefore, the
proposed regulation is not expected to result in new or significant
impacts on CVR manufacturers. The FAA invites comments on the expected
effects of the proposed rule on CVR manufacturers.
As described in the RIA, the FAA identified six U.S. manufacturers
that would be affected by the proposed rule. Based on the Small
Business Administration (SBA) 2023 size standard for Other Aircraft
Part and Auxiliary Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS 336413),\28\ and on
publicly available data on employment for these entities, all six
identified manufacturers are large businesses that exceed the 1,250-
employee size maximum for a small business. Therefore, the FAA
certifies that the proposed rule will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities because the proposed
rule does not impact any small entity. The FAA welcomes comments on the
number of U.S. CVR manufacturers and this certification.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Small Business Administration (SBA) Size Standards,
effective March 17, 2023, can be found at www.sba.gov/document/support-table-size-standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. International Trade Impact Assessment
The Trade Agreements Act of 1979 (Pub. L. 96-39), as amended by the
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
[[Page 84096]]
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 promotes the safety of the American public
and does not exclude imports that meet the recording length
requirement. As a result, the FAA does not consider this proposed rule
as creating an unnecessary obstacle to foreign commerce.
D. Unfunded Mandates Assessment
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
that may result in the expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100
million or more (adjusted annually for inflation) in any one year. The
current threshold after adjustment for inflation is $177 million using
the most current (2022) Implicit Price Deflator for the Gross Domestic
Product.
The FAA determined that the proposed rule will not result in the
expenditure of $177 million or more by State, local, or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or the private sector, in any one year.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) requires
that the FAA consider the impact of paperwork and other information
collection burdens imposed on the public. 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 Office of Management and Budget (OMB) control number.
This action contains the following proposed amendments to the
existing information collection requirements previously approved under
OMB Control Number 2120-0700. As required by the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)), the FAA has submitted these proposed
information collection amendments to OMB for its review.
Summary: This notice proposes to amend parts 91, 121, 125, and 135
requirements so aircraft manufactured on or after [ONE YEAR THE
EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL RULE] that are required to be installed
with a cockpit voice recorder would be required to have a recording
limit of 25 hours, expanded from the current requirement of 2 hours.
Use: Such a record would provide additional information to accident
and incident investigators to determine flight crew's procedural
compliance, distraction, decision-making, workload, fatigue, and
situational awareness. The expansion to 25 hours would address the
issue in which data is overwritten because the relevant recording
occurred earlier than the available two hours of recording.
Respondents (including number of): The respondents all would be
certificate holders operating the above-referenced U.S.-registered
aircraft under parts 91, 121, 125, 129, and 135. Certificate holders
operating under part 129 requirements would be affected because, in
accordance with Sec. 129.24, a cockpit voice recorder would be
required to record as if the aircraft were operated under parts 121,
125, or 135.
Frequency: The 25 hours of recorded data would be overwritten on a
continuing basis and would only be accessed following an accident or
incident.
Annual Burden Estimate: This proposed requirement would not change
the current information collection activity; therefore, it does not
contain a measurable hour burden.
The FAA is soliciting comments to--
(1) Evaluate whether the proposed information requirement is
necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the FAA,
including whether the information will have practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of the FAA'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 to the address listed in the ADDRESSES section
at the beginning of this preamble by February 2, 2024. 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 Office Building, Room 10202, 725 17th Street NW,
Washington, DC 20053.
F. 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 the following differences with these proposed
regulations. The proposed rule would harmonize with ICAO regarding the
required length of the CVR recordings at 25 hours. However, the U.S.
does not regulate carriage requirements of CVRs based on the aircraft
gross weight, as do the ICAO and EASA, and the proposed rule change
would not change this. If this proposal is adopted, the FAA intends to
amend its currently filed difference on this topic with ICAO.
G. Environmental Analysis
FAA Order 1050.1F identifies FAA actions that are categorically
excluded from the preparation of an environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement under the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) in the absence of extraordinary circumstances. The FAA has
determined this proposed rulemaking action qualifies for the
categorical exclusion identified in paragraph 5-6.6f for regulations
and involves no extraordinary circumstances.
V. Executive Order Determinations
A. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
The FAA has analyzed this proposed rule under the principles and
criteria of Executive Order (E.O.) 13132, Federalism. The FAA has
determined that this proposed action would not have a substantial
direct effect on the States, or the relationship between the Federal
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.
B. Executive Order 13175, Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
Consistent with Executive Order 13175, Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments,\29\ and FAA Order 1210.20,
American Indian and Alaska Native Tribal Consultation Policy and
Procedures,\30\ the FAA ensures that Federally Recognized
[[Page 84097]]
Tribes (Tribes) are given the opportunity to provide meaningful and
timely input regarding proposed Federal actions that have the potential
to affect uniquely or significantly their respective Tribes. At this
point, the FAA has not identified any unique or significant effects,
environmental or otherwise, on tribes resulting from this proposed
rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ 65 FR 67249 (Nov. 6, 2000).
\30\ The FAA. (Jan. 28, 2004). FAA Order No. 1210.20.
www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/media/1210.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Executive Order 13211, Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use
The FAA analyzed this proposed rule under E.O. 13211, Actions
Concerning Regulations that Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use (May 18, 2001). The FAA has determined that it
would not be a ``significant energy action'' under the Executive order
and would not be likely to have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
D. Executive Order 13609, Promoting International Regulatory
Cooperation
Executive Order 13609, Promoting International Regulatory
Cooperation, promotes international regulatory cooperation to meet
shared challenges involving health, safety, labor, security,
environmental, and other issues and to reduce, eliminate, or prevent
unnecessary differences in regulatory requirements. The FAA has
analyzed this proposed action under the policies and agency
responsibilities of E.O. 13609 and has determined that this proposed
action would have no effect on international regulatory cooperation.
VI. Additional Information
A. Comments Invited
The FAA invites interested persons to participate in this
rulemaking by submitting written comments, data, or views. The FAA also
invites 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, commenters should submit only one time if comments
are filed electronically, or commenters should send only one copy of
written comments if comments are filed in writing.
The FAA will file in the docket all comments it receives, as well
as a report summarizing each substantive public contact with FAA
personnel concerning this proposed rulemaking. Before acting on this
proposal, the FAA will consider all comments it receives on or before
the closing date for comments. The FAA will consider comments filed
after the comment period has closed if it is possible to do so without
incurring expense or delay. The FAA may change this proposal in light
of the comments it receives.
B. Confidential Business Information
Confidential Business Information (CBI) is commercial or financial
information that is both customarily and actually treated as private by
its owner. Under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) (5 U.S.C. 552),
CBI is exempt from public disclosure. If your comments responsive to
this NPRM contain commercial or financial information that is
customarily treated as private, that you actually treat as private, and
that is relevant or responsive to this NPRM, it is important that you
clearly designate the submitted comments as CBI. Please mark each page
of your submission containing CBI as ``PROPIN.'' The FAA will treat
such marked submissions as confidential under the FOIA, and they will
not be placed in the public docket of this NPRM. Submissions containing
CBI should be sent to the person in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section of this document. Any commentary that the FAA receives that is
not specifically designated as CBI will be placed in the public docket
for this rulemaking.
C. Electronic Access and Filing
A copy of this NPRM, all comments received, any final rule, and all
background material may be viewed online at www.regulations.gov using
the docket number listed above. A copy of this proposed rule will be
placed in the docket. Electronic retrieval help and guidelines are
available on the website. It is available 24 hours each day, 365 days
each year. An electronic copy of this document may also be downloaded
from the Office of the Federal Register's website at
www.federalregister.gov and the Government Publishing Office's website
at www.govinfo.gov. A copy may also be found at the FAA's Regulations
and Policies website at www.faa.gov/regulations_policies.
Copies may also be obtained 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) 267-9677.
Commenters must identify the docket or notice number of this
rulemaking.
All documents the FAA considered in developing this proposed rule,
including economic analyses and technical reports, may be accessed in
the electronic docket for this rulemaking.
D. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of
1996 requires the FAA to comply with small entity requests for
information or advice about compliance with statutes and regulations
within its jurisdiction. A small entity with questions regarding this
document may contact its local FAA official or the person listed under
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT heading at the beginning of the
preamble. To find out more about SBREFA on the internet, visit
www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/rulemaking/sbre_act/.
List of Subjects
14 CFR Part 91
Aircraft, Aviation safety.
14 CFR Part 121
Air carriers, Aircraft, Aviation safety, Charter flights, Safety,
Transportation.
14 CFR Part 125
Aircraft, Aviation safety.
14 CFR Part 135
Air taxis, Aircraft, Aviation safety.
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 91--GENERAL OPERATING AND FLIGHT RULES
0
1. The authority citation for part 91 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g), 40101, 40103, 40105,
40113, 40120, 44101, 44111, 44701, 44704, 44709, 44711, 44712,
44715, 44716, 44717, 44722, 46306, 46315, 46316, 46504, 46506-46507,
47122, 47508, 47528-47531, 47534, Pub. L. 114-190, 130 Stat. 615 (49
U.S.C. 44703 note); articles 12 and 29 of the Convention on
International Civil Aviation (61 Stat. 1180), (126 Stat. 11).
0
2. Amend Sec. 91.609 by revising paragraph (i)(2) to read as follows:
Sec. 91.609 Flight data recorders and cockpit voice recorders.
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(2) Retains at least--
(i) The last 2 hours of recorded information using a recorder that
meets the standards of TSO-C123a, or later revision; or
(ii) If manufactured on or after [ONE YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
[[Page 84098]]
OF THE FINAL RULE,] the last 25 hours of recorded information using a
recorder that meets the standards of TSO-C123c, or later revision.
* * * * *
PART 121--OPERATING REQUIREMENTS: DOMESTIC, FLAG, AND SUPPLEMENTAL
OPERATIONS
0
3. The authority citation for part 121 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g), 40103, 40113, 40119, 41706,
42301 preceding note added by Pub. L. 112-95, sec. 412, 126 Stat.
89, 44101, 44701-44702, 44705, 44709-44711, 44713, 44716-44717,
44722, 44729, 44732; 46105; Pub. L. 111-216, 124 Stat. 2348 (49
U.S.C. 44701 note); Pub. L. 112-95, 126 Stat. 62 (49 U.S.C. 44732
note); Pub. L. 115-254, 132 Stat. 3186 (49 U.S.C. 44701 note).
0
4. Amend Sec. 121.359 by revising paragraphs (i)(2) and (j)(2) to read
as follows:
Sec. 121.359 Cockpit voice recorders.
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(2) Retains at least--
(i) The last 2 hours of recorded information using a recorder that
meets the standards of TSO-C123a, or later revision; or
(ii) If manufactured on or after [ONE YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours of recorded information using a
recorder that meets the standards of TSO-C123c, or later revision; and
* * * * *
(j) * * *
(2) Retains at least--
(i) The last 2 hours of recorded information using a recorder that
meets the standards of TSO-C123a, or later revision; or
(ii) If manufactured on or after [ONE YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours of recorded information using a
recorder that meets the standards of TSO-C123c, or later revision; and
* * * * *
PART 125--CERTIFICATION AND OPERATIONS: AIRCRAFT HAVING A SEATING
CAPACITY OF 20 OR MORE PASSENGERS OR A MAXIMUM PAYLOAD CAPACITY OF
6,000 POUNDS OR MORE; AND RULES GOVERNING PERSONS ON BOARD SUCH
AIRCRAFT
0
5. The authority citation for part 125 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g), 40113, 44701-44702, 44705,
44710-44711, 44713, 44716-44717, 44722.
0
6. Amend Sec. 125.227 by revising paragraphs (g)(2) and (h)(2) to read
as follows:
Sec. 125.227 Cockpit voice recorders.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(2) Retains at least--
(i) The last 2 hours of recorded information using a recorder that
meets the standards of TSO-C123a, or later revision; or
(ii) If manufactured on or after [ONE YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours of recorded information using a
recorder that meets the standards of TSO-C123c, or later revision; and
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(2) Retains at least--
(i) The last 2 hours of recorded information using a recorder that
meets the standards of TSO-C123a, or later revision; or
(ii) If manufactured on or after [ONE YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours of recorded information using a
recorder that meets the standards of TSO-C123c, or later revision; and
* * * * *
PART 135--OPERATING REQUIREMENTS: COMMUTER AND ON DEMAND OPERATIONS
AND RULES GOVERNING PERSONS ON BOARD SUCH AIRCRAFT
0
7. The authority citation for part 135 continue to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g), 40113, 41706, 44701-44702,
44705, 44709, 44711-44713, 44715-44717, 44722, 44730, 45101-45105;
Pub. L. 112-95, 126 Stat. 58 (49 U.S.C. 44730).
0
8. Amend Sec. 135.151 by revising paragraphs (g)(1)(iii) and
(g)(2)(iii) to read as follows:
Sec. 135.151 Cockpit voice recorders.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) Retains at least--
(A) The last 2 hours of recorded information using a recorder that
meets the standards of TSO-C123a, or later revision; or
(B) If manufactured on or after [ONE YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours of recorded information using a
recorder that meets the standards of TSO-C123c, or later revision.
* * * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Retains at least--
(A) The last 2 hours of recorded information using a recorder that
meets the standards of TSO-C123a, or later revision; or
(B) If manufactured on or after [ONE YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], the last 25 hours of recorded information using a
recorder that meets the standards of TSO-C123c, or later revision.
* * * * *
Issued under authority provided by 49 U.S.C. 106(f) and 44701(a)
in Washington, DC.
Lawrence Fields,
Acting Executive Director, Flight Standards Service.
[FR Doc. 2023-26144 Filed 12-1-23; 8:45 am]
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