[JYO] AOPA to Homeland Security Department: "Lift the ADIZ"
- From: FlyboyEd@xxxxxxx
- To: jyo@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2003 17:59:17 EDT
from AOPA...
Apr. 16 — AOPA President Phil Boyer today sent a <A
HREF="http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsitems/2003/030416letter.html">strongly
worded letter</A> to
the Homeland Security Department (HSD), requesting the immediate suspension
of the air defense identification zones (ADIZs) around Washington, D.C. and
New York City. Boyer fired off the letter within hours after the government
reduced the national threat level to yellow, or "elevated."
"AOPA's members are now not just asking, but demanding, that with the reduced
threat level, the ADIZ areas be rescinded," Boyer wrote in his letter to HSD
Under Secretary for Border and Transportation Security Asa Hutchinson.
Boyer noted that he has been holding face-to-face Pilot Town Meetings with
pilots in the New York City area. "They have made it clear that these
restricted flying areas are an operational disaster," he said in the letter.
"Nearly 65,000 AOPA members base their airplanes and/or fly in the New York
and Washington, D.C., areas," he said. "As Americans concerned with this
nation's security, these pilots have tolerated an ill-conceived operational
plan during the period of heightened alert ... However, elevated threat
conditions should not be an excuse to impose airspace restrictions that are
not eliminated after the threat conditions are lowered. Will these
restrictions be like taxes, once imposed as a 'temporary' measure, they never
go away?"
Boyer noted that the restrictions have placed undue burdens not only on
pilots, but on air traffic controllers as well, as ATC struggles to deal with
a vastly increased workload.
"AOPA has been flooded with complaints from pilots who have been subject to
lengthy delays and even denied service," Boyer wrote. Typical of the
problems, one Washington, D.C.-area pilot reported spending almost two hours
to file the required ADIZ flight plan, contact ATC, receive a transponder
code, and obtain a clearance into the ADIZ — more time than the trip itself!
"An AOPA member in New York waited 'more than two hours on the ground after
engine start-up' to receive clearance into the New York City ADIZ ... for a
flight that was to take less than one hour en route!" Boyer wrote. "These are
but two examples. AOPA has heard countless reports of extreme delays,
canceled flights, terminated flight lessons, and lost business at general
aviation airports."
Boyer concluded, "Based on real-world experiences by pilots, the ADIZ is not
working. It is clear that the air traffic control system does not have the
resources in place to effectively manage, for extended periods of time, the
volume of general aviation traffic requiring access.
"On behalf of the nearly 400,000 members of AOPA, under this reduced threat
level, I urge you to rescind the ADIZ restrictions immediately."
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