Regulatory Update and Future Plans
Transcription
Regulatory Update and Future Plans
Regulatory Update and Future Plans Federal Aviation Administration Federal Aviation Administration WATS, 2015 Orlando, FL Robert Burke, Manager Air Carrier Training Systems and Voluntary Safety Programs, AFS-280 1 Discussion Overview • AFS-280 • Rulemaking – Part 61/121 – Part 60 – Part 135 • LOC-I • ACT ARC • Future Plans Federal Aviation Administration 2 AFS-280 General Responsibilities AFS-280 is responsible for all regulations and guidance pertaining to part 121, 135, and 142: – – – – – – – – – Pilot, Flight Attendant, and Dispatcher Training Programs ATP Certification Training Program (ATP CTP) Advanced Qualification Programs (AQP) Flight Operational Quality Assurance Programs (FOQA) Aviation Safety Action Programs (ASAP) Voluntary Disclosure Reporting Programs (VDRP) Aviation Safety Reporting Systems (ASRS) Internal Evaluation Programs (IEP) Line Operations Safety Audit Programs (LOSA) Federal Aviation Administration 3 AFS-280 Personnel Federal Aviation Administration 4 Projects Air Carrier Training ARC AC 120-109A, AC 120-111 ASAP AC, Change C AQP AC, Change B 135 ASAP/145 ASAP PPD (Mentoring) NPRM Ops Spec Approval Training Programs CAST/JIDMDAT A350 Project ICAO/EASA LOC-I, Cabin Safety, MPL Federal Aviation Administration 5 Rulemaking – Part 61/121 Established new certificate requirements for airline pilots and modified the Airline Transport Pilot (ATP) certificate requirements • • • Final Rule published July 15, 2013 Requires all pilots in part 121 operations have an ATP certificate Requires completion of an ATP Certification Training Program (ATP CTP) Federal Aviation Administration 6 Advisory Circular 61-138 Airline Transport Pilot Certification Training Program (ATP CTP) • Completion of the ATP CTP is required to take the ATP multiengine airplane knowledge test (as of August 1, 2014) • Training incorporates an introduction to stall and upset prevention and recovery concepts and procedures in large transport airplanes Federal Aviation Administration 7 ATP Certification Training Program • § 61.156 – Training requirements for an initial ATP-Multiengine Airplane Certificate – 30 hours academics – 10 hours FSTD: 6 hours FFS; 4 hours FTD • Course must be FAA-approved • Part 121, 135, 141, & 142 certificate holders are eligible providers • Added instructor requirements • Prerequisite to the ATP-Multiengine Airplane Knowledge Test Federal Aviation Administration 8 Approval Process Overview • Field Review: – Applicant works with POI or TCPM – Review § 61.156; AC 61-138; Job Aid – Forward to Region once satisfied all requirements have been met • Region Review – Follows similar review to validate requirements are met before sending to headquarters. • HQ Review – Both AFS-200 & AFS-800 review for standardization – Tspec/Ops Spec is issued once HQ memo received and all findings have been addressed. Federal Aviation Administration 9 Approved Providers Certificate Holder Embry‐Riddle Aeronautical University Location Date Authorized Daytona Beach, FL 7/24/2014 Embry‐Riddle Aeronautical University Prescott, AZ 7/25/2014 ABX AIR INC Aerosim Training Solutions CAE SimuFlite, Inc. Wilmington, OH 9/3/2014 Orlando, FL 10/3/2014 Dallas, TX 10/20/2014 Atlanta, GA ExpressJet Airlines, Inc. 11/4/2014 Houston, TX FlightSafety International, Inc. Atlanta, GA AeroStar Training Services, LLC Orlando, FL Air Wisconsin Airlines Corporation Charlotte, NC 12/11/14 3/24/2015 04/15/15 • 1 additional course has completed HQ review (121) http://www.faa.gov/pilots/training/atp/ Federal Aviation Administration 10 Rulemaking – Part 121 Pilot Professional Development (Mentoring) Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) • • Estimated publication date is 2015 Will consider: − − Leadership and mentoring training for part 121 flight crewmembers Establishment of flight crewmember professional development programs Federal Aviation Administration 11 Rulemaking – Part 121 Qualification, Service, and Use of Crewmembers and Aircraft Dispatchers Final Rule • • • • Published on November 12, 2013 with 5 years to implement most provisions (March 2019) Amends certain regulations for part 121 training programs Requires pilot training for: − Recognizing, avoiding, and recovering from stalls; − Recognizing and avoiding aircraft upset; − Manual flying skills; − Crosswind maneuvers including wind gusts; − Pilot monitoring; and − Runway safety procedures. Requires remedial training programs for pilots who have demonstrated performance deficiencies Federal Aviation Administration 12 Rulemaking - Part 60 Flight Simulation Training Device (FSTD) Qualification for Extended Envelope and Adverse Weather Event Training NPRM • Initiated to address simulator fidelity • Proposed: – Full stall simulator evaluation criteria – Upset prevention and recovery training – Enhanced airborne icing modeling • NPRM comment period closed January 2015 • Part 60 standards will be in place to allow time for air carriers to modify and evaluate FSTDs before the part 121 N&O compliance date Federal Aviation Administration 13 Rulemaking – Part 135 Helicopter Air Ambulance, Commercial Helicopter, and Part 91 Helicopter Operations Final Rule – Final rule published February 21, 2014 – Amends equipment and operations requirements for helicopter air ambulance operations Federal Aviation Administration 14 Rulemaking – Part 135 Helicopter Air Ambulance (HAA) Pilot Training and Operational Requirements – NPRM in development – Public Law 112-95 directed FAA to initiate second HAA rulemaking – Purpose: Develop HAA pilot training requirements and operational safety requirements for pilots and medical personnel Federal Aviation Administration 15 Rulemaking – Part 135 HAA rulemaking – Considerations: – Minimum number of hours for training programs and requirements for scenario-based training through line-oriented flight training (LOFT). – Requirements for protective gear such as helmets, flame resistant clothing, and shoulder harnesses, in order to increase accident survivability. Federal Aviation Administration 16 LOC-I Loss of Control and Recovery Training (LOCART) – Goal: Develop harmonized guidance on loss of control and upset prevention and recovery training on-aircraft and in a flight simulator – ARC meetings held in Montreal to facilitate work with ICAO, EASA, and other national aviation authorities – U.S. guidance being updated to support final rules which modified stall and upset training requirements for ATP training and part 121 operations – AC 120-109A, AC 120-111 Federal Aviation Administration 17 LOC-I • AC 120-111, Upset Prevention and Recovery Training – Published, April 2015 – Key Principles: • Early recognition of divergence from intended flight path. • Upset prevention through improvements in manual handling skills. • Crew-oriented training that integrates crew resource management including progressive intervention strategies for the pilot monitoring. Federal Aviation Administration 18 LOC-I • AC 120-109A, Stall Prevention and Recovery – Anticipated Publication: Summer 2015 – Key Principles: • Reduce angle of attack when confronted with a stall event. • Use realistic scenarios that could be encountered in operational conditions, including stalls when the autopilot is engaged and high altitude stalls. • Stall Prevention (Approach to Stall): execution of the stall recovery procedure at the first indication of a stall. • Stall Recovery: (Full Stall) instructor led training, but must allow the pilot to experience the associated flight dynamics and execute a recovery Federal Aviation Administration 19 Air Carrier Training Aviation Rulemaking Committee (ACT ARC) Inputs • CAST Safety Enhancements • PARC Recs • NTSB Recs • Previous ARC Recs • FAA Input • Industry Input ACT ARC • • • • • Advisory Circulars InFOs SAFOs Inspector Guidance Regulations Outputs Federal Aviation Administration 20 Air Carrier Training Aviation Rulemaking Committee (ACT ARC) FAA Designated Federal Official / Industry Chair A4A ADF AIA Air Carrier and Contract Training Workgroup AFA ALPA APFA CAE Crew Resource Management Enhancement Workgroup CAPA FSF FSI NACA Education, Training, and Experience Alternatives for an ATP Workgroup NATA NBAA RAA RACCA Flight Path Management Workgroup Federal Aviation Administration 21 Issues at Stake and Future Plans • Keeping pilots engaged— • Pilot monitoring training and procedures • Maintaining pilot manual handling skills— • • Targeted skill development during training Practice during flight operations (SAFO 13002) Federal Aviation Administration 22 Thank you for your participation. Robert Burke, Manager, AFS-280 Air Carrier Training Systems and Voluntary Safety Programs robert.burke@faa.gov Federal Aviation Administration 23