Richman67
Pre-takeoff checklist
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Richman67
A bit more on this.
We have a lot of airspace incursion violations in the northeast, especially VIP TFRs. I work with the FAA when the violation falls under the Compliance Philosophy and the investigating inspector chooses to pass the incident off to the applicable FSDO's FPM. When the pilot shows up to the meeting with a compliant attitude the FPM may choose to assign RT (Remedial Training). RT is neither an enforcement or administrative action, so nothing ever appears on the pilot's record -- that's a good thing.
My lead rep and I conduct RTs and most of them are TFR-related. Because this is such a big issue at present it's a FAASTeam area of emphasis. We have conducted safety seminars on this topic and I co-wrote a "decoder" document for the Bedminster TFR in mid-2017. We deal with this topic weekly if not daily, with the involvement of the FSDO on a regular basis.
The problem we see time and time again in these RTs is basic lack of awareness of the TFR on the part of the pilot. The two most common problems are:
It's fairly uncommon to run across an incursion which resulted from a true navigational error. In the vast majority of the cases, the pilot was unaware of the TFR, or believed it to be inactive (or in a different place.) To be fair to the incident pilots, some of the POTUS TFRs have been quite complex, with last-minute changes to dates/times and locations. That adds to the challenge of staying up to date.
- No briefing, no awareness of the TFR.
- An electronic self-briefing only, which for one reason or another ends up incomplete or misinterpreted.
We have identified, and heavily recommend, one virtually sure-fire solution to avoid an inadvertent TFR incursion:
Call Flight Service within 30 minutes of your departure time.
That is to say, don't use tfr.faa.gov; don't use Foreflight/WingX/Garmin Pilot/etc.; don't use your in-panel avionics which receive TFR alerts via ADS-B In; call Flight Service. Further, call as close to your departure time as possible to get the latest possible information.
If one calls and ask for an abbreviated briefing, TFRs and adverse conditions only (Leidos is required to always provide adverse conditions), the typical length of call is under two minutes. I tend to call right after I pull my plane out of the hangar and am doing a leisurely walk-around. I call every single time I fly, even if it's just for a flight in the pattern, even if I've called two hours prior for an earlier flight. It's the cheapest insurance imaginable.
This is an article which appeared on my facebook page, GA Safety Briefing:
https://www.facebook.com/notes/ga-safety-briefing/i-flew-into-a-presidential-tfr/338556203223703/
It's a great analysis of what went wrong for a pilot who thought he could trust his EFB weather briefing to keep him appraised of TFRs. He's a convert for the "always call FSS" philosophy. Incidentally the FAA picked up and shared this article along with a number of FSDO's FAASTeam pages. The pilot involved has been asked to speak at a number of clubs and safety seminars. It's a pretty interesting read, and a good example of why it's so important to call rather than trust a self-briefing, when it comes to TFR incursions.
Good luck to all!
Interesting perspective from someone close the process.
There was an episode with a Cirrus (I believe the original post was over on the COPA forum) who's pilot was exonerated from a TFR bust WITHOUT talking to Flight Service, and his lawyer went further to get a letter of interpretation from the Feds about the equivalency of a phone briefing from FSS vs an online briefing. That letter is out there if you google search it, and I think there was even an AOPA article about it. Some see it as rock solid you are NOT required to call Flight Service prior to flying, others see it as a "squishy" answer at best.
After reading about it, I asked the Feds at OSH last year about this, and NOT one would commit to an answer, as nice as they were about it.
Problem is that there is going to be a fundamental change with ATC that will further reduce Flight Service to irrelevancy. The FAA and NATCO have reached an agreement that will permit the publishing of all facilities phone numbers for clearance delivery/IFR release purposes (in the Chart Supplement). Airports under approach control airspace will have numbers that go to that facilities flight data position, and those outside will be routed to the overlying ARTCC data position. What this means is that without the need to contact Flight Service for clearances, you are left with a program that exists solely to provide voice briefings and enroute services, both of which are already rapidly declining due to online resources and ADS-B.
As the remaining IFR clearances move to an ATC function, and without the NEED to have a touch point with Flight Service for clearances, the number of contacts will continue to fall away, and you will be left with a program that has to justify it's costs for a VERY low number of contacts (and don't forget...they eliminated the Flight Watch position).
Now I DO call Flight Service to update any TFRs ( I also make sure I select "update adverse conditions via email" option when I do the web brief, which I do every time), and I agree it is very cheap insurance, but my responses from them is mixed at best. When I call, I try to emphasize that I want an abbreviated briefing, but it takes me time to recite information regarding my flight, then they have to look, and as you point out, they always have to provide adverse conditions AND most usually always review NOTAMS as well. It is rarely a 2 minute process...more like 5 at a minimum. Some briefers sound annoyed that I am calling at all. OTOH, some realize that I have already done a briefing (my caller ID should pull my file up, and some have called me by name when they pick up) have pulled up that information to provide what I am actually calling about and make the process as painless as possible. Pretty inconsistent, as far as I can tell.
Richman