The Weekly of Business Aviation

Staff
NEL SANDERS, senior manager of tax issues for the National Business Aviation Association, accepted a position with Conklin&De Decker Associates, Inc., the Orleans, Mass.-based aviation consulting firm. Sanders, who has been with NBAA for the past 12 years, will begin dealing with tax, financing and accounting issues for the consulting group Nov. 1, working from her home in the Washington, D.C. area.

Staff
MAJOR AIRLINES represented by the Air Transport Association filed their new "Customer First" programs with the Transportation Department last week, the latest step in an effort to fend off new congressional mandates to improve scheduled airline service. The new programs, which are scheduled to be fully implemented by Dec.

Staff
Docket No.: 29598 Section of the FAR Affected: 14 CFR 25.571(b) and 25.671(c)(1) Description of Relief Sought/Disposition: To allow the McDonnell Douglas Corporation, now a wholly owned subsidiary of The Boeing Com-pany, three years to analyze, redesign, and retrofit, as necessary, the flap system on the Model 717-200 airplane, to show compliance with the regulations. Grant, Aug. 20, 1999, Exemption No. 6951

Staff
Docket No.: 29627 Section of the FAR Affected: 14 CFR 135.251, 135.255, 1135.353, Appendices I&J of Part 121 Description of Relief Sought/Disposition: To permit CAB to conduct local sightseeing rides at Ellingson Field, Canton, S.D., for the annual Canton Car Show on July 25, 1999, for com-pensation or hire, without complying with the drug testing and alcohol abuse prevention requirements of Part 135. Grant, July 15, 1999, Exemption No. 6924

Staff
Docket No.: 28991 Section of the FAR Affected: 14 CFR 133.33 (d) and (e) and 133.45(d) Description of Relief Sought/Disposition: To allow JBI to operate a Bell Model UH-1B helicopter (Huey) (Registration No. N204JB, Serial No. 63-13088), a restricted-category helicopter, in external-load operations over congested areas, subject to an approved Congested Area Plan. Denial, July 30, 1999, Exemption No. 6934

Staff
Docket No.: 28964 Section of the FAR Affected: 14 CFR 21.325(b)(3) Description of Relief Sought/Disposition: To allow RAC to obtain airworthiness approval tags for its Hawker model parts in accordance with Secs. 21.21 and 21.303, and export those Class II and Class III parts located at certain Raytheon facilities outside the U.S. and modify conditions Nos. 1 and 2, adding condition No. 4, and redesignating condition No. 4 of the original exemption as condition No. 5. Grant, July 26, 1999, Exemption No. 6720A

Staff
Six persons, including the deputy foreign minister of Greece, were killed Sept. 14 when the Falcon 900 in which they were riding encountered severe turbulence and abruptly plunged thousands of feet before the pilots could regain control. Five other passengers aboard the aircraft sustained injuries.

Staff
Docket No.: 29583 Section of the FAR Affected: 14 CFR 25.785(b) Description of Relief Sought: To allow installation of one or more side-facing divans on Falcon Model 2000 airplanes.

By David Collogan ([email protected])
The Federal Aviation Administration's latest proposed restrictions on air tour operators at Grand Canyon National Park (GCNP) provoked howls of protest from affected operators who claim the regulations would force air tour providers out of business while resulting in little or no measurable public benefit.

Staff
Docket No.: 29621 Section of the FAR Affected: 14 CFR 135.251, 135.255, 135.353, Appendices I&J of Part 121 Description of Relief Sought/Disposition: To permit RAS to conduct sightseeing rides at Genesee County Airport for a pancake breakfast on July 18, 1999, for compensation or hire, without complying with the drug testing and alcohol abuse prevention requirements of Part 135. Grant, July 15, 1999, Exemption No. 6923

Staff
FLIGHTSAFETY INTERNATIONAL named Richard Yeatter manager of the company's new maintenance technician training center in Little Rock, Ark. The facility, which is under construction, is adjacent to Dassault Aviation's principal completion center for Falcon business jets and will be devoted entirely to training of technicians for that fleet. The center will hold its first classes in the first quarter of next year. Yeatter joins FSI from US Airways, where he was director of technical training.

Staff
The Senate last week unanimously approved the fiscal 2000 appropriations bill that provides nearly $10 billion for the Federal Aviation Administration. The Senate began consideration of the bill after Senate transportation appropriations subcommittee Chairman Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) agreed to drop controversial transit language that had stalled the bill (BA, Sept. 13/119). Like the House bill, the Senate bill calls for the Airport and Airway Trust Fund to completely pay for FAA operations in fiscal 2000.

Staff
ROCKWELL COLLINS said its Flight Dynamics Head-up Guidance System (HGS) made the first customer flight on a Boeing Business Jet Sept. 4. Collins recently won FAA Category IIIa supplemental type certification for the HGS on the BBJ, where it is standard equipment and installed during the aircraft's production process. "The Head-up Guidance System brings a new level of situational awareness to the cockpit of the Boeing Business Jet," said Larry Brandt, manager of corporate aviation for the avionics manufacturer.

Staff
THE SMALL BUSINESS SURVIVAL COMMITTEE was among those calling on President Clinton last week to sign the tax cut bill passed by Congress. "The vast majority of Americans will benefit under the tax bill being sent to President Clinton," said SBSC President Christopher Wysocki. "This bill accomplishes many things, not the least of which is a significant reduction in the death tax and the marriage penalty.

Staff
National Air Transportation Association received a mixed reception last week when it appealed to Congress to support flexibility for on-demand air charters when new flight and duty time regulations are drafted. NATA President James Coyne, noting that the Federal Aviation Administration is developing a new flight and duty time proposal for carriers, testified before the House aviation subcommittee Thursday, "Part 135 certificate holders must have versatility to comply with the on-demand nature of unscheduled FAR Part 135 operations.

Staff
Docket No.: 29603 Sections of the FAR Affected: 14 CFR 43.3(g) Description of Relief Sought: To permit Atkins and pilots employed by him to perform certain preven-tive maintenance functions listed in Paragraph (c) of Appendix A to Part 43 on an aircraft operating under 14 CFR Part 135 without holding a me-chanic certificate.

Staff
Docket No.: 26474 Section of the FAR Affected: 14 CFR 21.197(a)(1) Description of Relief Sought/Disposition: To permit Deere to operate its Cessna Model CE-650 aircraft (Registration Nos. N400JD, N600JD and N900JD, Serial Nos. 650-0035, 650-0236 and 650-0213, respectively) without obtaining a special flight permit when the flaps fail in the up position. Grant, July 26, 1999, Exemption No. 6581C

Staff
FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY set an Oct. 19 hearing date to consider petitions of four groups within FAA to conduct a vote to organize and be represented by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (BA, Sept. 6/105). Such hearings are usually scheduled when employers contest petitions for union organization, although FAA officially maintains that it has not formed its position yet.

Staff
MOONEY AIRCRAFT CORP. Chairman Paul Dopp said his son, Chris, will assume the title and responsibilities of chief executive officer Oct. 1. "The timing of the transition, anticipated for many months, is appropriate given the success of the turnaround at Mooney over the past 18 months," the company said in a statement, adding that Mooney is "now profitable and poised to enter the next millennium." Gen.

Staff
JOHN AMES joined Jetcraft Corporation's management and sales team in the Raleigh-Durham, N.C. area. Ames has 15 years of business aviation industry experience with Dassault Falcon Jet and Boston JetSearch. Most recently he was with TAG Aviation (formerly Aviation Methods).

Staff
GULFSTREAM AEROSPACE resumed aircraft production Friday after the Savannah, Ga. plant was closed for two and one-half days because of the mandatory evacuation of Savannah due to Hurricane Floyd. There was no significant damage to the plant during the storm and some workers were scheduled to work overtime during the weekend to catch up on work delayed by the shutdown. A Gulfstream spokesman said all workers will be paid for the time missed because of the storm evacuation.

Staff
WHILE SUPPORTIVE of a full Senate vote on S.82, general aviation leaders have become increasingly wary of a recent movement to include language to "corporatize" the nation's air traffic control system. Such language could come before S.82 hits the Senate floor or in a House/Senate conference. White House officials met with GA leaders earlier this month to gain approval for such a provision, but received little support.

Staff
General Dynamics realigned senior management responsibilities, in part because Senior Vice President Michael W. Wynne, 55, decided to take early retirement. Wynne has been responsible for the company's international, planning and development activities since 1997.

Staff
DORNIER Model 328-100 series airplanes 2(Docket No. 99-NM-01-AD)- proposes to require repetitive inspections of the left and right roll spoiler actuators to check for signs of leakage and deformation of the housing, repetitive inspections of the gap between the left roll spoiler actuator housing cap and the actuator housing, repetitive torque checks of the left roll spoiler actuator housing cap attachment screws, and corrective action, if necessary.

Staff
IN-FLIGHT TURBULENCE caused the upset of a Falcon 900 last week over Europe, resulting in the deaths of six of the 11 passengers. See article on Page 131.