For business aviation, 2006 was a year of firsts, lasts and
celebrations -- first flights, last planes off the line and
dreams coming to fruition for some long-suffering players. The
highs and lows made for a roller coaster of a year:

January
The year started with the first flight of the Spectrum
33, a light business jet first announced at NBAA in
2005. With a cruising speed of up to 415 knots and a roomy cabin to
boot, the Spectrum launched with the promise of vast improvements
in the economy of business class jets... Hoping to provide a
real-time resource for maintainers of business aircraft, the NBAA
in January launched its Forum for Enhanced Reliability and
Maintenance Standards (FERM) web site. The idea:
provide users with a clearinghouse of information aimed at
enhancing safety... Looking forward to full-tilt production and
then some, Eclipse Aviation broke ground in January on a new production facility that,
when completed, would double the size of the production floor...
January also marked the first flight of the Bombardier Challenger
605 -- a flawless maiden performance that came on
schedule, as announced in 2005... The FAA refused in January to ground the
Mitsubishi MU-2, a line of aircraft that, while
greatly appreciated by owners and operators, has certainly seen its
share of mishaps.

February
National Air Transportation Association (NATA) President James K. Coyne called the FY 2007
budget released by the White House a "poorly timed
retreat from the nation's responsibilities to aviation at a time
when the air transportation industry needs to advance most." Most
notably underfunded, according to Coyne: the Airport Improvement
Program, whose budget the president proposed to cut from $3.7
billion in FY 2006 to $2.75 billion in FY2007... Marking a renewed
interest in the line, Bombardier announced plans to restart production of its
CRJ200/Challenger 850 line. The aircraft was shelved
in October 2005... February was a big month for Eclipse Aviation -- named winner of the
NAA's Collier Trophy. Vern Raburn and company thus
joined the likes of the Apollo 11 crew, Chuck Yeager and Scott
Crossfield at the rarified altitude of top of class.

March
Starting March 1, 2006, buyers and sellers had to comply with a
new international treaty covering aircraft with eight
or more seats and helicopters with five or more seats -- and with
engines rated at 550 horsepower or more. AOPA reported the Aircraft
Protocol to the Cape Town Convention on International Interests in
Mobile Equipment (shown below) requires a title search and
registration through the Cape Town International Registry (CTIR)
whenever one of these larger aircraft changes hands -- even if the
sale is domestic... Cessna Aircraft Company announced in March its
first flight of the Citation
Encore+, a significant step toward the anticipated
certification of the airplane early in the fourth quarter... The
FAA asked Hawaii Air Ambulance to keep its fleet of aircraft on the
ground after the company halted operations in March. This, in the
wake of an accident in which three crew members were lost in the crash of one of the company's Cessna 414
Chancellors. The plane went down on approach to land
at Kaluhui Airport.

April
The new Bombardier Learjet 60 XR
successfully executed a rigorous two-hour, 20-minute first
flight... Citing a message posted in Arabic on an Internet forum,
the Transportation Security Administration
warned owners of corporate jets and airport officials
to be vigilant of dangers, and urged them to boost security. The
web site message cited by the TSA also included instructions on how
to distinguish US tail numbers and mentioned the tail number of a
bizjet used by the CIA to covertly transport terror suspects.

May
The Federal Aviation Administration Southwest Region office
revoked the air carrier operating certificate of Ammerican Air
Network (ANN), Inc., of Chesterfield, MO. AAN appealed the
emergency order of revocation, but dropped the appeal after the FAA
presented its case before a National Transportation Safety Board
administrative law judge in December. The parties reached an
agreement on certain terms of the revocation.The FAA determined
that AAN permitted flights for hire or
compensation to be conducted on its air carrier
certificate when individuals who did not hold an air carrier
certificate exercised operational control of those flights. AAN
described itself as "a Part 135 management company."

June
Cessna Aircraft Company celebrated 10 years of producing its
single-engine piston aircraft at the company's
Independence, KS manufacturing facility. Over the past decade, more
than 6,000 Cessna 172 Skyhawks, 182 Skylanes and 206 Stationairs
have been built, painted, flight tested and delivered to customers,
since the company resumed single-engine production in 1996... Then,
less than two weeks after its public unveiling at that celebration,
the first production Citation
Mustang assembled at the plant took to the skies for
the first time, on a two-hour-and-twenty-minute test flight... The
flight test prototype of the Excel-Jet Sport Jet was "extensively"
damaged during a takeoff accident in Colorado Springs,
CO, in June. One report indicated that a wingtip contacted the
ground during the takeoff roll, initiating a series of events which
culminated in the accident.

July
Based on a months-long investigation into the safety of cargo
and charter operations, the Miami Herald suggesting that the
government often bypasses other factors to blame the pilot in eight out of ten
cases. This, in an industry the Herald says is dogged
by safety woes... At the onset of the EAA Oshkosh fly-in, ANN
confirmed rumors that Honda was going to announce a committment to
produce the HondaJet and that a major deal was in the works for
Piper Aircraft. The rumors were right. Not only did Honda commit to
production of the innovative Honda TwinJet, but Piper was named a partner in
a venture that will, in part, result in the production of that
aircraft in the United States... What, at the beginning of the
year, looked like the beginning of a remarkable new light jet ended
in flames and shattered hopes in July. As Oshkosh was just getting
underway, two crew members were killed when the Spectrum 33 crashed on
take-off at Spanish Fork, UT... That big sigh of
relief you heard during AirVenture 2006 came from Vern Raburn. FAA certification was officially granted
to the Eclipse 500 at a ceremony at AirVenture 2006.
The provisional type certificate was presented to Vern Raburn,
president and CEO of Eclipse Aviation, by FAA Administrator Marion
Blakey.

August
Even as AirVenture continued, the NTSB issued a preliminary report on the
Spectrum 33 crash, citing bad rigging of the attitude
controls as a possible factor in the fatal mishap. The safety board
found that the aeliron controls were rigged backwards, making any
input have the exact opposite effect of the one intended... The
NTSB followed up on its concerns over the 2004 crash of a Bombardier
CL-600-2A12 with a series of recommendations owed to
the "...particular concern to the Safety Board is that a qualified
14 CFR Part 135 captain and first officer, both of whom received
winter weather operations training in accordance with the company's
FAA-approved winter operations procedures, could fail to understand
the insidious nature of upper wing surface contamination and its
threat to the safety of the flight. Further, proper CRM could have
helped the crew identify the risks associated with winter weather
operations..." In a letter to FAA Administrator Marion Blakey, NATA
requested the agency delay implementation of the recent notice
announcing a new policy requiring landing performance
assessments prior to landing for all turbojet
aircraft. According to the notice, all Part 121, 135 and 91(K)
operators will be issued a new Operation Specification (OpSpec) or
Management Specification (MSpec), as appropriate, requiring
completion of a new en-route landing distance assessment for all
turbojet aircraft. This calculation must take into consideration
current runway conditions and allow a full stop landing with at
least a 15% safety margin beyond the actual landing distance. The
calculation must also occur as close to the time of arrival as
practicable.

October
Although September was a quiet month for business aviation, the
last Bombardier Challenger 604 business jet, serial number
5665, rolled off the assembly line in October at
Bombardier's Montreal-Trudeau International Airport facility. The
green aircraft will be completed by Midcoast Aviation, and is
scheduled to enter customer service in spring 2007... "Get rid of
the noisy jets!" That's what state officials and residents living
near Teterboro Airport have been saying for over a year, and that's
what users of the airport agreed to in October. Operators at the
busy New Jersey airport pledged to limit night flights and ban the
loudest Stage 2 aircraft. All this, to placate nearby
homeowners amid fears they might seek to close the airport...
October also saw the annual NBAA convention, where, in addition to
announcing a proof-of-concept program for a large-cabin business
jet, Cessna also formally launched the new
Citation CJ4 business jet, with more than 70 orders
already on the books... Also at NBAA, Piper confirmed that it will
move into the jet market with the all-new PiperJet, a bird
that they call "a revolutionary new aircraft that will offer
customers a class-setting combination of performance, style,
utility, capability and pricing."

November
The first production version of the promising -- but oft-delayed
-- Sino Swearingen SJ30-2 has
been delivered to its first customer. Douglas Jaffe will base his
aircraft at the San Antonio International Airport, where it will
fly for his company, JetTran International... With its
ever-increasing concern over abuses in charter certification, the
NTSB in November recommended that the FAA
disseminate guidance that includes specific procedures
on appropriate methods by which a certificate holder can
demonstrate it is maintaining adequate operational control over all
on-demand charter flights conducted under the authority of its
certificate... Just in time for Thanksgiving, Cessna Aircraft
Company delivered its first Citation Mustang
business jet, following receipt of the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) production certificate (PC) for the
aircraft's Independence, KS assembly line.

December
A Brazilian court released the passports of American pilots
Joseph Lepore and Jan Paladino. The two men had been
held in Brazil since the September 29th midair collision between
the Embraer Legacy 600 they were piloting, and a Gol Airlines 737.
An inquiry appears to show the two pilots were following ATC
instructions to fly at the same altitude as the 737 traveling in
the opposite direction. All 154 persons onboard the airliner died
when it crashed into the Amazon rain forest; the Legacy was able to
execute an emergency landing with damage to one of the plane's
wings.