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Helicopters Magazine Careers in Aviation
Flight Operations: Charging to Get from A to B

Charging to Get from A to B

Written by John R. Scott   
As a professional pilot you are usually interested only in a few significant things related to your job. As a professional pilot working for a commercial airline you are usually interested only in a few significant things related to your job: company solvency, your pay cheque, your medical, your upcoming simulator ride, the aircraft serviceability and doing a good job. I agree that this is a rather flippant overview because there are many other areas you will contend with, but most would accept the basics as stated. It is not the pilot's worry to think about what costs are involved with the airline operation.That is management's responsibility. Or maybe it isn't? When one considers fuel charges, ground handling, aircraft leasing/purchase, parts, engines and a myriad of other items, including the cost of using air traffic services....

ATC is a service provider.We get from A to B using ground-based navigation equipment such as ADF,VOR/DME, onboard GPS or inertial systems. We know how they work. We know what the information is and how we use it to be in the right place at the right time.We work with controllers who use sophisticated RADAR (an acronym for RAdio Detection And Ranging) equipment and a selective identification frequency transponder. But who is paying for it, what does it cost and how is it paid for? Prior to the establishment of Nav Canada these costs were absorbed by Transport Canada.

The reason I began to research this subject was to be able to determine the costing of navigation fees for a business plan. It was a navigation exercise in itself to get the right answers, and perhaps this is where maintaining contacts within the industry has significant value.The natural source of accurate information was Nav Canada.