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              FAA throws a spanner in 
              the works
             
            
              
               
             
            
              The Federal Aviation 
              Administration has set about making life difficult for the tens 
              of thousands of pilots worldwide who hold FAA tickets on the 
              strength of their national licenses. The new policy, unannounced 
              and not subject to any consultation, means that such pilots must 
              now make appointments and travel to the United States in order 
              to amend their licenses – something all must do within the next 
              year.
             
            
              If you have an FAA licence 
              issued in its own right – that is, if you took a knowledge test 
              and a flight test with a designated FAA examiner – you are 
              unaffected. If, however, your licence was issued on the basis of 
              a JAA or national licence (known as a 61.75 certificate) then 
              you are going to find the going tough.
             
            
              In 
              brief, the situation is as follows. By March 5th2009, 
              you must have an ‘English Language Proficient’ authorisation on 
              your FAA licence to be able to fly legally. (This is to comply 
              with an ICAO requirement for better English.) If you have a 
              ‘full’ FAA licence you can log onto the FAA website, pay $2 and 
              get your authorisation by post within a couple of weeks. If, 
              however, you have a 61.75, you must use a special form to apply 
              to your licence issuer to have your licence, ratings and medical 
              validated by them, then apply to the FAA for an English 
              Proficient stamp, make an appointment with an FAA District 
              Office in the United States, go there and collect it in person.
             
            
              The 
              problem is compounded for pilots holding the old-style cardboard 
              61.75 certificate. The FAA has been issuing credit card style 
              licenses for five years, and the cardboard ones will no longer 
              be legal after March 31st2010. They cannot be 
              exchanged online; a trip to the States is required. But at least 
              you’ve got a year for that one.
             
            
              Since AOPA first alerted GA 
              to the English Proficient stamp problem in December, it has been 
              working with IAOPA and AOPA-US to obtain some relief for 61.75 
              holders, in particular a delay to the start date of the ICAO 
              requirement, if only to make it humanly possible to comply. 
              IAOPA has fought against ICAO’s ‘Level 4’ language requirement 
              since it was first proposed, as they are grossly excessive for 
              GA pilots, but has not convinced ICAO to change.
             
            
               
              
             
            
              Ways around it?
             
            
              There are a number of people 
              in Europe claiming to be able to provide English Proficient 
              authorisations for a fee, but when questioned about this, the 
              FAA’s Airmen Certification department told AOPA that the only 
              way to comply is to have your licence first authorised by your 
              own CAA, then apply in person, with an appointment, at an FAA 
              District Office in the United States. No other option is 
              available outside the United States.
             
            
              Just why the FAA is doing 
              this is not explained. It may be a security measure; in 
              off-the-record conversations with FAA personnel in Oklahoma 
              City, New York and Washington AOPA was told that a lot of dodgy 
              characters had obtained 61.75 licenses and the FAA wants to weed 
              them out. But very few FAA staff anywhere in the world knew of 
              the policy, and some denied its existence.
             
            
              However, 
              the FAA’s website (see http://www.faa.gov/licenses_certificates/airmen_certification/English_proficiency/) 
              states that unless your FAA certificate has ‘English language 
              proficient’ on it by March 09, you may not exercise the 
              privileges of that certificate. While full licence holders can 
              simply get their stamp online, 61.75 holders who attempt to do 
              so are blocked. Those who attempt to obtain their amended 
              certificates by mail from the Oklahoma City office – the other 
              route specified on the web for full licence holders – have their 
              applications returned marked ‘rejected’.
             
            
              Under 
              the URL http://www.faa.gov/licenses_certificates/airmen_certification/foreign_license_verification/you 
              will see, inter alia, the requisite information in the 
              section beginning ‘Foreign License’. If you have a 61.75 
              certificate, it says, “then 
              you must have the Civil Aviation Authority that issued those 
              certificates verify the validity and currency of the foreign 
              license and medical certificate or endorsement before you apply 
              for an FAA certificate or authorization.”
             
            
              The information the FAA 
              requires, it goes on, includes “…the location of the FAA Flight 
              Standards District Office where you intend to apply for your US 
              certificate…” and says once your CAA has verified your licence, 
              you will be notified that your certificate has been forwarded to 
              the District Office you specified, to be collected in person 
              within six months.
             
            
              For some 
              reason, holders of licenses issued by the UK and Australian CAAs 
              are singled out for special treatment. The FAA says: “In 
              addition to the procedures stated under Verification of 
              Authenticity of Foreign license, Rating and Medical 
              Certification above, airmen from the United Kingdom or Australia 
              must contact their respective CAA to complete additional forms 
              that are required priorto providing the requested 
              information to the Airmen Certification Branch.” At time of 
              going to press AOPA was still seeking clarification from the FAA 
              and the CAA on this issue.
             
            
               
              
             
            
              Blank stares
             
            
              IAOPA’s general secretary 
              John Sheehan is working with AOPA-US’s staff who deal with the 
              FAA to seek answers. The only definitive statements have come 
              unsigned out of the Airmen’s Certification department in answer 
              to AOPA’s written questions. These answers say: “The initial 
              step in re-verifying your ‘restricted’ certificate based on your 
              foreign license is to submit a ‘Verification of Authenticity of 
              Foreign License’ to AFS-760 requesting Civil Aviation Authority 
              in your country verify the validity of your foreign pilot 
              license, ratings and medical certificate.
             
            
              “This 
              form is located on our website at http://registry.faa.gov, 
              choose Airmen 
              Certification, then under Certificates select ‘Verify the 
              Authenticity of a Foreign License, Rating or Medical 
              Certification’.
             
            
              “After your country 
              has verified the authenticity of your foreign pilot license we 
              will send the information to the Flight Standards District 
              Office you have designated and a copy to you. You will then 
              contact an Inspector at that FSDO and set up an appointment to 
              complete the process.”
             
            
              Asked whether anyone in 
              Europe was authorised to do this work, the reply was: “The only 
              way is to go through the verification of authenticity process 
              and meet with an FAA Inspector in the US.”
             
            
               
              
             
            
              No more paper
             
            
              For those 
              with cardboard certificates, the 
              2009 edition of the Federal Aviation Regulations contains a new 
              part of interest. FAR 61.19 – ‘duration of pilot and instructor 
              certificates’ (page 45 of the ASA FAR/AIM) headed 61.19(h), says 
              the holder of a paper pilot certificate issued by the FAA may 
              not exercise the privileges of that certificate after 31 March 
              2010. That means you must have the credit card or plastic 
              certificate by this date, with Orville and Wilbur Wright on the 
              card, or you cannot fly your N-reg aircraft in the UK or Europe. 
              That, too, can only be obtained by visiting an FSDO in the US.
             
            
              The FAA is also starting to 
              issue certificates with an expiry date. 61.11(c) (page 42) says 
              a pilot certificate issued on the basis of a foreign pilot 
              licence will expire on the date the foreign pilot licence 
              expires, unless otherwise specified on the 61.75 US certificate. 
              JAA/EASA licenses are valid for five years. If you’re getting 
              new 61.75, check whether your 61.75 has an expiry date. It will 
              be listed on the back in the limitations part, along with 
              ‘English proficient’. 
             
            
              A common misconception is 
              that 61.75 holders require an FAA medical. This is not true as 
              can be seen on page 72 (61.75 (b) (4) ‘medical certificates’. 
              It’s also listed at 61.3 (c)(2)(x) on page 39, which shows that 
              you can use your UK medical.
             
            
              FAR 61.3 says you are 
              required to have your medical, UK licence and FAA certificate 
              and passport on your person or readily accessible in the 
              aircraft.
             
            
              With a 61.75 certificate you 
              are required to keep your UK licence current AND you are 
              required to have a flight review – 61.56 (c) page 57: No person 
              may act as pilot in command of an aircraft unless since the 
              beginning of the 24th calendar month before that in which he 
              acts a PIC, that person has 
             
            
              (1) accomplished a flight 
              review given by an authorized instructor.
             
            
              (2) A log book endorsement 
              from an authorised instructor.
             
            
              An authorised instructor is 
              one that holds an FAA CFI or CFII, not a UK or JAR instructor. 
             
            
              If you haven’t had a flight 
              review within the last two years you are flying illegally. If 
              you have an accident or you’re ramp-checked your insurance 
              company will not cover you and the FAA will fine you.
             
            
              It’s worth noting that the 
              US domestic security agency, the TSA, is now saying that 
              N-registered aircraft must be required to inform the agency of 
              any flight, anywhere in the world, in advance. At the moment 
              this is believed to be restricted to aircraft above 12,500 lbs, 
              but there are a lot of itchy trigger fingers at the agency and 
              anything could happen.
             
            
              IMPORTANT UPDATE TO THE ARTICLE AFTER THE INITIAL 
              DISTRIBUTION OF THE NEWSLETTER: Confusion characterises 
              the Federal Aviation Administration's response to questions on 
              amendments to 61.75 certificates, with different offices taking 
              different positions. The Airmen Certification Branch of the 
              Federal Aviation Administration is today (February 5) advising 
              AOPA members that the only way to amend such certificates is by 
              appointment at an FAA District Office. The New York field 
              office, however, says certain DEPs in Europe are authorised to 
              amend 61.75 certificates. As long as some FAA staff maintain 
              there is an procedure whereby the requirements stipulated on the 
              FAA website can be circumvented, there seems to be no reason why 
              that route should not be used by 61.75 holders in Europe. AOPA 
              will therefore support all 61.75 holders who have their 'English 
              Proficiency' amendments made by Europe-based DPEs with the 
              authority of the New York field office, whatever the eventual 
              outcome. AOPA US continues to work with the FAA to establish an 
              acceptable means of compliance that can be widely published.
             
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