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Mon, Oct 09, 2006

EAA Fights For Homebuilder Rights In Las Vegas

Area FSDO Agrees to Review First-Flight Ban

Las Vegas, NV is booming... with new houses popping up like so many slot machines and all-you-can-eat buffets. That growth is encroaching on the once-isolated North Las Vegas Airport (KVGT), to the point the Las Vegas Flight Standards District Office (FSDO) recently banned first flights of amateur-built planes from the airport, due to urban growth.

That didn't sit well with the Experimental Aircraft Association... which has stepped at the request of its chapters in that area. At the EAA's request, the FSDO agreed to review its decision and authorized two independent safety surveys of the airport and its flight paths.

EAA has been in continual contact with FAA officials on the matter, and specifically brought up the issue once more at conferences with FAA Headquarters officials, the FAA Western Region and the Las Vegas FSDO during AirVenture 2005 and 2006, the 2006 FAA/EAA Summit, and most recently during an August 2006 teleconference.

"EAA's position on these matters, which affect numerous airports throughout the country, is consistently clear," said Earl Lawrence, EAA's vice president of industry and regulatory affairs. "Every person who builds an aircraft must have access to a safe and convenient way to make the initial flights in these aircraft.

"Corridors have been established in many parts of the country that ensure the safety of the pilot of these aircraft and those who live in an airport's vicinity, while meeting the safety standards of initial flights. Rapid growth in an urban area certainly adds complexities to the issue, but aircraft builders have a right to safe, convenient access to facilities where they can make these flights."

The EAA states the North Las Vegas decision only affects initial flights in homebuilt aircraft, not established homebuilt aircraft operations at the facility. According to FAA and NTSB figures, the initial two flights in amateur-built aircraft pose the highest risk for accidents than other operations in those aircraft.

The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA) has also joined with the EAA in this effort to find a solution in North Las Vegas. EAA will continue to seek solutions that emphasize flight safety and the convenience of those who have worked thousands of hours to complete an aircraft project.

FMI: www.eaa.org

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