WASHINGTON, D.C. — On the eve of an FAA public hearing in College Park, Georgia, on the Part 23 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM), a coalition of general aviation leaders applauded the FAA’s efforts to improve safety and make it easier to bring new products to market for the light general aviation sector, while strongly encouraging the agency to finish its work on the issue by the end of 2016.
The groups included the General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA), the Aircraft Electronics Association (AEA), the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA), the Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA), the Helicopter Association International (HAI), the International Council of Air Shows (ICAS), the National Association of State Aviation Officials (NASAO), the National Air Transportation Association (NATA), and the National Business Aviation Association (NBAA).
The NPRM is a result of the Small Airplane Revitalization Act (SARA) that was signed into law on Nov. 27, 2013.
In March of this year, the FAA issued the proposed rule, which removes overly prescriptive design requirements and replaces them with performance-based airworthiness standards.
The NPRM also recognizes the use of consensus-based standards to establish acceptable methods of compliance for specific designs and technologies.
This will facilitate the installation and retrofit of safety-enhancing technologies, bolster the light end of the general aviation market, remove barriers to certification for emerging technologies such as electric and hybrid propulsion, and foster greater harmonization between the FAA and other regulatory authorities worldwide, GA advocates note.
“The shift to proportional and objective-based rules within the Part 23 framework will provide general aviation with the ability to more effectively design, certify, produce, operate, and maintain the airplanes of today, and it will assure the future of general aviation will only be limited by human imagination,” the associations noted in their written comments submitted to the U.S. Department of Transportation.
This proposed rule takes into account the needs of the entire general aviation community and assures safety improvements will no longer be held captive to outdated and inflexible regulations that don’t keep pace with technological change, GA officials added.
The groups recognized the FAA for its leadership, calling the Part 23 effort “a poster child for good rulemaking.”
“We applaud these efforts to fully understand the range of issues involved when making changes of this magnitude,” they added.
The groups also praised Congress for its leadership in passing SARA unanimously in November 2013.
The proposed rule is the result of nearly a decade of work, which included the Part 23 Reorganization Aviation Rulemaking Committee and the parallel European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) CS-23 rulemaking effort. The changes will allow for the “safe adoption of current and future technologies in an extremely efficient manner” and are a lifeline to assuring that today’s general aviation community can deploy rapidly evolving new technologies, which is today stymied by the nature of current regulations.
“Given the overwhelming support for this proposed rule, and the tremendous benefits it would offer to all facets of the general aviation community for years to come, we hope the current administration will put this well-crafted rule in place as soon as possible to allow our industry to innovate freely without being shackled by outdated restrictions,” GAMA President and CEO Pete Bunce said. “The increased harmonization between the FAA and other agencies worldwide will ensure the success of this effort and allow our industry to grow in ways we can’t even think of yet. It’s time for the FAA to finish this rule.”
“The Aircraft Electronics Association urges the FAA to complete its work on the Part 23 rulemaking effort by the end of this year,” said AEA President Paula Derks. “General aviation safety can be improved by modernizing and revamping the regulations to clear the path for technology adoption and cost-effective means to retrofit the existing fleet with new safety technologies. The AEA has been actively involved in the effort to streamline burdensome regulations for several years, and we look forward to final rule completion by the FAA in the near future.”
“Part 23 reform is a critical issue to AOPA and our members, and we’ve taken an active role in every step of the process,” AOPA President Mark Baker remarked. “We’ll continue to work with FAA and other aviation organizations to move away from prescriptive design requirements and toward performance based standards. This is an important step in a process that we hope will ultimately increase safety and lower costs for pilots and aircraft manufacturers alike.”
“Completion of the Part 23 rule would be a tremendous step forward in opening
the door for innovation in general aviation and continuing the legacy of American leadership in the world of flight,” noted Jack J. Pelton, CEO/Chairman of EAA. “This rule would not only bring new products to the market for today’s aircraft, it would help preserve thousands of vintage aircraft that are now part of the general aviation community.”
“Safety is priority one without question,” ICAS President John Cudahy said. “Part 23’s framework will enable our members to effectively keep their equipment in safe, up-to-date working order with fewer hurdles to compliance. That’s a win for safety, for our industry, and for general aviation.”
NASAO President Greg Principato added, “Our members across the country see this as a much-needed way to improve safety, promote general aviation, and increase jobs in the states by tapping into new technologies and ideas.”
“The FAA’s proposed rule recognizes that we live in an era of extraordinary innovation; its emphasis on performance-based standards will accelerate the availability of exciting new safety enhancing products to the aviation community,” stated NATA President and CEO Thomas L. Hendricks. “Just as important, performance-based standards will enhance regulatory clarity, assisting in efforts to increase regulatory consistency across the agency’s regions and offices.”
“We have long understood that streamlining the certification process for general aviation manufacturers, while preserving important safety requirements, will lead to swifter adoption of new aircraft designs and vital safety equipment, benefiting everyone from pilots and their passengers to manufacturers,” said NBAA President and CEO Ed Bolen. “We thank the FAA for holding this important hearing, and we will continue working with the agency on these long-sought reforms.”
This seems to be going in a good direction as things like this are included in the proposal.
“Accordingly, the FAA proposes to accept consensus standards as a means of compliance
with the proposed part 23 performance-based regulations. The use of consensus standards would
be one means of compliance with the performance-based standards of the proposed part 23.
Compliance with the current prescriptive provisions within current part 23 would be yet another
means of compliance available under this proposal. Applicants would still have the option to
propose their own means of compliance as they do today. The process for reviewing new means
of compliance would not change substantially from the process in place today.”
This will go a long way toward keeping us held hostage to the ASTM rules and standards that can change quickly and leave us with designs that can not be repaired with out a “factory” approval like the SLSA aircraft. We do not need a “better” system that may well require new compliance methods every few months on the whim of a committee and that does not answer at all to the public, but rather does the bidding of major manufacturers.