FAA Has No Clue About Who Owns Approximately 1/3 Of All Private And Commercial Planes
from the our-government-at-work dept
johnjac points us to the news that the FAA's record keeping is so bad that it is "missing key information" on who owns 119,000 out of 357,000 registered private and commercial airplanes. Apparently, the FAA is so bad at record keeping that its solution is to phase out every plane's registration and demand that everyone apply for a new registration to get its database back on track. Apparently, the old system was that you just had to register once, and then you were responsible for letting the FAA know if info changed, but not everyone does that. So, basically, the FAA is rather clueless about approximately 1/3 of what's in the sky.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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[Cough] "spfluck wha..." ??
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To be fair...
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Re: To be fair...
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Ownership
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It's not like there is a rash of unknown plane incidents
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FAA
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Re:
> for owning a plane (or is there no vehicle tax
> in the US?).
Not federally. Each state has different rules on that sort of thing.
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Re: It's not like there is a rash of unknown plane incidents
The FAA has numerous requirements for maintenance on planes in order for them to be airworthy which makes sense, Registration is when you first buy it which puts you as owner of record for the plane. Then you are obligated to send in a change of address if you move and that is essentially all.
At the state levels you have some issues with taxes, but it's in the states with Property (not land) Taxes.
It sounds like the FAA is about to complicate a system that doesn't need it.
As for the airplanes that they have no clue about, most likey most of them aren't airworthy and will never fly again anyway.
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Re-documenting only works with follow-up
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Why would they want to know?
When did plausible deniability become a bad thing?
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Re: Why would they want to know?
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Re: Re-documenting only works with follow-up
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doot doot doodle-oodle doot doot do do
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hmm
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I don't know that I'd blame the FAA...
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Re: hmm
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Let's Be Fair
he simplest path is to make various actions - airworthiness cert, flight plans, air traffic control use, etc. - require valid registration.
The other problem is that real enforcement means money, and I bet the FAA has been starved for small plane rule enforcement, concentrating on other issues.
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For what's it worth...
Taxes are paid to feed the FAA via embedded fuel taxes.
In the US, we enjoy a great deal of freedom to fly. Most smaller plane pilots are able to fly as easy as someone drives around town - they just hop into the plane and go without talking to a tower, FAA, etc.
In short, even if the FAA had a 100% accurate ownership database, they still could never know who and what is flying in the skies at any single point of time without a massive change in the system.
In the small plane world, a pilot will only deal with the FAA when they've broken some rule and gotten caught. In that case, then the FAA will make sure everything is in order, but the system is very much a reactive system and definitely not a proactive/check-point system.
Just my two cents - freedoms are extremely hard to obtain and yet we give them up so easily. Only in a country as rich as America would you give up your Freedoms AND gladly pay more taxes to Uncle Sam to "protect you".
Freedom
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Re: To be fair...
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So?
By the way CIA will be pissed if there funding source goes away.
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