You didn't check all available information.
Check the 5010 data. Oh yeah, there's more info that's not just in the AF/D.
06070.*AIAA96ULTRALIGHT ACTIVITY DISCOURAGED-RDO RQRD.
Good grief....
(I didn't check NOTAMS, either, but KIOW isn't high on my gotta go soon list)
Pretensions of granduer, perhaps?
Yeah, the only reason I checked IOW is cause Jay said we should fly out there for lunch. If that is legalling binding, can I make it "required" that all high wings have to have "low wings rule" stickers on the tail to land at 6Y9?
Makes me want to leave the handheld at home, fly there, land, then gleefully await the airport radio cops arrival.
http://www.pilotsofamerica.com/forum/showthread.php?t=27612KIOW - class G airport. Radio REQUIRED for operations?
Same here. I also want to go back to HII and fly 10 mile legs.
You didn't check all available information.
Check the 5010 data. Oh yeah, there's more info that's not just in the AF/D.
06070.*AIAA96ULTRALIGHT ACTIVITY DISCOURAGED-RDO RQRD.
Makes me want to leave the handheld at home, fly there, land, then gleefully await the airport radio cops arrival.
Says "RDO RQRD", not that you have to turn it on...keep your hand-held in your flight bag!
KIOW - class G airport. Radio REQUIRED for operations?
FAA - 5010 airport information, also shows up on airnav and skyvector.
I'd say that's just pure B.S. I don't think a public airport can legally supercede FAA rules WRT radio communication. Especially not one that has accepted federal funding -- and lately KIOW has accepted a TON of ObamaBux. (We've got two brand-new runways out of it.)
In 13 years of operating on this field I know of no one who has ever had a problem with NORDO traffic (well, other than our run-ins with crop dusters in '08, whom we eventually chased off the airport for repeated unsafe operations...) nor have I EVER heard anyone mention this so-called rule.
I wonder how we can get that removed? Is that something our airport manager sends in?
Manager should be able to send that information in. Though, the FAA is notoriously slow to update info. The FAA still shows us at 2000 feet even though the information was submitted to them in January 2009 to change it to 2600. And I've been trying to get them to change the lat/long which is wrong for the past 5 years. In other words, the FAA sucks and good luck.
They own the airport, they make the rules. No FAA rule says they can't as long as it's safety-driven and not otherwise discriminatory.
They own the airport, they make the rules. No FAA rule says they can't as long as it's safety-driven and not otherwise discriminatory.
Do you have any case law that would support that?They own the airport, they make the rules. No FAA rule says they can't as long as it's safety-driven and not otherwise discriminatory.
Do you have any case law that would support that?
It seems that if this was truly the case anyone could make a rule and as long as they could base it on data that supports their safety claim their rule would trump federal regulations.
Do you have any case law that would support that?
How 'bout a polite letter to your Senator?The FAA still shows us at 2000 feet even though the information was submitted to them in January 2009 to change it to 2600. And I've been trying to get them to change the lat/long which is wrong for the past 5 years.
It is what? Safety-related? Not hard to make that case, and once they do, the FAA rules on airports allow it unless you can show it's "arbitrary or capricious," and I don't think you can do that.But it is.
Not exactly. Local restrictions can be stricter than Federal when certain criteria are met, but they cannot make legal that which Federal law prohibits in a Federally pre-empted area (e.g., they can't issue their own pilot certificates allowing non-FAA certificated pilots to fly when Federal law prohibits such flight), or prohibit that which Federal law requires (e.g., banning low altitude flight required by a SIAP). Federal law only allows aircraft to operate without radios -- it does not require it. Therefore, an airport can, if their action can be shown to be safety-related and neither arbitrary nor capricious, prohibit that which the FAA allows (but does not require), i.e., operations without a radio. Likewise, states can require state registration (but not certification) of pilots and aircraft based in that state even though it's not a Federal requirement.Hunh? Last I checked, Fed law trumps local.
I was surprised when I lived in Idaho that pilot registration was required. It apparently still is.Likewise, states can require state registration (but not certification) of pilots and aircraft based in that state even though it's not a Federal requirement.
http://itd.idaho.gov/aero/airmen-aircraft/airmen-aircraft%20reg.htm#Pilot_RegistrationPilot Registration--Fees. Subject to the limitation of subsections (c) and (d) of this section, the department is authorized to require that every individual who pilots an aircraft within this state is to register with the department and to renew such registration every other year thereafter in which he/she pilots an aircraft within this state. The department may charge for each such registration, and for each biennial renewal thereof, a fee of twelve dollars ($12.00). Such income shall be used for search and rescue of lost aircraft and airmen, which said search and rescue shall be under the direction and supervision of the director of the department.
I was surprised when I lived in Idaho that pilot registration was required. It apparently still is.
http://itd.idaho.gov/aero/airmen-aircraft/airmen-aircraft reg.htm#Pilot_Registration
Required in IL, too. $10 biennially for pilots. Others here in IL can tell you the plane registration fee; I don't know it, but I know there is one.I was surprised when I lived in Idaho that pilot registration was required. It apparently still is.
http://itd.idaho.gov/aero/airmen-aircraft/airmen-aircraft%20reg.htm#Pilot_Registration
Discriminatory.It is what?
Not exactly. Local restrictions can be stricter than Federal when certain criteria are met, but they cannot make legal that which Federal law prohibits in a Federally pre-empted area (e.g., they can't issue their own pilot certificates allowing non-FAA certificated pilots to fly when Federal law prohibits such flight), or prohibit that which Federal law requires (e.g., banning low altitude flight required by a SIAP). Federal law only allows aircraft to operate without radios -- it does not require it. Therefore, an airport can, if their action can be shown to be safety-related and neither arbitrary nor capricious, prohibit that which the FAA allows (but does not require), i.e., operations without a radio. Likewise, states can require state registration (but not certification) of pilots and aircraft based in that state even though it's not a Federal requirement.
Ron is right guys - remember, the FARs are written to prohibit acts, not to allow them (I can't think of any exceptions)....
Our club got a letter directed at me once after a very late arrival and an intrepid do-right monitoring the CTAF over the internet or with a scanner.
Which is why you use some elses N number. Preferably someone on the other side of the country...
(Just kidding)