tonycondon said:
Consider yourself lucky Tom. There are a couple (MCW and ALO come to mind) airports in Iowa that really think they are big stuff because they get a couple of regional flights in a day. I think Mason City handles maybe 4 at the max Saab 340s a day. Waterloo does 4 Saabs and a CRJ every day. Apparently this creates enough of a security concern that I no longer should have access to my airplane.
Tony,
I don't think it's so much a matter of airports "thinking they're big stuff". An airport that serves scheduled air carriers with more than 9 (ie 10 or more) passenger seats are subject to Part 139. Kenmore Air's largest land plane is the Caravan, with 9 pax seats, so Whidbey Island is not subject to Part 139. Anything that's got even a single scheduled Saab 340 flight is subject to Part 139.
Specifically, read 139.325(i), (a), and (b) and 139.335(b).
I don't even know what chapter the TSA regs are in, so I don't know where to start looking for those.
I fly from KMSN which has lots of airline flights (Waterski ATR's, Mesaba Saab 340's, SkyEx Beech 1900's and DO-328 jets, RJ's from Eagle (American), Air Wisconsin (United), Contintental, and Delta; and Northwest DC-9's and A319's).
We'd be pretty much in the same boat except for one fact: We have a boatload of GA traffic as well, from Cubs to Gulfstreams to the occasional chartered 757, so Wisconsin Aviation is open 24/7. The GA terminal ("east ramp") is always open. They do lock the secondary GA terminal and hangars ("south ramp") after 9 PM but will send someone down to let you in and pull your plane out. There's also security training for based pilots that gives you the privilege of having your own key to the south ramp.
Without that level of traffic and that level of service from the FBO, well...
It sure would be nice if they could do something, but I'm not sure if TSA regs permit them to have a gate code or give out temporary cards under their 139-required security plan.