Be careful. I watched a VP get fired this way. He insisted on flying his own aircraft on sales calls. At first, he would calculate what a coach commercial ticket would have cost the company, and he submitted this value on his expense report.
He was told to cease and desist.
He then started claiming auto mileage for air miles. He was fired for 1) ignoring the request to stop, and 2) falsifying an expense report.
At this point, I'm willing to risk it.
The policy on mileage reimbursement expressly allows the use of other vehicles.... Motorcycles, wife's convertible (she doesn't have one, of course)
I'll evaluate my options if we ever get to the point of C&D.
In the meantime, I'm sure that when I run into my division VP in a couple weeks, we'll reignite that discussion again and I can hopefully get a few more people in a position of influence on my side.
My HR manager has offered to go into his network and put together a GA policy.
I would see it as this:
Min of 1MM of liability with additional insured.
Signed waiver of liability by myself and spouse
Flights to be conducted in VMC during normal defined working hours with attention to hours of duty regarding fatigue.
Economic Benefit analysis (time and expense vs driving or human mailing tube) I'm not going to fly myself to Phoenix for a meeting when I can catch 4 RJ's a day, but if I'm heading there then to Yuma then to SAN....it makes sense
You know, I'm not going to fly fatigued. I just won't do it. But I'll work an entire day and hop in my truck and do 7+ hours because it's not worth staying in another hotel.
Minimum equipment is a must. Plane must be in annual, void of mechanical defects...something even above 91 requirements.
I would never take Dad's 1960 Skylark. But I did attempt to use the age and low TT and SMOH of my '93 Socata as a selling point.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk