"We're right; they're wrong"
Isn't that the Cliff Notes version of every legal brief ever written?
Except in this situation, the written law and precedents all say "The FAA gets to decide what their own regulations mean unless you can prove their position is 'arbitrary, capricious, or otherwise not according to law'", and that's a very tough proof to make.Isn't that the Cliff Notes version of every legal brief ever written?
Then I guess most airlines aren't "commercial operations."Flights operated by expense-sharing pilots are not commercial operations because there is no profit.
Always helpful to comprehension is to take a sentence out of its 38-page context. Or even its 2-sentence context.Then I guess most airlines aren't "commercial operations."
In any event, the FAA has always taken the position that intent to make a profit is irrelevant when examining issues of "compensation". Of course, that only affects the pilots involved -- Flytenow clearly intends to be a business/"commercial activity", and they're matching pilots with passengers and handling the money.
And there's definitely no law against receiving compensation for eating dinner without a commercial eating license.
But all that aside, I've always felt that there was nothing wrong with running the ride board, and that it was only the pilots who were in violation of the FAR's. What I think changes this one is that Flytenow is getting a piece of the action, although I agree with them that this isn't "common carriage", mainly for the reason they stated (right to refuse carriage).
Then I guess most airlines aren't "commercial operations."
Please name the airline that is running without the the intent of making a profit.
Next, the FAA makes perhaps the most astonishing argument by seeming to assert that only “friends and acquaintances” may share expenses under the Expense-Sharing Rule, while “strangers” may not. This assertion is completely arbitrary and unsupported by the plain language of 14 C.F.R. § 61.113(c), decades of precedent, and the record in this case. Nothing in either the language of the Expense-Sharing Rule or the regulatory history of that provision even remotely suggests that individuals must have a preexisting friendship or relationship in order to share flight expenses. This “affinity” distinction also raises several questions, namely:
Is it true that two Flytenow members could use Flytenow’s communications platform to share expenses if they had a preexisting relationship, while members who had no such relationship would be prohibited from doing so?
Will the FAA now be responsible for determining whether or not people are “friends or acquaintances” when they share expenses?
Cliff Notes Version:
FlyteNow: Words mean things!! Look them up in the dictionary!!
FAA: Words mean what we say they mean! Screw your dictionary!!
Please name the airline that is running without the the intent of making a profit.
The brief doesn't use the word "intent", and neither did I. In any event, it was a joke. Sorry for omitting the smiley.
OTOH, in another recent case, involving a letter threatening enforcement action, the US Court of Appeals kicked it out for that reason.The FAA actually argued in a different court case that a "chief counsel opinion letter" is in fact a "final agency order". This is probably why Flytenow is appealing a final agency order referring to the Chief counsel opinion letter.
The brief doesn't use the word "intent", and neither did I. In any event, it was a joke. Sorry for omitting the smiley.
Expense-sharing pilots do not operate a business. “To bring a person therefore within the description of a common carrier.... he must hold himself out as ready to engage in the transportation of goods for hire as a business and not as a casual occupation.”CARRIER, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (emphasis added) (internal citations omitted).
Expense-sharing pilots have exactly zero indicia of engaging in a business or commercial activity; indeed, such pursuit would be self-defeating.
They are merely taking unprofitable flights they have a clear right under their license to take and that they otherwise would have taken. See United States v. Contract Steel Carriers,Inc., 350 U.S. 409, 411-12 (1956) (“We hold also that the fact that appellee has actively solicited business within the bounds of his license does not support a finding that it was ‘holding itself out to the general public.’”) If the FAA’s interpretation of expense-sharing pilots as common carriers is correct, then expense-sharing pilots would be the only common carriers in history to not seek commercial profit from their operations.
First time EASA actually got anything right...
The "safety" agency says that you can fly for free with a private pilot safely but if there is compensation it is not safe anymore???
Why do you think the FAA wants to win? If a court orders them to shed responsibility, that is less work they have to do. The only question is, what does the insurance industry want? That is what will happen.
I never heard of this company, or ever heard of this service until I read this thread.
I really like the concept, and I hope they prevail. That said, I do think they should make it a bit more clear that you may be flying with a guy who has minimal experience and qualifications. If third class medical reform passes, that should also be made clear. I went to the website, and if I was an aviation novice I may not grasp those details.
So, in short, I like it a lot, but I do think it should be made absolutely clear that the pilot may have minimal training, essentially zero experience and has not taken a physical (if reform passes).
I say this because like it or not, people see this in the internet, know it will cost them money, and therefor think of it as a commercial operation.
Yeah, I know it says in places that you can't pay the pilot because it's not commercial blah blah blah.... It needs to be more clear IMO, unless I missed it sonewhere.
So you're saying the standards that the FAA set for a pilot certificate (which includes the ability to carry any passenger you feel like carrying) aren't good enough?
So you're saying the standards that the FAA set for a pilot certificate (which includes the ability to carry any passenger you feel like carrying) aren't good enough?
Plenty good for private ops, AND plenty good to carry passengers. Not good enough if the passengers are under the impression they are booking a commercial flight.
The standards of a private pilot are pretty low, passengers beware.
Once the average PP receives his license, he is no longer required to get any formal or recurrent training, only the Flight Review which he can't fail. And we all know of flight reviews that are given at the airport cafe or on a weekend hamburger run.
Throw in an Instrument rating and now we have a person that can take you into the clouds and hard IFR and his recency of experience is on the "honor system" and again, he doesn't ever have to demonstrate ability for the rating ever again.
There's a distinct reason for Part 119.
There are lots of PP's that I wouldn't get in a plane with.
Who went after FlyteNow? Not the FAA. FyteNow asked the FAA a question. The FAA answered it. FlyteNow didn't like the answer.They went after FlyteNow first instead of pilot enforcement, in a Hail Mary of laziness, hoping they'd get tossed a bone by a judge.