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IAOPA Tackles
Universal Issues
April 27 -
Frederick, Maryland USA - The International Council of Aircraft Owner
and Pilot Associations has just concluded its 22nd biennial World
Assembly in Toulouse, France, determined to protect general aviation and
aerial work (GA/AW) from overzealous security precautions and excessive
costs.
"The issues pilots face are universal," said IAOPA President Phil Boyer.
"IAOPA was formed to give us all a more forceful voice in addressing
those issues, through it's official status with ICAO (the International
Civil
Aviation Organization)."
The 22nd World Assembly got underway Tuesday evening with a reception
for Boyer and the delegates hosted by the Mayor of Toulouse at the city
hall, known as "le Capitole." The hard work began on
Wednesday. Delegates heard from Patrick Goudou of the European Aviation
Safety Agency, George Firican, Regional Air Traffic Manager for the
International Civil Aviation Organization; later in the week
from Michel Vachenheim, the head of France's Direction Générale de
l'Aviation Civile (FAA Administrator Marion Blakey's French
counterpart).
Panel discussions covered a wide range of topics of worldwide interest.
In one entitled "Improving the Image of General Aviation," Boyer, in his
role as president of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association in the
United States, presented the GA Serving America program, which uses a
world-class Website (GAservingAmerica.org) and other materials to
explain to policy makers and the non-flying public about the many facets
and benefits of general aviation. In a session on "Attracting and
Keeping Members," He also
explained AOPA's role in Be A Pilot (beapilot.com), the industry-wide
effort to interest more people in learning to fly. During another
discussion, Boyer addressed the single most important issue to U.S.
members - "Saving and Preserving Airports." He gave a step-by-step
explanation of how AOPA and local pilots' organizations were able to
save Albert Whitted Airport in St. Petersburg, Florida. And he answered
questions about the demise of Chicago's lakefront airport, Merrill C.
Meigs Field. Delegates rightly viewed the overnight destruction of Meigs
as a worldwide "wake-up call" about what can happen to a valuable
landing facility.
Other panel discussions addressed airspace issues - primarily in Europe
but providing a warning of what may be in store for U.S. airspace;
newtechnology, in which U.S. AOPA Sr. Director of Advanced Technology
Randy Kenagy discussed the use of automatic dependent surveillance -
broadcast (ADS-B), a technology that, among other things, provides
pilots with air traffic information in the cockpit; controlling the cost
of flying; and general aviation security.
The IAOPA World Assembly brings together the leadership and delegates
from many of the 60 Aircraft Owner and Pilot Associations around the
world. This year's gathering was hosted by AOPA-France (aopa-fr.org) in
Toulouse, home of Airbus. European AOPAs were heavily represented, but
delegates from as
far away as Russia, Brazil, Japan, and the Philippines also attended, as
did representatives from two AOPAs that have joined the international
council within the past six months - AOPA-Korea and AOPA-Lebanon.
For the first time in its history, IAOPA deliberately concluded its
business early so that AOPA-France could host a fly-in at Toulouse
Blagnac Airport. IAOPA participants had the opportunity to visit
the Airbus production line, see a mock-up of the Airbus 380, and fly an
Airbus full-motion simulator. During the fly-in, Boyer hosted a seminar
on "General Aviation in the United States," while AOPA Air Safety
Foundation Executive Director Bruce Landsberg led a safety seminar on
the hazards involved in "Maneuvering Flight." John and Martha King,
leaders in aviation education in the United States, held a seminar on
"Practical Risk Management for Pilots," and other speakers representing
manufacturers and the French government's aviation weather service,
METEO FRANCE, addressed visitors.
IAOPA represents the interests of more than 470,000 pilots and aircraft
owners in 60 countries. Formed in 1962, IAOPA is dedicated to promoting
the peaceful uses of general aviation and aerial work worldwide. The
organization gives AOPA members in the United States and around the
world very important official recognition at the International Civil
Aviation Organization (ICAO), the governing body for global aviation.
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