poadeleted20
Deleted
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2005
- Messages
- 31,250
Everyone knows how the NASA ASRS can save you from sanctions (like grounding) even if not keeping the violation off your record. However, it will not save you from sanctions if the FAA decides your violation was the result of a deliberate act. Thus, if you bust a TFR because you didn't know it was there, and you hadn't received a briefing from an approved briefing source (like FSS, DUATS, FltPlan.com, AOPA RTFP, etc) including the NOTAMS, the FAA will write you up not only for violating 91.141 for entering the TFR without authorization, but also for violating 91.103 by failing to "become familiar with all available information concerning that flight." Since you chose not to get the full briefing information, your violation is not inadvertant, and the NASA ASRS filing will not get you out of the grounding. The FAA has applied this test in numerous TFR busts in the past.Rob Schaeffer said:Another pilot entered the office, and we started talking. He was looking for coffee, and stated he was Hungover and not going to fly today, but was going out for breakfast with some guys. He then proceeded to tell me why he was hungover,... after busting the Presidential TFR for New York yesterday and spending over 4 hrs with authorities,.. he had a rough night. Wow,... I couldn't imagine! Apparently he was making a flight to Morristown NJ, under the class B area of NYC, and didn't get a briefing prior to leaving, only checked DUATs, not filing a flight plan either. He listened to ATIS on the way up, but there was no indication of the TFR. Listened when 10 Miles out, and it was then added, but he had already busted airspace. Tower ended up giving him a number to call when he landed,... the beginning of a long evening. He filed a NASA report, and now we'll see what happens. Hopefully, no suspension, but it will be on his record.
The only way you get out of this is if you did get a briefing from an approved source and the TFR information was not provided. I know of one case where the FSS briefer simply failed to mention the TFR, and the pilot went in. The tape of the briefing was reviewed, and confirmed the pilot's contention that he'd done all he could reasonably be expected to do to comply with 91.103 -- the violation was torn up.
Note in Rob's story that the pilot who busted the TFR in NYC last Friday got a DUATS briefing. The FAA will pull up the record of that briefing, and if the TFR is in the briefing he obtained, or he did not obtain a briefing that fully covered his intended route of flight, the NASA ASRS form will not save him from the sanctions. Further, whether he skates on the sanctions or not, he will have the violation on his FAA record for five years and have to check "yes" every time the question "have you ever..." is asked on insurance or employment forms for the rest of his life even though the FAA won't consider it in their proceedings after five years.
Y'all be careful out there, hear?