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Subscriptionhttp://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsitems/2004/040915security.html

House aviation subcommittee advances aviation security bill
AOPA work blocks anti-GA proposal
The House aviation subcommittee Wednesday advanced an
aviation security bill, but anti-general aviation security
procedures proposed by New York Congressman Anthony D.
Weiner weren't part of it. AOPA had worked quickly with key
members of the subcommittee to make sure Weiner's bill
wasn't included. Weiner introduced legislation last week
that would require airline-style security screening and
continuous contact with the FAA for every GA flight.

At an aviation subcommittee hearing Wednesday to review any
changes to the aviation security bill before sending it to
the next level, Weiner acknowledged he had received
"additional insight" on general aviation security from other
committee members, including Leonard Boswell (D-Iowa), a
pilot and AOPA member.

Boswell said he had a "lengthy discussion" with Weiner the
day before the hearing. The Iowa congressman said that
legitimate security concerns could be addressed with the
expertise in the federal government and "with the assistance
of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association."

AOPA has "put a lot of study into this on how we can deal
with these [security issues] without the broader impact that
Congressman Weiner is concerned about," Boswell said at
Wednesday's hearing. "I will be available to assist and I
know AOPA will available to assist."

(Listen to portions of Rep. Anthony Weiner's statements to
the House aviation subcommittee and the exchange with Rep.
Leonard Boswell.)

Weiner responded, "I want to thank the gentleman from Iowa
for giving me some additional insight into this issue. It is
an issue where it is very easy to identify the tree and lose
sight of the forest. We still want general aviation, we
still want commerce, we still want transportation to go on,
and for that reason I didn't offer this [amendment] today."

Before the hearing AOPA had registered its concerns about
the tremendous impact the bill could have on general
aviation directly with Weiner's staff. AOPA's legislative
affairs staff had also lobbied other influential members of
the aviation subcommittee and its parent committee, the
House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

"What happened in the aviation subcommittee on Wednesday
clearly illustrates AOPA's strong relationships and support
in Congress," said AOPA President Phil Boyer. "For our
400,000 members, it is important to have a dedicated staff
on Capitol Hill working on behalf of pilots."

On September 8, the same day Weiner released his bill, an
AOPA legislative affairs staff member had met with Rep. Sam
Graves (R-Mo.), a member of the House aviation subcommittee,
to express opposition to the bill. Graves, a pilot and AOPA
member, confirmed he would oppose the bill.

AOPA also contacted subcommittee member Robin Hayes
(R-N.C.), a pilot and AOPA member, along with Boswell.

AOPA talked to the staff of aviation subcommittee Chairman
John Mica (R-Fla.) and Ranking Member Peter DeFazio
(D-Ore.); with chairman of the full Transportation
Committee, Don Young (R-Alaska); and with James Oberstar
(D-Minn.), the ranking member.

The leadership of both committees made it very clear there
would be no support for Weiner's bill. Without the backing
of the senior members of the aviation subcommittee and the
Transportation Committee, there's little chance a piece of
legislation will get passed. Weiner's bill is still
technically alive; he hasn't officially withdrawn it. But it
will die when Congress adjourns early next month if no
further action is taken.

"Weiner's bill would have to clear a lot of hurdles before
it would even be considered by the House," said Boyer.
"There are significant checks and balances to a piece of
legislation like this - the subcommittee, full committee,
full House - then the same over in the Senate.

"With our long experience in lobbying Congress, we know when
and how to target politicians to express our position,"
Boyer added. "Rarely has AOPA ever been placed in a position
to bring in the full power of our 400,000 members to stop a
bill on either the House or Senate floor because we work at
being effective well prior to that point. In this case, we
did just that and didn't need to call on our members for
assistance."

Weiner's bill (H.R. 5035) would require the Transportation
Security Administration to set up airline-style passenger
screening at every landing facility in the United States
(some 19,500) to screen every passenger boarding every
general aviation aircraft (more than 211,000) for every
flight (more than 43 million per year). That means the TSA
would have to conduct an additional 108 million passenger
screenings at more than 19,000 facilities where TSA today
doesn't currently have any officers. (Data from AOPA's 2004
Fact Card.)

But Weiner's bill wouldn't stop there. It would also require
every pilot of every flight to remain "in contact with the
Federal Aviation Administration regardless of the altitude
of such aircraft." That would increase the workload of air
traffic controllers by at least nine times, requiring the
agency to significantly increase the size of the workforce
and to install new communications and radar equipment to
cover all the areas of the country.

The aviation security bill that the subcommittee sent to the
House Transportation Committee on Wednesday deals primarily
with commercial aviation, where the risk of terrorism
remains greatest.

Update: September 16, 2004




©1995-2006 Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association

"Jim Macklin" wrote
in message news:fTVRf.117485$QW2.69668@dukeread08...
|I don't remember offhand, I'll see if I can get the name.
| Somewhere back east. I'll try Google and the AOPA.
|
|
| --
| The people think the Constitution protects their rights;
| But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome.
| some support
| http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm
| See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and
duties.
|
|
| "Matt Barrow" wrote in message
| ...
||
|| "Jim Macklin"
wrote
| in message
|| news:yyQRf.117463$QW2.74623@dukeread08...
||
|| Some Congressman proposed that before every take-off
the
| TSA
|| would have to approve every flight and that would
| include
|| the rancher in Wyoming checking his fences and cattle
| with a
|| J3 Cub.
||
|| Who might that Congresscritter be?
||
||
|
|