[JYO] D.C. Airspace May Be Restricted for Good

  • From: FlyboyEd@xxxxxxx
  • To: jyo@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 4 Aug 2005 15:21:47 EDT

D.C. Airspace May Be  Restricted for Good
By LESLIE MILLER
The Associated Press
Wednesday, August  3, 2005; 10:51 PM
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WASHINGTON -- The government wants permanently to restrict a wide swath of  
airspace over the Washington area and make it a crime if a private pilot  
knowingly enters a zone that extends from Maryland to Virginia. 
Pilots have strayed hundreds of times since the government temporarily  
restricted airspace over the capital just before the start of the Iraq war in  
2003. In many cases, fighter jets, which are prepared to shoot down a plane,  
have 
escorted an errant plane to an airport. 
The FAA, in a notice to be published on Thursday, said the restrictions are  
necessary because of the continuing threat of terrorism. 
"The success of the Sept. 11, 2001, attack on the Pentagon and reports  
demonstrating terrorist groups' enduring interest in aviation-related attacks  
indicate the need for continued vigilance in aviation security," the FAA  said. 
The agency said there is no information suggesting that terrorists have an  
imminent plan to use airplanes to attack the U.S. capital. 
The current restrictions went into effect in February 2003, when the FAA  
expanded the zone over Washington before the war in Iraq. Similar limits were  
imposed after the Sept. 11 attacks. 
The restricted airspace includes an outer ring that has a radius of about 30  
miles to 45 miles and an altitude of 18,000 feet. 
The zone extends east beyond Baltimore, west beyond Dulles International  
Airport in Virginia, north to Gaithersburg, Md., and about 30 miles south of  
Washington. 
A plane that flies into this zone must file a flight plan, emit a special  
signal so air traffic controllers can follow it and maintain radio contact with 
 
the ground. 
An inner ring extends about 15 miles from the Washington Monument. Most  
flights are prohibited from flying into this area. 
The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, which represents private pilots,  
opposes the FAA plan. The group says the outer ring is unnecessary because so 
 many precautions have been taken since Sept. 11. Measures include improved 
radar  coverage, anti-aircraft missiles and a system that uses lasers to warn 
pilots  away from the restricted airspace. 
"No general aviation aircraft has ever been used in a terrorist attack," the  
association's president, Phil Boyer, said in a statement. He said the 
government  has not any violation of the outer ring restriction that was  
terrorist-related. 
Though pilots flew into the outer zone more than 1,600 times in 2003-04, only 
 a few were penalized. 
Several lawmakers have proposed raising the penalty and making it  mandatory. 
One proposal would revoke for two years to five years the license of pilots  
who violate the inner ring and impose as much as $100,000 in fines. Pilots who 
 fly into the outer ring could be fined up to $5,000. 
The FAA proposal would allow the government to impose criminal penalties _  
fines and up to a year in prison _ on anyone who knowingly or willingly enters  
the outer zone. 
People have 90 days to comment on the proposal. 
___ 

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