FLY
NEIGHBORLY
Submitted by Bob Earl
It is time for
each of us to reflect on our responsibilities to each other in this great
country in which we live. Every pilot needs to revisit a topic that we often
overlook. The topic I am speaking about is our responsibility to fly
neighborly.
The FAA has always
received complaints concerning low flying aircraft over noise-sensitive areas.
You’ve seen the list—open air assemblies of persons, churches, hospitals,
schools, nursing homes, noise-sensitive residential areas, National Park Areas,
to name but a few. Other organizations like the Aircraft Owners and
Pilots Association (AOPA) and Helicopter Association International (HAI) have
addressed this issue with handouts and guides, such as the “Fly Neighborly
Guide” published by HAI in 1982 and revised in 1991, to help pilots make good
sound decisions when it comes to the flight path and altitudes flown. The
FAA has published Advisory Circulars (AC), such as AC 91-36C, “Visual Flight
Rules (VFR) Flight near Noise-sensitive Areas,” to encourage pilots to choose
altitudes and flight paths that will minimize their adverse impact on others,
especially around airports and navigational aids where it is natural to have an
increase of aviation activities.
Ask yourself this question; “on my last flight did I take into consideration the effects of my flight on others?” So, what was your answer? Chances are, you did not.
The federal aviation
regulations give us the “minimum safe altitudes” to start our planning, but all
too often we pilots have the attitude that minimum is good enough. While
it may be safe to fly at the minimum requirements for a particular flight, it
would do the industry a lot of good in the public relations department to add a
few hundred feet or alter our flight path to avoid needless aggravation to
those below us. Flight instructors often practice over the same areas.
They do “turns about a point” over the same barn, church, or intersection
hour after hour, day after day. It is no wonder this kind of repeated
activity solicits phone calls and letters to the local Flight Standards
District Office (FSDO) complaining about the noise and danger of all the
aircraft overhead. To add to the concerns of the general public, we have
the security issues brought to the limelight after the tragic events of
September 11, 2001. Heightened concerns about repeated flights over
houses and neighborhoods and what “they” could be doing have accompanied the
traditional complaints about noise and the possibilities of a crash
SO WHAT CAN WE DO?
Here are a few ideas to help you plan in the future.
They are just a few of the many you might come up with on your own, so do
not feel like this is an “all inclusive” list. Above all, remember to use
good judgment, common sense, and safety—safety should always be your first
concern.
• Remember, “altitude
above you and runway behind you, don’t do you any good.” Start your
takeoff roll at the beginning of the runway, so that more of your climb to a
safer, more neighborly, altitude will be over the airport. Besides, you
might be glad you have that extra few feet should you have an emergency.
• If you do not know
if you are over a “congested area of a city, town, or settlement,” then assume
you are and fly at the appropriate minimum altitude or higher.
• Remember the
federal aviation regulations say “an altitude of 1,000 feet above the highest
obstacle within a horizontal radius of 2,000 feet.” So, make sure you are
at least that far away from the hillside that might contain houses or people.
• Take the time to
find out where the noise-sensitive areas are around you, and then do your best
to avoid them. Make a concerted effort to minimize your impact on them.
• During VFR
operations over noise-sensitive areas, pilots should make every effort to fly
not less than 2,000 feet above the surface, weather permitting.
• When conducting
flight training be aware of what lies below you at all times. Use
appropriate altitudes for ground reference maneuvers. Teach your students
from the beginning to fly neighborly. (Don’t forget 14 CFR §91.303, it
really does apply to you!)
• Pilot examiners,
too, can play an important role by adopting fly-neighborly practices in their
flight exams.
• Get involved! Help your local airport
authorities educate the communities around the airport about local navigational
aids and the types of flights conducted there. Also, you should teach
your local airport neighbors what is allowed by regulation and how to properly
identify aircraft should the need arise.
• Help your local
zoning commission understand the usefulness of the airport to the community and
the necessity to have proper building and zoning laws in effect to provide for
a safe airport environment. You never know, this just might keep a house
from being built at the end of your runway.