Pennsylvania Legislature Calls For Smaller Presidential
TFRs
Remember that poor
pipeline patrol pilot who unwittingly flew over the Presidential
motorcade in Philadelphia earlier this year?
The Pennsylvania legislature certainly does. AOPA President Phil
Boyer was the honored guest of state Rep. Gene McGill (R-Dist. 151)
as the state House of Representatives on Monday passed by a
near-unanimous vote a resolution sponsored by McGill that calls on
federal security officials to reduce the size of Presidential
movement temporary flight restrictions (TFRs).
The four-page resolution also calls for authorities to
"reconsider the need to issue such restrictions based on
nonspecific threats and ways to improve the timely dissemination of
flight restriction information to pilots."
Presenting the measure on the floor of the House, McGill, an
AOPA member, said, "If it wasn't for the help and assistance of
AOPA to carry this message to Washington, D.C., this resolution
would not be possible."
In step-by-step detail, the resolution outlines the importance
of general aviation in Pennsylvania and nationwide, the lopsided
nature of the TFRs — affecting only GA, not scheduled air
carriers, the economic impact of the TFRs and the confusion they
can cause.
"Pennsylvania lawmakers are serious about getting this message
across to the federal government," said Boyer. "The resolution is
being sent to President Bush, Homeland Security Secretary Tom
Ridge, FAA Administrator Marion Blakey, the director of the U.S.
Secret Service, and each member of Pennsylvania's congressional
delegation.
"All pilots recognize the need to protect the President, but at
some point someone in a position of authority needs to step back
and ask if the excessively large airspace restrictions are worth
the cost to a vital portion of America's transportation
industry."
PA HOUSE RESOLUTION No. 411 Session of 2003
A RESOLUTION
Urging the Secretary of Homeland Security, the Secret Service and
the Federal Aviation Administration to consider reducing the size
of residential movement temporary flight restrictions.
WHEREAS, General aviation accounts for over 637,000 jobs
nationwide with an economic impact exceeding $102 billion annually;
and
WHEREAS, According to the Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation, Bureau of Aviation, over 698,000 visitors arrive in
Pennsylvania via general aviation aircraft, providing almost $54
million to Pennsylvania's economy; and
WHEREAS, During a presidential visit to any area in the nation,
each general aviation airport site has a temporary flight
restriction (TFR) imposed, affecting all general aviation
operations within a 30-nautical-mile radius or more and prohibiting
any general aviation flight within ten nautical miles; and
WHEREAS, These restrictions do not affect scheduled passenger
airline flights, air cargo flights, law enforcement helicopters or
life flight helicopters; and
WHEREAS, General aviation is singled out for these restrictions;
and
WHEREAS, Government
officials cite nonspecific security threats as a rationale for
expanding the standard Presidential movement TFR from a former
three-mile to five-mile radius to the current 30 miles; and
WHEREAS, During a recent visit of President George W. Bush to
Philadelphia, there were 45 airports impacted by the TFR; and
WHEREAS, An 80-nautical-mile-wide swath of some of the most
heavily used airspace on the East Coast was impacted; and
WHEREAS, The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA)
denounced the FAA's late release of a notice to airmen (NOTAM)
establishing the Philadelphia TFR; and
WHEREAS, The NOTAM did not come out until after 7 p.m. Wednesday
for a Thursday morning visit by the President; and
WHEREAS, Pilots were given less than 12-hours' notice, trapping
some at airports affected by the TFR as operators were not given
enough notice to relocate their aircraft outside the boundaries of
the TFR; and
WHEREAS, At the
Presidential retreat at Camp David, Maryland, the prohibited area
is a ten-nautical-mile radius when the President visits, but
security officials have recently proposed making it a
30-nautical-mile radius; and
WHEREAS, The proposed TFR area would stretch from Pennsylvania
to Virginia and West Virginia, affecting operations at about a
dozen airports, and would leave a corridor less than ten nautical
miles wide between the Camp David restricted airspace and the
15-nautical-mile radius no-fly zone around Washington, D.C., and
access to even that narrow gap would be restricted because it falls
entirely within the Washington Air Defense Identification Zone
(ADIZ); and
WHEREAS, There are not specific numbers on the lost revenue for
these airports, but the typical general aviation airport with 100
based aircraft and no air carrier service is estimated to have a
transportation benefit of $1 million annually; and
WHEREAS, This $1 million does not include the following indirect
economic benefits:
(1) each dollar spent by general aviation and an
aviation-dependent business generates an additional $1.52 in
economic activity;
(2) for every job at an airport, nearly three are created in the
visitor-related economy; and
(3) aviation-related businesses contribute $105 million in
local taxes; and
WHEREAS, Because TFR
airspace frequently changes, AOPA strongly encourages pilots to
obtain a briefing and check NOTAMS before every flight; and
WHEREAS, Violators are intercepted and forced to land; and
WHEREAS, On July 25, 2003, a pipeline patrol pilot on a
legitimate flight confronted an F-16 and 30 drawn guns after
accidentally overflying President Bush's motorcade in Philadelphia;
and
WHEREAS, After the forced landing and interrogation of the
unnamed pilot, the Secret Service released him, concluding he posed
no threat; and
WHEREAS, According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, air traffic
controllers from Philadelphia International Airport had tried
unsuccessfully to contact the pilot as he approached the motorcade
route; and
WHEREAS, Frequently pilots experience delays as air traffic
controllers search for flight plans they had not received, or
pilots circle when controllers cannot find a flight plan on file;
and
WHEREAS, AOPA has also
received multiple reports of pilots calling on a landline to
receive a beacon code and not being able to get through; and
WHEREAS, On several occasions, confused pilots transmitted on
the wrong frequency or were handed off to the wrong controller;
therefore be it
RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania urge the Secretary of Homeland Security, the Secret
Service and the Federal Aviation Administration to consider
reducing the size of Presidential movement TFRs and to reconsider
the need to issue such restrictions based on nonspecific threats
and ways to improve the timely dissemination of flight restriction
information to pilots; and be it further
RESOLVED, That copies of this resolution be transmitted to
the President of the United States, the Secretary of Homeland
Security, the Director of the Secret Service, the Director of the
Federal Aviation Administration and each member of Congress from
Pennsylvania.