Government Plans To Dismantle Program On August 2nd
The NBAA, AOPA and EAA said Thursday that, following a court's
decision not to suspend the government's looming deadline for
curtailing the Block Aircraft Registration Request (BARR) program,
the three associations will move ahead expeditiously toward a full
hearing on the matter.
Earlier this year, the Department of Transportation (DOT)
announced its intention to disable the BARR program on August 2.
Thursday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit denied a "motion for stay" filed by AOPA and NBAA to halt
the DOT's plan until the matter could be fully reviewed through the
appellate process. The EAA filed a "friend of the court" brief
supporting the motion for stay.
Importantly, the court's ruling is purely procedural; it does
not express a view on the merits of the BARR program, or the
substance of the associations' challenge to the DOT's plan for
dismantling it. The case will now proceed to the stage focusing on
the merits, where the associations are confident the court will
strike down the DOT's unprecedented change to the BARR program.
The procedural ruling also means the court will not rule on the
legality of DOT's new policy until after it takes effect on August
2. To minimize the burden of that new policy on the general
aviation community, the associations will seek a prompt ruling
overturning the agency's action. The developments do not impact
legislation preserving the BARR included in the version of Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) reauthorization passed by the U.S.
House of Representatives in April. The House legislation awaits
reconciliation with an FAA reauthorization measure passed by the
Senate in February.
"It is enormously difficult to get a
court to provide injunctive relief in advance of an actual hearing
on the merits of the DOT's plan to disable the BARR," said NBAA
President and CEO Ed Bolen. "We knew that we had a very high hurdle
to clear for the court to approve our motion for stay, but we are
committed to pursuing every legal avenue available to us. While we
are disappointed by the court's decision, it's important to
emphasize that it is a decision based on a request for an emergency
halt, not on the merits of the BARR program, or the DOT's intention
to severely curtail it. We will have an opportunity for our case
against the DOT's plan to be heard in court, and we will do
everything we can to move that process forward as quickly as
possible."
AOPA President and CEO Craig Fuller added: "Having taken this
early procedural step with our motion for stay, we now turn our
full attention and resources to the hearing on the merits of the
BARR program, and we believe firmly that we will prevail in that
part of the process. Although the DOT may succeed in making
near-term modifications to the BARR program, we believe strongly
that the court will ultimately agree with us on the need to
preserve it."
EAA President and CEO Rod Hightower
said: "We also know that the support we have in Congress for the
BARR is incredibly strong; not only has the House included in its
FAA reauthorization bill legislation for preserving the program,
but a bipartisan coalition of 59 legislators – 26 Senators
and 33 Members of the House – have called upon the DOT
Secretary to shelve his agency's plans to eliminate the BARR. We
urge Congress to continue working to pass a final FAA
reauthorization bill, which would bring resolution to this
matter."
The decade-old, Congressionally enabled BARR program provides
operators of private aircraft the ability to "opt out" of having
their aviation movements tracked by anyone, anywhere in the world,
who has an Internet connection. Earlier this year, the DOT
announced plans to dismantle the program, prompting NBAA and AOPA
to take legal action in order to preserve privacy, safety, security
and business competitiveness.