Rushie
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Rushie
another day in the life of PoA?
No but you're close! It's C******g T*************m. I dasn't spell it out for the very closeness of your guess!
another day in the life of PoA?
Ha! My accompanying attorney can relate that to the fed.no worries.....just have a compliant attitude and all will be well.
Exactly how does certified mail confirm that they are who they say they are? Give me your address. I'll be happy to send someone a verified letter claiming it is from you.My point is that it was a phone call from a random individual and a random email. There’s nothing about either a phone call or an email which can confirm that they are, in fact, originating from the FAA. Both the phone call and the email could be from someone trying to yank 6PC’s chain. The contact should be by certified mail. To me it could be like all these spam phone calls purportedly from the IRS.
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Exactly how does certified mail confirm that they are who they say they are? Give me your address. I'll be happy to send someone a verified letter claiming it is from you.
registered mail has official stamping on the item & leaves a paper trail of a delivery to a house,Exactly how does certified mail confirm that they are who they say they are? Give me your address. I'll be happy to send someone a verified letter claiming it is from you.
It's unlikely phishers and scammers will go to the trouble and expense of sending written, certified mail en masse. On the other hand it's probably also unlikely they'll pretend to be the FAA and target pilots but that's just because we're a tiny portion of people. Still, it's the principle of the thing. I think if I got a written certified letter from the FAA I would still look up the number independently before responding. I've gotten into the habit of doing that with every unsolicited contact I receive.
Registered mail is more expensive than certified mail.registered mail has official stamping on the item & leaves a paper trail of a delivery to a house,
a person receiving a registered letter chooses whether to sign (or not) & accept it to begin with & not sure if a postie requires id beforehand, could just be are u so & so
then if there is a signature, including all of the above, an easy match would pretty much confirm a delivery to the right person
billt460 5 years ago
Perhaps the greatest test pilot / air show performer that ever lived, and our government says he's "unsafe" to fly. Why am I not surprised?
you are joking rt? right? right? .... get a footnote before someone send this to FAAI have a brilliant plan:
Step 1) fraudulently get pilots to show me their log books
Step 2) ???
Step 3) profit!
??? uhmm, no kidding.. guess its called due process in the faa style worldi can't talk to you (..unless)
A dude says "This is Ad*m H*nderson (that could be any name) from the North Texas FSDO"
My first thought is that @EdFred is jacking with me.
I go "sure dude! what's up?"
He says "I can't talk to you. I need to send you an email, you need to respond that you have received and understand it and then you can call me back and we can talk"[/QUOTE]
I do too.It's unlikely phishers and scammers will go to the trouble and expense of sending written, certified mail en masse. On the other hand it's probably also unlikely they'll pretend to be the FAA and target pilots but that's just because we're a tiny portion of people. Still, it's the principle of the thing. I think if I got a written certified letter from the FAA I would still look up the number independently before responding. I've gotten into the habit of doing that with every unsolicited contact I receive.
That confirms the recipient. He said he was concerned about verifying the sender.registered mail has official stamping on the item & leaves a paper trail of a delivery to a house,
a person receiving a registered letter chooses whether to sign (or not) & accept it to begin with & not sure if a postie requires id beforehand, but doubt it, prob just are u so & so
then if there is a signature, including all of the above, an easy match would pretty much confirm a delivery to the right person
The FAA inspectors do not have a sense of humor that they are aware of.I guess Bryan needs a disclaimer for his Facebook posts similar to the one in the video in the other thread:
View attachment 68400
Why do they want my logbooks? What currency requirements are there for facebook posts?
I could see if they saw a video of me flying through a cloud or something but this is NOT aviation related at all.
I will go to the FSDO next week and I will play nice but this is ********
Aside from the fact that perhaps they have a desire for a government retirement and to be home on the weekends, aviation safety inspectors aren't really much different from anyone else working in the the aviation industry. Their tolerance for BS might be slightly higher due to the nature of the job, but they know what is a legitimate safety issue and what just needs to be closed out, and will do so in the most efficient way possible. The FAA philosophy of compliance and risk-based oversight and enforcement supports this from the top up; something that did not exist in the dark Bob Hoover days. What the FAA ( and the inspector) cannot do is close out a complaint without at least speaking to the pilot in question. From FAA order 8900.1, "It is FAA policy to respond to all complaints that come to the attention of the Flight Standards Service, whether by mail, email, phone, or in person."
While Bryan may have to meet up with the inspector, I would expect it to be quick and painless. Believe it or not, many ASIs are active GA folks and read web forums and watch youtube videos with a sense of humor like the rest of y'all. While folks on the front lines tend to deal with the worst of the worst because of the nature of their work investigating complaints, accidents, etc., FAA folks laugh at Bryan's stuff just like you do.
Aside from that Mrs. Lincoln, how did you like the play?
I'm sure you're right, they are normal people like the rest of us. But a federal pension with benefits is a HUGE incentive to make sure you justify the continuation of your position, wouldn't you think? I'm not saying Mr. H*nderson specifically would beef up this investigation but he said himself if Bryan remembered the conversation verbatim: "I get it but My job is to investigate these things and if I don't investigate it, there is no need for me to have a job". Post #47
So either Mr. H*nderson is confessing to bias because of personal interest, or he is joking. If he has no sense of humor wrt Bryan's joking then I must assume the former.
By all accounts, the FSDOs are understaffed with inspectors (and plenty of open ASI positions across the country on USAjobs.gov if you're interested). There's no shortage of work to be done and no need to justify his position. There is an internal quality management system within flight standards that ensures inspectors are doing what they're supposed to be doing. If person 'A' provides evidence that person 'B' was violating the regs, the inspector is obligated to follow up with person 'B' and document that the allegation was not substantiated. Also, we don't know if person 'A' added to the story beyond what was posted online. Here's the thing, once the report goes into the ASI's queue, there's no latitude to close with no action (unless it's a situation in which person 'B' cannot be identified). Whoever processed the original complaint (we don't know if that came from the safety hotline or went directly to the FSDO) took the comment at face value, without knowing Bryan's sarcasm and humor, as there's nothing in the statement that textually says it was a joke.
No shortage of work. . .no latitude. . .might be related to bad process, like a policy to investigate all complaints, even ones obviously, clearly, ridiculous. Working hard isn't the same as working smart - you can put a lot of energy into tasks that are very low value. I believe you when you say ASIs are busy - but harbor deep skepticism about the necessity of some of the work they are required to do.By all accounts, the FSDOs are understaffed with inspectors (and plenty of open ASI positions across the country on USAjobs.gov if you're interested). There's no shortage of work to be done and no need to justify his position. There is an internal quality management system within flight standards that ensures inspectors are doing what they're supposed to be doing. If person 'A' provides evidence that person 'B' was violating the regs, the inspector is obligated to follow up with person 'B' and document that the allegation was not substantiated. Also, we don't know if person 'A' added to the story beyond what was posted online. Here's the thing, once the report goes into the ASI's queue, there's no latitude to close with no action (unless it's a situation in which person 'B' cannot be identified). Whoever processed the original complaint (we don't know if that came from the safety hotline or went directly to the FSDO) took the comment at face value, without knowing Bryan's sarcasm and humor, as there's nothing in the statement that textually says it was a joke.
No shortage of work. . .no latitude. . .might be related to bad process, like a policy to investigate all complaints, even ones obviously, clearly, ridiculous. Working hard isn't the same as working smart - you can put a lot of energy into tasks that are very low value. I believe you when you say ASIs are busy - but harbor deep skepticism about the necessity of some of the work they are required to do.
on this one instance alone, that can be found all over the place,Someone posted on a Texas pilots facebook group asking "can someone recommend a local CFI to teach me to fly?"
I responded:
"I can teach you but I am not a CFI so it won't be legal which is why I have a cash only, under the table policy but I'm good "
Requesting information via FOIA isn't free, either. They charge based on what the use of the information is, then how long it takes to acquire the documents and how many pages there are. It depends what category your request falls into for the cost though. You also don't know how much it will be and you have to give them a threshold of what you're willing to spend. Then wait weeks for it to show up in the mail.For giggles when this is over file a FOIA request for the entire investigation file which will include the complaintant if the complaint was not Anon.
I haven't been keeping up with this thread. When is the day of the big meeting with the FAA?
Will you video it for a future edition of Just Plane Silly?
What "huge federal pension." Such certainly does not exist now, nor did it ever really exist. I was under the old CSRA and it was hardly huge. My wife retired under FERS and about the only thing it really gave us much was allowing us to continue to buy into federal health insurance plans (we're not Medicare age yet, so that was "moderately" large).But a federal pension with benefits is a HUGE incentive to make sure you justify the continuation of your position, wouldn't you think?
There was a guy in flying club I used to belong to who saw fit to line up with the runway edge lights instead of the center line lights when he was getting ready to take off one night. He clipped off a couple lights with the prop before he figured it out. The FAA wanted a sit down with him after that. He ended up with a certificate action not because he clipped the runway lights but because they found in his logbook where he had either logged flights while his medical was expired or while he was out of BFR (can't recall which). If the FAA is looking at your book, everything in there back to day one is far game.It seems that the FAA could just go on a fishing expedition with the OP's logbooks, and could find a violation that isn't addressed in the complaint.
No shortage of work. . .no latitude. . .might be related to bad process, like a policy to investigate all complaints, even ones obviously, clearly, ridiculous. Working hard isn't the same as working smart - you can put a lot of energy into tasks that are very low value. I believe you when you say ASIs are busy - but harbor deep skepticism about the necessity of some of the work they are required to do.
Bashing the FAA also isn't the same as bashing the people there, especially the ones at the delivery end. FAA is deeply flawed, probably on the left side of the bell curve of guv orgs; structure right out the 60s, multi-layered and redundant management, uncoordinated efforts - the people working there are trapped in that morass. And we have to deal with it, too.
What "huge federal pension." Such certainly does not exist now, nor did it ever really exist. I was under the old CSRA and it was hardly huge. My wife retired under FERS and about the only thing it really gave us much was allowing us to continue to buy into federal health insurance plans (we're not Medicare age yet, so that was "moderately" large).
Fed pensions aren't all that great these days. Around here, for the same job, folks try to get into the county and city systems rather than the feds. Fed is good if you are law enforcement, retire early and double-dip.
Correct me if I misunderstand. A Federal pension pays for life. So if it's only say $40,000 a year which doesn't sound big, you live 30 years that's $1,200,000. That's not crumbs to a lot of people.
Under the FERS system, retirement comes from three sources- social security (like everyone else), your TSP (basically a 401K that you pay into with an employer match), and a pension. The pension is relatively small- 1% of your high three for each year of service. So if you worked for 30 years and made a max of $100k for three years, your pension would be $30k. I'm not sure if that adjusts for inflation but I don't think so.Correct me if I misunderstand. A Federal pension pays for life. So if it's only say $40,000 a year which doesn't sound big, you live 30 years that's $1,200,000. That's not crumbs to a lot of people.
Under the FERS system, retirement comes from three sources- social security (like everyone else), your TSP (basically a 401K that you pay into with an employer match), and a pension. The pension is relatively small- 1% of your high three for each year of service. So if you worked for 30 years and made a max of $100k for three years, your pension would be $30k. I'm not sure if that adjusts for inflation but I don't think so.
This system seems to work best for former career military who can count military service as part of their total federal service, and double dip on retirement plans.
For the rest of us, it's not bad, but it's not the same juicy retirement that feds from the 80s enjoy.