Give Me A
Break...
FAA Says
"NO"
Agency Affirms AOPA
Argument Against Anti-Aviation Antagonists
The
aviation industry has won a small battle against those who would see
aviation curtailed and harmed for their own selfish interests.
The FAA
has turned down a petition from a Massachusetts anti-noise group to
require aircraft owners to put two-foot-high N numbers under their
wings. As AOPA had argued in its comments on the petition, the FAA said
the issue had been debated, studied, and decided years ago — the current
12-inch-high numbers on the fuselage are sufficient.
The FAA
concurred with AOPA's comments that the issue had been addressed years
ago and the current 12-inch numbers are appropriate. In its denial
letter to William Burgoyne of the group Stop The Noise, the FAA said,
"In considering the change to the 12-inch numbers [on the fuselage], the
FAA worked extensively with law enforcement agencies, FAA field
inspectors, the U.S. Customs Service, the U.S. Department of Defense,
the FAA Air Traffic Service, and private citizens and citizen groups
with concerns similar to those of your organization. Those groups agreed
with the FAA that it was important to make the registration marks more
visible. After extensive deliberation, the FAA decided on the 12-inch
criteria."
"Stop
The Noise has shown that it's willing to sue pilots even if the pilots
are operating in full accordance with regulations," said AOPA Director
of Regulatory and Certification Policy Luis Gutierrez. "This petition
was just a thinly veiled attempt to make it easier for the group to go
after other pilots."
AOPA has
offered financial help to the four pilots that Stop the Noise has
already sued and has provided significant legal research to aid in their
defense. The cases against the pilots have not yet gone to trial.
www.aopa.org
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