For those of you that did not comment already, please do so to this link:
http://www.regulations.gov/#!submitComment;D=FAA-2014-0463-0001
Time is running out.
And I might add, that while some of us get emotional about this, just raising hell with them and not be respectful won't help out our cause. If I printed how I really feel about this, I would go to jail. If you swear or say things that could be considered hurtful, the FAA may not post or consider your comment. There is a one or two day review period before your comment is actually officially received. Lets not step on our own toes. - alan
My response to the FAA comment:
One has to ask what is gained and what is lost in this proposed rule.
Yes, there are hangars at airports that are being used for non-aviation activities. With the decline in the fleet population, one could expect that. The high cost of hangars is an issue, as people try to recoup their costs. If a hangar sits empty, it produces no revenue which further increases the cost of flying and the decline of General Aviation.
Easy to fix. If there is a waiting list for hangars, I can see a regulation that puts airplanes and aviation uses as first and foremost priority above all other uses. But that is where I think we need to end the regulation. More regulations, especially those regulations that will, typically, be misinterpreted by local airport boards and municipalities, will only discourage the growth of General Aviation.
General Aviation is the Genesis of every pilot's aviation career. Part of the magic of the aviation "experience" is providing a place where the "old hands" (pilots & mechanics) and wide-eyed youth can hang out and enjoy the sights, smells & stories of aviation. Items stored alongside an airplane, or a home built airplane being put together, or a bicycle to run around the field or even a boat against the back wall should be OK. That is the hangar and it is provided for the airplane. Even if the airplane is in parts or being worked on. Any other use of left over space should be unregulated by the Federal Government. Let's leave the hangar alone for all our sakes. If it is being used for anything related to aviation, good enough. Otherwise, the FAA and local authorities need not waste their resources looking for an invented problem caused by regulation.
If it is being used for solely for some other purpose, that should be only if there are no waiting lists for aviation use. An airplane should be able to immediately "bump" a non-aviation use. And I do think aviation is helped when an airport collects revenue from an otherwise empty hangar, but only if no one needs it for aviation. Aviation first and foremost, then others might be considered on a month by month basis - until an aircraft needs a hangar. That should be a rule. Easy to enforce on the local level and not very complicated.
Otherwise, freedom is wonderful thing. We dare not lose it.