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A Kinder, Gentler FAA

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The FAA has historically struggled with conflicting mandates to both promote civil aviation and enforce regulations, often leading to an emphasis on public protection over industry partnership.
  • Over time, there have been attempts to introduce more cooperative and less adversarial enforcement methods, such as temporary certificate removal or remedial training.
  • A successful "remedial training" program in the 1990s offered pilots and mechanics educational intervention for inadvertent violations, proving more effective for compliance than punitive actions and leading to better safety outcomes.
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(January 2012) Some time back, Congress decided that the FAA’s goals were just downright incompatible. How could a federally mandated regulatory agency “encourage and develop civil aeronautics” while enforcing the regulations and exercising its authority to levy fines and suspend or revoke certificates? So guess which functions were eliminated? Washington also reminded the agency that its customers are passengers … period. It is “tasked” (as bureaucrats love to say) with protecting the flying public from people like us — pilots, mechanics, aviation companies and the airlines. Then, when things get too adversarial, a new administrator usually “comes on board” (another much-loved government phrase), proclaiming a new version of the old, a kinder and gentler FAA thing.

I remember a day in the FSDO, back in the early ’80s, when a newly appointed administrator, Adm. James Busey, held an agencywide teleconference. He seemed sincere about promoting a spirit of cooperation with industry (in government-speak, industry means anybody not behind government lines), and he said there were times when the complex, expensive and time-consuming task of processing a violation should be short-circuited. If a pilot did “something dumb” (my quote), the FAA should consider fixing the problem by hauling him into the office, reading him the riot act and putting his pilot certificate in a desk drawer for two weeks.

Martha Lunken

Martha Lunken is a lifelong pilot, former FAA inspector and defrocked pilot examiner. She flies a Cessna 180 and anything with a tailwheel, from Cubs to DC-3s.

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