Wed, May 14, 2003
Proposal Would Ensure Availability of Safety/Maintenance
Information
The House Aviation Subcommittee must act favorably on
legislation to make aircraft maintenance data available to those
legally required to have it, the Aeronautical Repair Station
Association (ARSA) maintains. The association's proposal to break a
decades-old logjam on access to basic safety data is being actively
considered on Capitol Hill. It may be included in the Aviation
Subcommittee's version of a bill to reauthorize certain Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) programs, scheduled for markup today,
May 14.

Adoption of the proposal is vital to the nation's thousands of
maintenance providers, including certificated repair stations, air
carriers and commercial operators. These providers require current
and complete maintenance manuals, service bulletins and related
materials in order to properly inspect and repair aircraft.
Independents Are Effectively Cut Out, in Present Scenario
The FAA already requires that these materials, also known as
Instructions for Continued Airworthiness (ICAs), be made available
to aircraft owners and maintenance providers. Yet some
manufacturers have adopted policies that prevent independent repair
stations from obtaining maintenance manuals under any
circumstances.
When manuals
can be obtained, many repair stations are forced to pay
manufacturers exorbitant prices for them, or to obtain them from
airlines or other sources, adversely affecting their ability to
keep the manuals current. The maintenance industry is asking only
for data essential to continued airworthiness, not manufacturer
proprietary information or unique repairs developed beyond that
basic safety data.
"The FAA must enforce its requirement to furnish maintenance
manuals, which has been on the books since 1941," according to
Sarah MacLeod, ARSA Executive Director. "Our proposal will require
that ICAs be made available for the cost of preparation and
distribution. It will direct the FAA to clearly identify the kinds
of information which must be contained in ICAs and will clarify
compliance responsibilities."
ARSA represents the interests of independent aircraft
maintenance and alteration facilities before the Federal Aviation
Administration, the National Transportation Safety Board, and other
federal agencies.
More News
According To The Witness, Once The Airplane Landed, It Continued To Roll In A Relatively Straight Line Until It Impacted A Tree In His Front Yard On November 4, 2025, about 12:45 e>[...]
"In the frame-by-frame photos from the surveillance video, the left engine can be seen rotating upward from the wing, and as it detaches from the wing, a fire ignites that engulfs >[...]
Radar Required A term displayed on charts and approach plates and included in FDC NOTAMs to alert pilots that segments of either an instrument approach procedure or a route are not>[...]
From 2023 (YouTube Edition): It’s a Small World After All… Founded in 2011 by pilot, aircraft designer and builder, and U.S. Air Force veteran Sam Watrous, Uncasville,>[...]
Also: UFC Buys Tecnams, Emirates B777-9 Buy, Allegiant Pickets, F-22 And MQ-20 The NTSB's preliminary report on the UPS Flight 2976 crash has focused on the left engine pylon's sep>[...]