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Sat, Feb 28, 2015

Key NBAA-Backed Provision Included In New PBOR Legislation

Requires FAA To Release Enforcement Report When Serving Emergency Orders

The Pilot's Bill of Rights 2 legislation introduced Thursday by Senator James Inhofe (R-OK) along with companion legislation in the U.S. House contains a key provision backed by the NBAA.

In a news release, the association said that last year, members of the NBAA Regulatory Issues Advisory Group joined Dick Doubrava, the Association’s vice president for government affairs, and Brian Koester, NBAA’s project manager for operations, in meeting with Inhofe’s office regarding the addition of language that will ensure defendants have an opportunity to prepare a proper defense. The resulting provision, specified in PBOR2, would require the FAA to hand over the enforcement report when serving emergency orders, and upon request in all other cases.

Although the timely release of such documentation was a key requirement in the original PBOR legislation, multiple reports from the pilot community indicate the agency has not consistently released this documentation in sufficient time to enable defendants to mount a proper legal defense.

“This key provision ensures that pilots and other certificate holders facing FAA enforcement action are granted their due process under law,” said NBAA president and CEO Ed Bolen, “and is keeping with the spirit and intent of the initial Pilots Bill of Rights measure in assuring that the nation’s pilot community is treated fairly during enforcement action proceedings. We are particularly pleased that our concerns in this area are reflected in this new legislation, and we look forward to doing what we can to help move these important bills into law.”

Additional provisions outline specific actions the FAA may not take, should the agency fail to provide timely notifications to individuals facing enforcement action at the start of the investigation. The House and Senate pilots’ rights bills would also prohibit the agency from moving forward with any enforcement action should the FAA fail to provide such notifications.

Also of note, PBOR2 would compel the FAA to take action on oft-delayed industry calls for reform to the third-class medical requirement for general aviation (GA) pilots, by expanding upon a current medical exemption under the sport pilot category to cover certain noncommercial operations in GA aircraft with a maximum takeoff weight up to 6,000 lbs. NBAA has supported industry calls for this reformed certification process.

The PBOR2 legislation also calls for expedited action to reform the Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) process, and the extension of civil liability protections afforded to government employees to aviation medical examiners and other FAA representatives in the private sector.

FMI: www.nbaa.org

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