'Crisis Of Conscience' Seems At An Impasse
ANN has reported on
the ongoing issues between the National Association of Flight
Instructors (NAFI) and a growing segment of its membership since
last fall. The issue arose last October when the NAFI Board and a
group of its members (organized under the name of "TBO-NAFI") found
themselves in conflict over a number of issues.
The TBO-NAFI group claims that EAA and others within the
aviation industry, NAFI included, apparently remain on a
'self-destructive path.' At issue, TBO-NAFI claims the absence of
member participation; a lack of transparency in the NAFI's Board
selection process, governance, administration, and financial
management; and mismanagement of the flagship Master Instructor
program. Moreover, the Board's unilateral termination of its two
most-recognized and productive members, Sandy & JoAnn Hill, and
its disregard for, and alienation of, TBO-NAFI and the hundreds of
members it represents, collectively demonstrate that the NAFI Board
is failing.
Strong words... and yet we have feeling that this matter is
drawing to a close that may result in a permanent split of a large
segment of the CFI community from the elder NAFI organization. The
following statement, submitted by TBO-NAFI organizer Rich Stowell,
is but one more shot across the bow in the continuing war of words
between the two camps.
Is NAFI Misappropriating Its Members' Work Product?
by Rich Stowell, NAFI 8175
NOTE: The views expressed in the
following editorial are strictly those of the author and do not
necessarily represent the views of any other individual or
organization.

The escalating problems with NAFI and the Master Instructor (MI)
program have reached new heights as manifested by NAFI having hired
a law firm to fight the Hills, and possibly others. This editorial
considers the primary issue underlying NAFI's demands: ownership of
the MI program's intellectual property (IP). This editorial
concludes that such IP is largely owned by Sandy and JoAnn Hill and
others, and that NAFI's claims are erroneous, unenforceable, and
frivolous.
Consider the following timeline of the Hills involvement with
the MI program and their (uncompensated) development of IP, which
the Hills permitted NAFI to use on a nonexclusive, royalty-free
basis.
1995: Began research & development of a
flight instructor (CFI) accreditation program.
1997: Launched the Master Certificated Flight
Instructor designation, initially called the "Master CFI"
program.
1999: Changed the program name to the "Master
Instructor" program. Added the Master Flight Instructor for
ultralight instructors, and the Master Ground Instructor
designations.
2000: Developed an appeal process for denied
applications.
2001: Explored the Master Instructor Emeritus
designation, and coordinated and launched the Master Aerobatic
Instructor designation program with Rich Stowell. Pursued CFI
renewal through the FAA using MI accreditation.
2002: Helped facilitate FAA consideration of the
MI designation. FAA subsequently granted CFI renewal via the MI
designation.
2004: Explored the possibility of MCFI-TAA,
MCFI-SP, and MIE designations. Revised the application package. MI
designation permitted to count toward a Gold Seal.
2008: Began work on a CFI accreditation
(non-Master) program and finalized the Emeritus program, both with
input from the Members Professional Standards Committee. Negotiated
with the FAA for WINGS credit for MI designation.

Every word appearing on each iteration of every MI and MI
Emeritus application package (through Rev: Apr08) was crafted by
the Hills. The same is true for the voluminous designation
announcements, press releases, Mentor and e-Mentor articles, and
website content generated by the Hills to advance the MI program.
Additionally, the Hills designed and arranged for the manufacture
of the following Master Instructor paraphernalia:
- MI Logo
- MI, MCFI-A, & MI Emeritus Plaques
- MI Graduation Certificate (in collaboration with EAA's Livy
Phillip & Sue Strehlow)
- MI Lapel Pin
- MI Patch
- MI Velcro Flight Jacket Patch
- MI Hats, Shirts, & Window Stickers
The fruits of the Hills' labor: to date, nearly 1,300 Master
Instructor portfolios have been reviewed by or under the
supervision of the Hills. Additionally, the last thirteen National
Flight Instructors of the Year have been Master Instructors.
Throughout the above process, the NAFI Board contributed no
tangible work product to the MI program. The NAFI Board neither
hired, nor compensated the Hills for any of the time and effort
they invested in R&D for the MI program. Nor did the Board
entertain any vote to approve or to disapprove anything the Hills
developed pertaining to the MI program.
In 2000, the Hills, doing business as "Two Hills Aviation,"
signed an agreement with NAFI to administer the MI program for
compensation. The duties and responsibilities of Two Hills Aviation
under that agreement were quite narrow: "to review all applications
[including] processing of applications, collection of application
fees, record keeping, evaluation of applications and initial
notification to applicants..." The tremendous work done by the
Hills in the years preceding the agreement, and subsequent program
development work, were well-outside of the scope of Two Hills
Aviation's contractual obligations. Again, the agreement was
limited to "receiving and reviewing applications."

The development and evolution of the Master Instructor
program-more than thirteen years of effort dedicated to elevating
the status of instructors-has been exclusively the work product of
Sandy and JoAnn Hill. That the Hills also allowed NAFI the
royalty-free use of their IP to our collective benefit speaks to
the generosity and philanthropy of Sandy and JoAnn. Simply put, the
material portion of the IP used by the Master Instructor program is
owned by Sandy and JoAnn Hill, including but not limited to:
- The names of the various designations
- MI application and review guidelines and processes
- The various three- and four-letter identifiers
- Associated media releases and website content
- The composition of the various application packages
- The design of pins, plaques, and other paraphernalia
In sum, whether the law ultimately recognizes the Hills'
ownership of some or all of these things, we all know the
truth: This IP is the rightful property of the Hills!
In contrast, what approach has the NAFI Board taken? The Board
claims as their own that which is not theirs, asserting that what
is the Hills' is theirs. This is sadly consistent with this Board's
"business as usual" approach-harboring an arrogant sense of
entitlement; acting with unwavering self-interest; producing
nothing of value, but instead expropriating the work of others and
claiming it as their own.
Whether you support the Hills, or are among the handful who
don't, we should universally agree that one's IP deserves respect
and protection. In contrast, NAFI seeks not only to misappropriate
the Hills' IP, but also to take away the Hills' right to earn a
living and prevent them from doing what they have done for decades:
working among, embracing, encouraging, and lifting-up other
educators.
Not an Isolated Case
NAFI's apparent disregard for the IP of its members isn't
confined to the Hills. Others who have similarly permitted NAFI the
royalty-free and nonexclusive benefits of their work product are in
NAFI's crosshairs.

Take the case of Master Instructor Ron Galbraith, who
established an independent website supporting the Master Instructor
program (www.nafimasters.org).
Galbraith registered and paid for (and continues to pay for) the
domain name and web hosting. He developed and continues to maintain
the website, often with content authored and provided royalty-free
by the Hills.
At no time during the more than two years that the site has been
active did the NAFI Board (notwithstanding their express knowledge
of the site) approve, object to, or direct Galbraith's activities.
At no time did Galbraith receive compensation from NAFI for
commissioning or maintaining the website. Galbraith never entered
into any agreement with, or assigned any rights to NAFI for any of
these activities. Yet in the demand letter received by the Hills,
the Board has demanded that the website owner "assign the website
to NAFI."
Finally, consider the work product and IP of NAFI member Rich
Stowell. Stowell was the principle author of the Aerobatic
Instructor designation program, which started with R&D work on
the Master Aerobatic Instructor (MCFI-A) designation in 2000,
through its launch in 2001, and carried through to a broader
program initiated in April 2008. Stowell permitted both NAFI and
the International Aerobatic Club (IAC) to benefit from the
nonexclusive, royalty-free use of his IP. Stowell was neither
commissioned nor compensated by NAFI or IAC to develop the
program.
Ultimately, NAFI's attempts to subvert and exercise control over
the MI program and associated IP will fail. Even in the highly
unlikely event that NAFI succeeds against the Hills, the IP of
other contributors has not been secured by NAFI. This will
invariably prevent NAFI from continuing its current campaign, or at
least it could become the subject of an intractable legal
dispute-causing further (if not fatal) hemorrhaging of NAFI
resources and good will.