The Weekly of Business Aviation

Staff
Named regional program director, Florida and Alabama, for CJ Systems Aviation Group. Spears will serve as a local liaison for the company's Critical Care Transport community-based programs in Florida and Alabama. He has served as a paramedic and an air medical dispatcher and recently became an attorney.

Staff
A Connecticut state legislator has authored a bill that would attempt to stem the loss of any more privately owned, public-use airports to suburban residential development in the Constitution State.

Staff
Appointed executive vice president for Airlines Americas for Rolls-Royce. Cyr formerly was senior vice president of sales for the Rolls-Royce European Business unit. He joined Rolls-Royce in 2002 after holding senior positions with Goodrich and Pratt & Whitney. In his new position Cyr is responsible for sales, customer service and commercial activities in North, South and Central America.

Staff
Model ERJ 170 airplanes [Docket No. FAA-2006-25419; Directorate Identifier 2006-NM-055-AD] - Revises an earlier proposal for an AD that would have required replacing the mini-latches on certain lavatory waste compartment doors with new, stronger latches, and other specified actions. The original proposal resulted from reports of certain lavatory waste compartment doors opening during flight due to movement of the waste compartment during takeoff, because the mini-latches installed on the doors of those compartments lose their strength over time.

Staff
Named assistant general manager of Wilson Air Center's Charlotte, N.C. location. He has more than 30 years of aviation experience and previously served as general manager for Southern Jet in Raleigh, N.C.

Staff
F406 Airplanes [Docket No. FAA-2006-26694; Directorate Identifier 2006-CE-91-AD; Amendment 39-14899; AD 2007-02-12] - Requires repetitive inspections and installation of a modified pulley bracket. This AD results from mandatory continuing airworthiness information (MCAI) issued by the aviation authority of France that cited reports of cracks found in the rudder pulley bracket, P/N 6015511-1. About seven U.S.-registered aircraft are affected, at an estimated cost for the inspection of $80 per airplane, or $560 for the fleet.

Staff
Industry Observers expressed differing views last week about the pending departure of Russ Chew as chief operating officer of FAA's Air Traffic Organization. One man said the loss of Chew will be a "disaster" for the effort to develop a next-generation air traffic control system, while another predicted that the organization and industry working groups established under his watch will continue their work without significant disruption.

Staff
February 15-17 - Women in Aviation International Conference, Orlando, Fla. Contact Connie Lawrence, WAI, (937) 839-4647. March 1-3 - Helicopter Association International, Heli-Expo 2007 Conference & Exhibition, Orlando, Fla. Contact Marilyn McKinnis at (703) 683-4646, fax: (703) 683-0341. March 7 - Coping With Crisis 101-Managing an Aviation Disaster, Hilton Garden Inn, Nashville Metro Airport, Nashville, Tenn. Register at www.thecommunicationsworkshop.com

Staff
Named accessory technical representative for Duncan Aviation in Lincoln, Neb. A Duncan employee since April 1997, Cable began his career there as a technician on the hydraulic team. Since then Cable has cross-trained on five teams within the accessory shop, served as a crew and team leader and is both a master technician and a qualified inspector. In his new post he will provide customer technical support and troubleshooting, as well as training production and customer service employees.

Staff
Model Mystere-Falcon 50 and 900, and Falcon 900EX airplanes; and Model Falcon 2000 and Falcon 2000EX airplanes [Docket No. FAA-2006-25988; Directorate Identifier 2006-NM-113-AD; Amendment 39-14884; AD 2007-01-12] - Requires an inspection of the identification plates of the outboard slats to determine the type of identification plates and the part numbers.

Staff
FAA Chief Operating Officer Russell Chew believes now is as good a time as any for him to leave the agency, since the Air Traffic Organization he heads is about to enter a new phase that will require long-term leadership continuity. Chew told FAA senior officials that he will resign at monthend to take a job in the aviation industry. Chew told BA affiliate Aviation Daily that when he took the COO job in 2003, he promised FAA Administrator Marion Blakey he would stay for at least three years, and he has more than fulfilled that pledge.

Staff
The Kestrel, a new single-turboprop business aircraft, made its debut at the Middle East Business Aviation (MEBA) exhibition at Dubai, U.A.E. at the end of January. Developers have targeted 2009 to achieve Part 23 certification of the $2.5 million aircraft. The prototype's appearance at MEBA was sponsored by the Gulf Aircraft Partnership, formed by the Gulf Aircraft Maintenance Company (GAMCO) of Abu Dhabi and Farnborough Aircraft Corp. Ltd. (FACL) of the U.K.

Staff
The Federal Aviation Administration Tuesday is slated to publish long-anticipated rules that will toughen the standards for air tour and sightseeing operators. The rules were written in part at the urging of the National Transportation Safety Board, which had undertaken a special investigation of air tour safety after a series of accidents. NTSB had released six recommendations for improving air tour safety, and FAA officials believe the new rules will meet or exceed all of them except one - to implement national standards by the end of 1995.

Kerry Lynch
Commercial air tours and sightseeing operators will have to meet new requirements under a series of rules the Federal Aviation Administration released last week that culminated a 17-year effort to strengthen air tour standards. The original air tour proposal was among the agency's most controversial rulemakings in recent years, generating more than 2,300 comments. FAA twice extended the comment period, held two public hearings and a two-week virtual public meeting on the Internet.

Staff
The Bush Administration wants to recover "most of the costs of air traffic services though user fees," but budget documents released last week contained few details because FAA and DOT officials still were trying to reach agreement with Office of Management and Budget executives on what those fees will include.

Dave Collogan
Bryan T. Moss, who has spent nearly 40 years selling high-end business jets and overseeing companies that make them, will be succeeded in April as the top executive at Gulfstream Aerospace by Joseph T. Lombardo.

Staff
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) managed, without too much trouble, to push through a ban on members of Congress traveling on corporate aircraft, but she encountered a lot of turbulence last week about her own travel arrangements. Since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the Speaker of the House, who is second in the line of succession for the presidency, has been authorized to travel on Air Force aircraft to ensure the speaker's safety and security.

Staff
Appointed regional program director, Kentucky for CJ Systems Aviation Group. Walter will oversee the company's community-based programs in Kentucky, including STATCARE in Louisville, MedFlight in Ashland and MedFlight in Pikeville. He was paramedic for 30 years and a flight paramedic for 17 years. He also is past president of the International Association of Flight Paramedics.

Staff
Airscooter Corp. of Las Vegas, Nev. said it won a second U.S. patent for its AeroTwin four-stroke piston aircraft engine. The latest patent includes 23 claims focusing on the company's lightweight, one-piece head/cylinder design and related circulation and cooling methods. The AeroTwin engine produces 65 horsepower at 4,200 rpm and is designed for use in small sport aircraft. The company also said it has sold out and discontinued its inventory of hobby models and now focuses its resources on the AeroTwin engine, the UAV and AirScooter segments of the market.

Staff
Honda Aircraft Company has decided to permanently set up shop in Greensboro, N.C., unveiling plans to build a new 215,000-square-foot headquarters facility and hangar at Piedmont Triad International Airport (PTI). During a press conference Friday, Michimasa Fujino, president and chief executive of Honda Aircraft, also said Honda plans to build a manufacturing plant for the HondaJet at PTI, but added that the size, timetable, and costs are still being hashed out.

Premier Electric Aviation

Staff
General Dynamics named Joseph Lombardo to take over from Bryan Moss as president of Gulfstream Aerospace, replacing a sales and marketing veteran with a man who has focused on aircraft manufacturing and production for most of his career. See article below.

Staff
The fiscal 2008 budget released last week calls for user fees, but FAA and DOT officials said last week they were still awaiting final approval of those fees by the Office of Management and Budget. FAA is planning to release more detailed information this week when FAA Administrator Marion Blakey is scheduled to appear at congressional hearings Wednesday and Thursday. See article below.

Staff
CESSNA AIRCRAFT delivered its 1,000th CitationJet series business jet, a CJ2+, to Colin Bailey, founder and CEO of Xpressdocs, a Fort Worth, Texas-based company. The first CitationJet was certified Oct. 16, 1992. The CJ family includes three current production models, the CJ1+, CJ2+ and CJ3, with the CJ4 in development.

Staff
ART WEGNER and Charles Chadwell were named to the board of directors of B/E Aerospace, the Wellington, Fla. manufacturer of aircraft cabin interior products. Wegner retired as chairman of Raytheon Aircraft Company in 2000. Chadwell spent 37 years with General Electric, retiring in 2002 after serving as vice president and general manager of commercial engine operations for GE Aircraft Engines.