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TSA Rule... what constitutes "training"?



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 26th 04, 06:45 PM
Geoffrey Barnes
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Default TSA Rule... what constitutes "training"?

As I understand the TSA rule on alien flight training -- and please correct
me if I am wrong about this -- anyone who is already engaged in flight
training does not need to undergo the background checks. Now if that's true
(and it might not be), what does a student need to have done to have started
their flight training prior to Oct. 20? For example, if a foreign student
came in and did a 30-minute "discovery flight" on Oct. 15, and logged the
time as a half-hour "lesson", were they already engaged in flight training
when the rule took effect? What if the discovery flight took place in
August, or June, or April, or a year ago?


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  #2  
Old October 26th 04, 08:50 PM
Richard Russell
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Posts: n/a
Default

On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 17:45:30 GMT, "Geoffrey Barnes"
wrote:

As I understand the TSA rule on alien flight training -- and please correct
me if I am wrong about this -- anyone who is already engaged in flight
training does not need to undergo the background checks. Now if that's true
(and it might not be), what does a student need to have done to have started
their flight training prior to Oct. 20? For example, if a foreign student
came in and did a 30-minute "discovery flight" on Oct. 15, and logged the
time as a half-hour "lesson", were they already engaged in flight training
when the rule took effect? What if the discovery flight took place in
August, or June, or April, or a year ago?

Flight training is defined as instruction received from a flight
school in an aircraft or aircraft simulator. Any such activity that
is noted in a logbook prior to October 20th would exempt the student
from the new TSA procedures (as I interpret the regs). There is a
time limit for lessons to begin after a new student that is subject to
the regs is cleared. He must begin lessons within 180 days. I'm not
sure if there are any time limitations on the situation that you
proposed.
Rich Russell
  #3  
Old October 28th 04, 04:56 AM
Mike Reichfeld
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Posts: n/a
Default

U r wrong BIG TIME.

Read the rule as corrected. Only instruction that lead to another/higher
rating or certificate is falling under the rule. All others - are not
instruction under the rule.

As always - TSA stupidity at its prime. The bad guys can get instruction
from Microsoft flight simulator if they want to.


"Richard Russell" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 17:45:30 GMT, "Geoffrey Barnes"
wrote:

As I understand the TSA rule on alien flight training -- and please
correct
me if I am wrong about this -- anyone who is already engaged in flight
training does not need to undergo the background checks. Now if that's
true
(and it might not be), what does a student need to have done to have
started
their flight training prior to Oct. 20? For example, if a foreign student
came in and did a 30-minute "discovery flight" on Oct. 15, and logged the
time as a half-hour "lesson", were they already engaged in flight training
when the rule took effect? What if the discovery flight took place in
August, or June, or April, or a year ago?

Flight training is defined as instruction received from a flight
school in an aircraft or aircraft simulator. Any such activity that
is noted in a logbook prior to October 20th would exempt the student
from the new TSA procedures (as I interpret the regs). There is a
time limit for lessons to begin after a new student that is subject to
the regs is cleared. He must begin lessons within 180 days. I'm not
sure if there are any time limitations on the situation that you
proposed.
Rich Russell



  #4  
Old October 28th 04, 01:33 PM
Richard Russell
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 23:56:44 -0400, "Mike Reichfeld"
wrote:

U r wrong BIG TIME.

Read the rule as corrected. Only instruction that lead to another/higher
rating or certificate is falling under the rule. All others - are not
instruction under the rule.

As always - TSA stupidity at its prime. The bad guys can get instruction
from Microsoft flight simulator if they want to.


"Richard Russell" wrote in message
.. .
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 17:45:30 GMT, "Geoffrey Barnes"
wrote:

As I understand the TSA rule on alien flight training -- and please
correct
me if I am wrong about this -- anyone who is already engaged in flight
training does not need to undergo the background checks. Now if that's
true
(and it might not be), what does a student need to have done to have
started
their flight training prior to Oct. 20? For example, if a foreign student
came in and did a 30-minute "discovery flight" on Oct. 15, and logged the
time as a half-hour "lesson", were they already engaged in flight training
when the rule took effect? What if the discovery flight took place in
August, or June, or April, or a year ago?

Flight training is defined as instruction received from a flight
school in an aircraft or aircraft simulator. Any such activity that
is noted in a logbook prior to October 20th would exempt the student
from the new TSA procedures (as I interpret the regs). There is a
time limit for lessons to begin after a new student that is subject to
the regs is cleared. He must begin lessons within 180 days. I'm not
sure if there are any time limitations on the situation that you
proposed.
Rich Russell


I'm not wrong "big time". I am aware of the interpretation that
narrows the definition to training for a rating or certificate. The
question was clearly asked within the context of training for a
rating.
Rich Russell
  #5  
Old October 28th 04, 05:52 PM
Andrew Sarangan
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Richard Russell wrote in message . ..
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 17:45:30 GMT, "Geoffrey Barnes"
wrote:

As I understand the TSA rule on alien flight training -- and please correct
me if I am wrong about this -- anyone who is already engaged in flight
training does not need to undergo the background checks. Now if that's true
(and it might not be), what does a student need to have done to have started
their flight training prior to Oct. 20? For example, if a foreign student
came in and did a 30-minute "discovery flight" on Oct. 15, and logged the
time as a half-hour "lesson", were they already engaged in flight training
when the rule took effect? What if the discovery flight took place in
August, or June, or April, or a year ago?

Flight training is defined as instruction received from a flight
school in an aircraft or aircraft simulator. Any such activity that
is noted in a logbook prior to October 20th would exempt the student
from the new TSA procedures (as I interpret the regs). There is a
time limit for lessons to begin after a new student that is subject to
the regs is cleared. He must begin lessons within 180 days. I'm not
sure if there are any time limitations on the situation that you
proposed.
Rich Russell


So does that mean a foreign national who had taken a lesson prior to
Oct 20 can go to any FBO within 180 days and continue training? Does
the 180-day clock get reset every time he takes a lesson, or is it
counted from the day of the first lesson?
  #6  
Old October 28th 04, 06:37 PM
Brian Case
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

snip

As always - TSA stupidity at its prime. The bad guys can get instruction
from Microsoft flight simulator if they want to.

snip

Better yet the new rules encourage thousands of foreign students (and
maybe a couple terrorists) to go to other countries to spend their
money to train. Training of Foriegn pilots in the US is/Usedtobe big
business.
  #7  
Old October 28th 04, 07:28 PM
Richard Russell
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Posts: n/a
Default

On 28 Oct 2004 09:52:56 -0700, (Andrew
Sarangan) wrote:

Richard Russell wrote in message . ..
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 17:45:30 GMT, "Geoffrey Barnes"
wrote:

As I understand the TSA rule on alien flight training -- and please correct
me if I am wrong about this -- anyone who is already engaged in flight
training does not need to undergo the background checks. Now if that's true
(and it might not be), what does a student need to have done to have started
their flight training prior to Oct. 20? For example, if a foreign student
came in and did a 30-minute "discovery flight" on Oct. 15, and logged the
time as a half-hour "lesson", were they already engaged in flight training
when the rule took effect? What if the discovery flight took place in
August, or June, or April, or a year ago?

Flight training is defined as instruction received from a flight
school in an aircraft or aircraft simulator. Any such activity that
is noted in a logbook prior to October 20th would exempt the student
from the new TSA procedures (as I interpret the regs). There is a
time limit for lessons to begin after a new student that is subject to
the regs is cleared. He must begin lessons within 180 days. I'm not
sure if there are any time limitations on the situation that you
proposed.
Rich Russell


So does that mean a foreign national who had taken a lesson prior to
Oct 20 can go to any FBO within 180 days and continue training? Does
the 180-day clock get reset every time he takes a lesson, or is it
counted from the day of the first lesson?


You raise a couple of interesting issues and I can't answer them. If
the student took a lesson prior to Oct 20, I believe that he is
grandfathered and not subject to the new provisions at all. I don't
think the 180 day issue applies to him. It would be interesting to
see, however, if such a student could change to another FBO/CFI and
have them accept him as being grandfathered. I suspect that the new
CFI would be leery of that and may want to cover his butt by not
honoring his previously logged work. We'll have to wait and see how a
lot of different scenarios develop.

As far as the 180 days goes (for a new student that is subject to the
new rule) I know that he has to begin his lessons within 180 days of
approval but I don't know if he's subject to any sactions if there is
a lapse in his training of 180 days.
Rich Russell
  #8  
Old October 28th 04, 11:49 PM
Chris
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Richard Russell" wrote in message
...
On 28 Oct 2004 09:52:56 -0700, (Andrew
Sarangan) wrote:

Richard Russell wrote in message
...
On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 17:45:30 GMT, "Geoffrey Barnes"
wrote:

As I understand the TSA rule on alien flight training -- and please
correct
me if I am wrong about this -- anyone who is already engaged in flight
training does not need to undergo the background checks. Now if that's
true
(and it might not be), what does a student need to have done to have
started
their flight training prior to Oct. 20? For example, if a foreign
student
came in and did a 30-minute "discovery flight" on Oct. 15, and logged
the
time as a half-hour "lesson", were they already engaged in flight
training
when the rule took effect? What if the discovery flight took place in
August, or June, or April, or a year ago?

Flight training is defined as instruction received from a flight
school in an aircraft or aircraft simulator. Any such activity that
is noted in a logbook prior to October 20th would exempt the student
from the new TSA procedures (as I interpret the regs). There is a
time limit for lessons to begin after a new student that is subject to
the regs is cleared. He must begin lessons within 180 days. I'm not
sure if there are any time limitations on the situation that you
proposed.
Rich Russell


So does that mean a foreign national who had taken a lesson prior to
Oct 20 can go to any FBO within 180 days and continue training? Does
the 180-day clock get reset every time he takes a lesson, or is it
counted from the day of the first lesson?


You raise a couple of interesting issues and I can't answer them. If
the student took a lesson prior to Oct 20, I believe that he is
grandfathered and not subject to the new provisions at all. I don't
think the 180 day issue applies to him. It would be interesting to
see, however, if such a student could change to another FBO/CFI and
have them accept him as being grandfathered. I suspect that the new
CFI would be leery of that and may want to cover his butt by not
honoring his previously logged work. We'll have to wait and see how a
lot of different scenarios develop.

As far as the 180 days goes (for a new student that is subject to the
new rule) I know that he has to begin his lessons within 180 days of
approval but I don't know if he's subject to any sactions if there is
a lapse in his training of 180 days.
Rich Russell


There are visa problems and transferring to a new school FBO can be a major
problem, in theory not possible if the school is not able to issue the I-20
form.


 




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