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Residential Through The Fence protection in FAA bill

By Janice Wood · February 8, 2012 ·

After three and a half years of hard work by many Residential Through The Fence (rTTF) advocates, H.R. 658, the FAA Air Transportation Modernization and Safety Improvement Act containing language preserving rTTF, has passed the House and Senate and sent to President Obama for his expected signature.

RTTF access is defined as homes with attached or adjacent aircraft hangars with taxiway access to the airport taxiways and runways. Hangar home owners with rTTF access pay similar fees as airport users and support the airport economy with fuel and service purchases.

Rep. Sam Graves (R-Mo.) led the charge for rTTF access in the FAA funding bill. Major support from the Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA) and Oregon’s state and federal legislative representatives was instrumental in having rTTF language in the long overdue FAA reauthorization bill.

“We thank Congressman Graves and many others in the General Aviation Caucus who have supported this legislation, which will help the future economic viability of many small airports,” stated Brent Blue, organizer of ThroughTheFence.org, a site that advocates rTTF access. “Congressman Graves, who not only was able to force a Transportation and Infrastructure Committee hearing on the topic, championed the inclusion into the legislation as well as several other general aviation issues which will help the future of small aircraft in the United States. Also, the support of the EAA has been unwavering and instrumental in our success. We are greatly indebted to them.”

RTTF access became an issue about five years ago when two FAA staffers in the Washington, D.C., FAA Airports office, Acting Associate Administrator for Airports Katherine Lang and Director of Compliance Randall Fiertz, decided that hangar homes were an incompatible use of adjacent airport property, Blue noted. Lang and Fiertz cited reasons for their campaign as incongruous as “hangar home owners complain about airport noise” to “hangar homes are harder to condemn” than cemeteries for future airport expansion. Lang also stated, in written hearing testimony, that “hangar home owners had undue influence on airport boards because they testified at public meetings.”

The rTTF language protects airports from losing airport improvement grant funds from the FAA due to past, current, or future rTTF agreements.

For more information: ThroughTheFence.org, FAA.gov

 

 

People who read this article also read articles on airparks, airshow, airshows, avgas, aviation fuel, aviation news, aircraft owner, avionics, buy a plane, FAA, fly-in, flying, general aviation, learn to fly, pilots, Light-Sport Aircraft, LSA, and Sport Pilot.

About Janice Wood

Janice Wood is editor of General Aviation News.

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