Jay Honeck
Touchdown! Greaser!
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For Immediate Release
U.S. Pilot’s Aviation Nightmare in Mexico
Think Twice About Flying Your Plane to Mexico
Imagine flying your private plane to Mexico to spend tourism dollars, landing at Cancun, immediately having your plane impounded and then threatened with a fine of $5,000 to $25,000! And then sitting around for six days waiting to hear from Mexican Civil Aviation authorities (DGAC) if and when your plane can fly back to the U.S.! Not exactly an ideal vacation.
The “N” registered Cessna 210 with husband and wife on board was flying from a visit in Belize to meet friends in Cancun. The pilot had checked NOTAMS, filed a Mexican APIS notifying his arrival from Belize to Cancun, filed an international IFR flight plan which was accepted by Belize and Mexico, was in constant radio contact with Belize and Mexican ATC including Cancun approach and was cleared to land by the Cancun tower. As soon as he landed, Mexican civil aviation officials (DGAC) confiscated his aircraft.
Six days later, following a six hour meeting (in Spanish) with DGAC officials in Cancun (“how much do you want to pay?”) he received his first communication from DGAC headquarters in Mexico City - “You violated Mexican law. The fine is US$1,000.” On day seven it took over five hours to process the penalty payment and to receive clearance to depart.
The private pilot followed all the international civil aviation procedures for flying in the Caribbean. Mexico’s response can only be characterized as extreme. It was extreme in relation to a minor non-safety, non-security infraction of a regulation which the vast majority of private U.S. pilots could not find even if they were told it existed. It was extreme given the pilot’s APIS notification of arrival, successful filing of an international flight plan and clearance to land by Mexican civil aviation who were clearly aware that he was arriving from Belize. His plane was immediately impounded as soon as he landed. His aircraft was refused takeoff clearance for an entire week waiting for the DGAC legal department to make a simple decision about his status. He was fined US$1,000. Attempts to reason with Civil Aviation officials in Mexico city was fruitless. Could this really happen in today’s world? The answer is “yes.”
According to Caribbean Flying Adventures, the leading pilot’s guide for the Caribbean, “Other Caribbean destinations aggressively compete for U.S. private aviation tourism dollars. Not so Mexican Civil Aviation authorities. Their extreme response to this completely unintentional and minor infraction will cause thousands of U.S. private pilots to think twice about flying their planes to Mexico.”
Lesson learned? Think seriously about Flying your private aircraft to Mexico. There could be other hidden regulations that will earn you an involuntary week in Mexico accompanied by fines of up to $25,000 depending on your negotiating skills. It should also be mentioned that there were several hints about paying local DGAC officials to make the whole thing go away. The pilot was concerned that a bribe might land him in even more trouble and he refused to pay. Mistake? That’s not the point. This unacceptable treatment has no place in the 21st century world of international civil aviation. The good news is you will never be treated like this anywhere else in the entire Caribbean. Only in Mexico. For more details about this aviation nightmare, read on.
DGAC: You violated our laws. The company should have known better.
Pilot: We’re not a company. I am a private pilot in a small single engine aircraft and would not have a clue where to find Mexican regulations and would not understand them even if I found them since I do not speak Spanish. Like thousands of other private pilots, I assumed that all I needed to know would be available in English in the NOTAMS, or in response to my APIS submission, or in acceptance or rejection of my flight plan or as directed by ATC.
DGAC: Belize should have never accepted your flight plan. It’s their fault.
Pilot: Mexico accepted our flight plan also. Why did Cancun tower clear me to land?
DGAC: Our ATC does not know who has or does not have a permit to land in Cancun.
Pilot: But your DGAC officials on the ground at Cancun obviously knew that I was arriving from Belize and impounded my plan as soon as I landed. Why could they have not given Cancun approach or Cancun tower a heads up to warn us to land at nearby Cozumel? It almost seems like entrapment.
DGAC: you need to respect our laws.
Pilot: Could you please publish a NOTAM warning pilots not to land at Cancun when coming from the South; and instruct DGAC officials on the ground at Cancun who are clearly monitoring traffic from the south to remind small GA aircraft by radio that they need to land at Cozumel rather than clearing them to land at Cancun and then impounding their aircraft. That would be the reasonable and decent thing to do. Otherwise, your actions can only be construed as “entrapment.”
DGAC: you need to respect our laws. You are welcome to visit our offices in Mexico City to learn about our laws (this from the DGAC legal department)
Thinking about flying your plane to Mexico to spend your tourism dollars? Think again.
Follow up inquiries to Jim Parker at CaribbeanFlyingAdventures
Jim@CaribbeanFlyingAdventures.com
305-667-6282
For details go to:
www.CaribbeanFlyingAdventures.com
or contact Jim Parker
305-667-6282
Jim@CaribbeanFlyingAdventures.com
For Immediate Release
U.S. Pilot’s Aviation Nightmare in Mexico
Think Twice About Flying Your Plane to Mexico
Imagine flying your private plane to Mexico to spend tourism dollars, landing at Cancun, immediately having your plane impounded and then threatened with a fine of $5,000 to $25,000! And then sitting around for six days waiting to hear from Mexican Civil Aviation authorities (DGAC) if and when your plane can fly back to the U.S.! Not exactly an ideal vacation.
The “N” registered Cessna 210 with husband and wife on board was flying from a visit in Belize to meet friends in Cancun. The pilot had checked NOTAMS, filed a Mexican APIS notifying his arrival from Belize to Cancun, filed an international IFR flight plan which was accepted by Belize and Mexico, was in constant radio contact with Belize and Mexican ATC including Cancun approach and was cleared to land by the Cancun tower. As soon as he landed, Mexican civil aviation officials (DGAC) confiscated his aircraft.
Six days later, following a six hour meeting (in Spanish) with DGAC officials in Cancun (“how much do you want to pay?”) he received his first communication from DGAC headquarters in Mexico City - “You violated Mexican law. The fine is US$1,000.” On day seven it took over five hours to process the penalty payment and to receive clearance to depart.
The private pilot followed all the international civil aviation procedures for flying in the Caribbean. Mexico’s response can only be characterized as extreme. It was extreme in relation to a minor non-safety, non-security infraction of a regulation which the vast majority of private U.S. pilots could not find even if they were told it existed. It was extreme given the pilot’s APIS notification of arrival, successful filing of an international flight plan and clearance to land by Mexican civil aviation who were clearly aware that he was arriving from Belize. His plane was immediately impounded as soon as he landed. His aircraft was refused takeoff clearance for an entire week waiting for the DGAC legal department to make a simple decision about his status. He was fined US$1,000. Attempts to reason with Civil Aviation officials in Mexico city was fruitless. Could this really happen in today’s world? The answer is “yes.”
According to Caribbean Flying Adventures, the leading pilot’s guide for the Caribbean, “Other Caribbean destinations aggressively compete for U.S. private aviation tourism dollars. Not so Mexican Civil Aviation authorities. Their extreme response to this completely unintentional and minor infraction will cause thousands of U.S. private pilots to think twice about flying their planes to Mexico.”
Lesson learned? Think seriously about Flying your private aircraft to Mexico. There could be other hidden regulations that will earn you an involuntary week in Mexico accompanied by fines of up to $25,000 depending on your negotiating skills. It should also be mentioned that there were several hints about paying local DGAC officials to make the whole thing go away. The pilot was concerned that a bribe might land him in even more trouble and he refused to pay. Mistake? That’s not the point. This unacceptable treatment has no place in the 21st century world of international civil aviation. The good news is you will never be treated like this anywhere else in the entire Caribbean. Only in Mexico. For more details about this aviation nightmare, read on.
DGAC: You violated our laws. The company should have known better.
Pilot: We’re not a company. I am a private pilot in a small single engine aircraft and would not have a clue where to find Mexican regulations and would not understand them even if I found them since I do not speak Spanish. Like thousands of other private pilots, I assumed that all I needed to know would be available in English in the NOTAMS, or in response to my APIS submission, or in acceptance or rejection of my flight plan or as directed by ATC.
DGAC: Belize should have never accepted your flight plan. It’s their fault.
Pilot: Mexico accepted our flight plan also. Why did Cancun tower clear me to land?
DGAC: Our ATC does not know who has or does not have a permit to land in Cancun.
Pilot: But your DGAC officials on the ground at Cancun obviously knew that I was arriving from Belize and impounded my plan as soon as I landed. Why could they have not given Cancun approach or Cancun tower a heads up to warn us to land at nearby Cozumel? It almost seems like entrapment.
DGAC: you need to respect our laws.
Pilot: Could you please publish a NOTAM warning pilots not to land at Cancun when coming from the South; and instruct DGAC officials on the ground at Cancun who are clearly monitoring traffic from the south to remind small GA aircraft by radio that they need to land at Cozumel rather than clearing them to land at Cancun and then impounding their aircraft. That would be the reasonable and decent thing to do. Otherwise, your actions can only be construed as “entrapment.”
DGAC: you need to respect our laws. You are welcome to visit our offices in Mexico City to learn about our laws (this from the DGAC legal department)
Thinking about flying your plane to Mexico to spend your tourism dollars? Think again.
Follow up inquiries to Jim Parker at CaribbeanFlyingAdventures
Jim@CaribbeanFlyingAdventures.com
305-667-6282
For details go to:
www.CaribbeanFlyingAdventures.com
or contact Jim Parker
305-667-6282
Jim@CaribbeanFlyingAdventures.com