AOPA Says Its Efforts Kept Young Pilots Flying, While Grounding
"Stunt" Flights
It was ten years ago today -- April 11, 1996 -- that a Cessna
177 Cardinal took off and headed straight for a huge thunderstorm
cell outside of Cheyenne, WY. The plane, already over its gross
weight limit, was no match for the powerful storm... and the
encounter ended, sadly but predictably, with the deaths of the
three people onboard.
Accidents such as this occur far too frequently for any pilot's
taste, but rarely do such mishaps attract as much media attention
as this one did. The NTSB attributed the cause to the pilot in
command's decision to take off into what was clearly deteriorating
weather. Nothing we haven't heard before... but the NTSB also
listed a new twist as a contributing cause -- "a desire to adhere
to an overly ambitious itinerary, in part, because of media
commitments. pressure to meet a schedule of media interviews."
Because of the general media, the "pilot" wasn't the 52-year-old
flight instructor in the right seat; it was the seven-year-old
little girl on the left, Jessica Dubroff -- who was sitting on a
booster seat, reaching for rudder-pedal extensions, all in a
much-hyped quest to set a record for the "youngest pilot" to fly
across the United States.
Jessica was a media darling with her fresh face and spunky
attitude, ready to take on the adventure of piloting an aircraft
from "sea to shining sea" as her promotional material said. Her
father, Lloyd Dubroff, was good at promotion. Even the major media
like the Today Show and Good Morning America got caught up in the
hype.
The media fallout from
her tragic death nearly changed general aviation, according to AOPA
President Phil Boyer.
"It was crazy," said Boyer. "Everyone was screaming about
allowing children to fly airplanes, and Congress was hot to pass
laws to prevent the tragedy from ever happening again. We had our
work cut out for us to bring reason and sanity back to the
situation."
"We tried to dissuade them," recalled Warren Morningstar, then
AOPA's media relations director, about Jessica's flight. "I
explained to every media outlet I talked to that Jessica couldn't
set a record because she couldn't be the pilot in command. She was,
at best, a passenger allowed to manipulate the controls."
It didn't matter. Even the FAA got caught up in the hype,
according to AOPA. The FAA administrator asked Boyer what the
agency should do to celebrate the flight. Boyer wisely responded,
essentially -- "don't."
Dubroff's flight was, for all practical purposes, a publicity
stunt -- one that was meant to look awe-inspiring on video,
heartwarming in print. Media around the globe ran photos of the
smiling little girl, at the controls of what the FAA defines as a
high-performance aircraft.
Such "stunts" often have to meet a harsh schedule in order to
look good in the public eye, however... which likely explains the
ill-considered decision by Dubroff's flight instructor, Joe Reid,
and her father to continue the flight.
In the wake of the resulting crash, the same media that had
celebrated the flight suddenly (finally?) questioned the logic of
such an endeavor. There was significant outcry over the notion --
celebrated just days before -- of letting a little girl fly an
airplane.

The public at large -- never ones to doubt the 20/20 wisdom of
hindsight -- attacked the media for hyping the flight. Many also
harshly criticized Jessica's mother, Lisa Hathaway, for allowing
her daughter to partake in such an endeavor.
Years after the accident, Hathaway
published an online book, in which she insisted Jessica died while
trying to fulfill her dream. That's probably true... but dreams
often carry a price, especially when efforts are made to tailor-fit
those dreams to a press junket schedule.
After the crash, Boyer and the AOPA media team did interview
after interview, explaining the concept of pilot in command and the
dual controls on a modern GA aircraft. AOPA says its efforts led to
changes that would prohibit such stunt flights, yet preserved the
ability to introduce young people to aviation -- calling the
outcome "the best possible result from a very bad confluence of
circumstances."
To that end, Boyer even took a video of dual controls onto Larry
King Live. He later used that same video in front of congressional
committees.
He needed it. Congress was ready to pass legislation preventing
anyone under the age of 16 from even touching the controls of an
aircraft -- putting such programs as Aviation Explorer Scouts,
EAA's Young Eagles, and every other attempt — both organized
and individual — to safely share the wonder of flight with
the next generation, at significant risk.
Fortunately, those lobbying efforts were successful. The Child
Pilot Safety Act was passed, which prohibits a pilot in command
from allowing a nonpilot to work the controls of an aircraft if the
nonpilot is attempting to set a record or engage in an aeronautical
competition.
It also put an end to the competition of younger and younger
"pilots" trying to set "records." Call it the difference between
putting young "pilots" in the left seat... versus introducing young
Pilots (with a capital "P") to the concept of flight, as well as to
the inherent risks and responsibility.
One senses no one ever really, seriously, had that discussion
with Jessica Dubroff... or if she would have been wise enough at
seven to understand it. And we'll never know.