Troubled Heli-School Hits The Skids
Reports from around the country, and verbal/published
confirmations from people claiming to have been employed by Silver
State Helicopters, indicate the nationwide flight school operation,
known for fanciful claims about employment opportunities in the
heli industry and a significant accident record, has ordered
its doors shut.

According to reports
sent to ANN, as well as a copy of correspondence allegedly issued
by SSH Founder Jerry Airola, all operations are being ceased and
employees terminated immediately. The situation apparently came to
a close at 1700 Las Vegas time, Sunday.
According to the Airola memo, "The Board of Directors has not
made a final decision as to Silver State Helicopters. Because
the monthly operating expenses, even at the recently streamlined
levels, continue to exceed cash flow the Board has elected to
suspend all operations effective at 5:00 PM today. All offices
are closed effective immediately and all employees are terminated
as of 5:00PM today as well. All employees will receive a final
payroll check via your normal payment method (check or direct
deposit by ADP)."
Regarding the great number of students who may be affected
by this situation, the memo states only that, "The students will be
notified as soon as a clear direction is confirmed."
Silver State Helicopters was, at best, a troubled operation.
With some 40+ facilities around the US, it reportedly operated well
over 200 helicopters, and employed 850 people. Criticized
widely for an aggressive marketing program that seemed to
"oversell" the availability of jobs in the helicopter industry, it
was beset by a number of legal problems as students and clients
reportedly sued with claims that they had been deceived. A video
featuring Airola claims that a, "...Nationwide shortage of
helicopter pilots has opened a way to unlimited employment in a
career that knows no limits."
Industry experts note that the employment picture for helicopter
pilots, especially those with limited experience, seems "far more
limited."
Still, business at one point seemed good for a company that
claimed that, "Silver State Helicopters achieved a six-year sales
growth from 2001 to 2007 of 963.4 percent with revenues growing to
$78.1 million in 2006. As the fastest-growing rotorcraft company in
the world, Silver State Helicopters has a business model that is
unequaled by any other in the industry. The company has the largest
flight training institution in the country with the additional
commercial operations that include search and rescue, air
ambulance, cargo transportation, seismic exploration, law
enforcement air support, agriculture, fire fighting and many other
services."
Late last
year, Silver State Helicopters reportedly 'partnered' with a
New York investment firm, Eos Partners. They created a new
entity known as Silver State Services Corp.
Another critical issue plaguing SSH was a growing accident rate
and legal exposures that occurred as a result of reported
malfeasance by the company itself. In a recent Jacksonville, FL
area crash that killed two people, an NTSB report called into
question maintenance practices and procedures known to be in
process at the local operation.
In the updated factual report, the National Transportation
Safety Board says poorly-coordinated maintenance practices by
overworked maintenance personnel may have contributed to the fatal
March 27, 2007 downing of a Robinson R44 near Jacksonville, FL.
As ANN reported, the Silver
State Helicopters helo impacted in a nose-down attitude on Ponte
Vedra Beach, killing the two persons onboard. In a Preliminary Report released
about 10 days after the accident, the NTSB noted the helicopter had
just come out of maintenance... and was missing attachment hardware
to its control system.
A lawsuit filed on behalf of deceased CFI Tamara Williams by
Jacksonville firm, in part alleges liability on the part of the
company by stating that, "The Defendant, SILVER STATE knew, based
on prior similar accidents and explicit warnings under the Federal
Aviation Regulations, in addition to appropriate maintenance/repair
manuals, which specify dangers in failing to secure dynamic flight
control components aboard the subject helicopter, that TAMARA
WILLIAMS was virtually certain to die when piloting the subject
helicopter. SILVER STATE'S helicopter mechanic failed to properly
connect and safety/secure the helicopter's control tubes to the
swash plate assembly of the main rotor system. SILVER STATE'S
mechanic deliberately concealed or misrepresented this danger so as
to prevent the decedent, TAMARA WILLIAMS, from exercising informed
judgment about whether to fly the aircraft. The decedent,
TAMARA WILLIAMS, was not aware of this risk because the danger was
not apparent to her, as the maintenance error was not visible upon
pre-flight inspection, and the subject control tube assembly was
covered by a shroud which encapsulated the mast and extended from
the helicopter fuselage to the base of the main rotor swash
plate. The employer misrepresented the danger caused by the
maintenance error in that the maintenance log falsely reported that
the maintenance/repairs had been properly completed and that a
follow-up inspection indicated that the maintenance had been
properly completed."