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Aviation Safety: Regulation, the Bad and the Good
Written by Steve Leslie   
The threat of war, terrorism, an economic recession and SARS have created a time of great uncertainty for the aviation industry.
 
 
 
 
 
The threat of war, terrorism, an economic recession and SARS have created a time of great uncertainty for the aviation industry. The last two years have presented a seemingly endless list of bad news, bankruptcies, layoffs and crises. Despite the uncertainty, business aviation seems to have weathered the economic downturn and the events of 9/11/01 better than most.

Case in point. The Canadian Business Aviation Association (CBAA) and the US-based National Business Aviation Association (NBAA) say that up to half of their members report “the same or greater activity than before 9/11.” Even the scandals that have rocked Wall Street and Bay Street have had minimal effect on corporate aviation departments. Ironically, the lack of public trust in private business and large corporations appears to have been a boost to corporate aviation, with face-toface contact becoming the key to rebuilding trust. Business aviation provides clients with safe and secure transport without the hassles of the airlines.

That same hassle-free environment, however, does not always extend to the operator. The growth and recovery of the aviation industry risks being smothered by some very narrow-minded government officials. Conversely, the industry can be helped along through some fresh thinking. This column provides examples of both.

Access Denied
With the recent introduction of the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority (CATSA) and its sister agency, the US-based Transportation Security Administration (TSA), business aviation has been presented with some serious challenges. Aircraft can be excellent business tools when they fly, but when they don’t fly they represent liabilities. If aircraft sit in a hangar because they cannot get access to airspace or airports, they become marginal investments.Access is the key and security determines access. Unfortunately, business aviation is now faced with more bureaucracy, as access to airspace and airports today is no longer controlled by the FAA but by the TSA.

After September 11 2001, corporate aviation bore the brunt of new security restrictions. This despite the fact that corporate flight departments have been practising the highest levels of security for decades. Now, the challenge is to document those practices and communicate them effectively to the TSA, so it will recognize right of access.