UARC's First US Event Announced For August 20-21st In
Camarillo, CA
A press call and subsequent info released to ANN, Wednesday,
about a new air racing event is already raising eyebrows throughout
much of the airshow, aero-association and warbird community --
especially as some of the major players in the event have recently
been named. Called the Ultimate Air Race Challenge (UARC), a
spokesman tried to describe the new event as "Mixed Martial Arts
with Airplanes" -- which did not inspire a very positive picture at
first hearing...

Heavily hyped via a web site and some initial marketing
materials, the folks at UARC claim that the FAA has given the go
ahead for first US Ultimate Air Race Challenge which will pit
'the world's greatest pilots at the controls of space age
technology aircraft head-to-head in what has been called (without
naming who has done so) the Superbowl of
Aviation.'
In the last few days, UARC says that pilots from around the
country were 'put thru their paces in a grueling series of
qualifying trials in the high desert of Southern California.' Seven
pilots 'met the qualifications to be issued the highly specialized
UARC Racing Qualification License' which will allow them to
participate in the UARC Races. UARC notes that to be considered for
the racing slots, that pilots are required to have 2000 hours of
experience plus formation cards and aerobatic waivers. At least one
practice "Race" was produced in China last year as a demonstration
program, though participants and staff admit that it was more a
demo than an actual competition. The UARC plans their first
American event in Camarillo, California, this August
20-21st.

UARC staffers admit that the first seven pilots have little
real-world air racing experience but claim that they have been
training for these races, 'aggressively' and that the FAA has
signed off on their plans.
While a new aviation event would normally be solid reason for
excitement and great anticipation, some of the names associated
with the event have raised serious questions among the aviation
community. Famed aerobatic pilot and industry legend, Corkey
Fornof, has been named as a member of the Board of Advisors
(and is still posted as such on the web site as of late Wednesday
night) but in a conversation with ANN this afternoon, Fornof
indicated that he has refused involvement, not once, but twice, due
to heavy schedule commitments and his own concerns about the
fledgling program.
Potentially more worrisome, two of the few recognizable names on
the pilots list have some pretty negative baggage following them.
The most notable is David Riggs... who made news (again) last year
during sentencing for a well-known buzzing incident in which he was
implicated as the L-39 pilot who flew a very low pass over the
Santa Monica pier... and created some fairly anti-aviation press
reaction. The stunt, which occurred in November 2008, was allegedly
an effort to generate "buzz" for a movie. The FAA almost
immediately revoked Riggs' pilot certificate, but on March 17th of
2009, an administrative law judge modified that revocation order to
a 210 day suspension, and it
was eventually reinstated.

Riggs was criminally charged and eventually sentenced by a
California Superior Court to 60 days in jail, 36 months probation,
and a $900 fine in connection with the incident. He was also
ordered to perform 60 days community service cleaning up Santa
Monica Beach. It was not the only legal/criminal altercation for
Riggs -- who has a long history, documented in a number of
press reports, of his legal altercations... one of which got him
incarcerated in a foreign prison for a year. He has created great
enmity among a significant portion of the aviation community... at
least one of whom has gone so far as to dedicate a web site to his
alleged transgressions (www.aviationcriminal.com).
Riggs cautiously admits to some problems in his past but insists
that he has become the "FAA's Poster Child for Compliance" since
then and that he now enjoys an excellent relationship with the FAA
and promises to behave in a manner that promotes aviation in a
positive way.
Chris Rounds was also named as a pilot for UARC and carries some
negative baggage in the airshow and the Oshkosh community for his
FAA suspension following a 2005 close intercept (while flying the
'Red Knight' T-33) of a Mitsubishi MU-2 turboprop near Wittman
field as well as a subsequent bust by the FAA for being aboard
an aircraft performing shortly thereafter (while his ticket
was still in suspension). The Tullahoma bust was dropped and the
FAA eventually declined to prosecute that incident (though the
Oshkosh suspension stood until the allotted time expired) but his
$2 million dollar suit against Airshow Performer Julie Clark (for
the letter she wrote, reportedly at the request of the authorities
to describe what she saw in Tullahoma), has rubbed many in the
airshow community the wrong way and created a significant negative
backlash where Rounds is concerned. Rounds claims that the
negativity is unjust, in that the Oshkosh incident was
improperly adjudicated and that the report of his intercept of the
MU-2 is "a lie." Rounds is wary of the attention created by these
circumstances and vehemently claims that he is the victim of
misrepresentations -- and that he was wronged by the MU-2 pilot,
the FAA, the NTSB Law Judge, many others in the airshow biz and
Performer Julie Clark.

"I've done and am doing a lot of good things in my life and
nobody wants to remember those..." says
Rounds.
In the meantime, the spotlight is being directed toward the
efforts of UARC... with those concerned that the event may be
heading for trouble at the direction of persons who may not have
aviation's best interests at heart... and no matter what, any new
event with the extreme potential for attention and hazard as does a
close-quarters formation air race event could do great harm to the
cause of aviation if the event fails -- or worse, has an accident
that injures a pilot or (even worse) a spectator. ICAS is
watching the matter closely and has yet to issue a verdict on the
matter, though industry buzz is certainly creating some tension for
those who seek to make the industry as safe as possible. ICAS
simply notes, for the moment, that the UARC event and Air Racing...
"in any form can be very dangerous, so we hope and expect that the
organizers of this event will do everything possible to develop
rules and insist on the highest level of training to insure that
both that the audience and the participating pilots are completely
safe."

ANN will continue to look into this matter as the program
develops -- and because of the potentially significant
repercussions should this event go bad, will do so aggressively. We
will report on what we find as the first US event approaches this
summer... stay tuned.