News and Updates – Stephen M. Dickson Sworn in as Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration

Dickson brings nearly 40 years of aviation experience to the job and becomes the 18th Administrator of the FAA.

Speech – FAA Administrator Stephen Dickson Swearing-In Remarks

Administrator Stephen Dickson
Washington, DC

As Prepared

Thank you for that kind introduction and thanks to all of you for being here today. Id like to thank President Trump and Secretary Chao for their confidence in me to lead the FAA during this very important time. It was an honor to receive the Presidents nomination, and the Secretarys support was vital during my confirmation process.

I would like to thank our emcee for today, Deputy Administrator Dan Elwell, for his strong, principled leadership during a very challenging time in the agencys history. Dan, you have served your country and the aviation industry with distinction, and I look forward to working with you and the outstanding team at the FAA as we move forward together.

I see so many friends, colleagues and leaders from across the aviation industry who are so critical to the safety and success in aviation we enjoy as a nation. Welcome and thank you for coming. Janice and I are blessed that so many friends made the trip to spend this day with us.

My biggest thanks are for my family. My Mom, Joy and my father-in-law, Hank Borger, both made the trip and I am thankful you were able to share this day with us.

Sadly my Dad, Bill, passed away in May about six days after my confirmation hearing. But I know he is looking down on us now with great pride.

To my biggest supporter, the love of my life, my wife, Janicethe glue that holds our family together. Honey, I know the FAA was not originally in your flight plan and that we are diverting for a few years from our intended destination. I am so thankful for your support, your encouragement and your love. I love you and appreciate you so much!

With that, I am reminded of that basic principle of military change of command speeches: be brief, be brilliant, and be gone! So lets get on with it.

The US aviation system is the safest, most dynamic, and innovative in the world, largely due to the collaborative approach to safety championed by the FAA and shared by various segments of the industry represented here today. Your presence here sends a strong message to the traveling public, to those who operate in our airspace, and to the international aviation community: that while we have earned their trust through our robust approach to safety, the job is not done. In fact it is never done. We all have to work together to retain- and in places, restore- that trust.

I am honored to join the outstanding team at the FAA. I want all FAA people to know that I look forward to working with them to ensure our aviation system maintains its proper place leading the world in both safety and operational performance. Nowhere else in the world sees the volume, complexity and pace of innovation that we have in our aviation system here in America. That certainly presents challenges, but also tremendous opportunities.

The public, and all those who work in American aviation, should know that FAA will continue to lead as a values-driven organization. Our highest and most important value is safetythis cannot be compromised. A lesson I learned in my service to our country in the Air Force, and will bring to my leadership of the FAA, is that safety is a journey, and not a destination. Its a journey that we must embark upon with renewed vigor each and every day.

At this moment, an entire fleet of U.S.-made aircraft is grounded due to two tragic accidents overseas. My heart goes out to the families of those who perished in Indonesia and Ethiopia. I want to again be clear: FAA is a safety-driven organization and safety is my highest priority. This plane will not fly in commercial service until I am completely assured that it is safe to do so. FAA is following no timeline in returning the aircraft to service. Rather, we are going where the facts lead us and diligently ensuring that all technology and training is present and correct before the plane returns to passenger service.

Throughout the U.S. aviation sector, any safety programwhether at an airline, an airport, a manufacturer or even at a regulatorhas at its foundation a just culture that places an extremely high value on front-line employee reporting.

Programs like ASAP, ATSAP, FOQA and ASIAS provide extremely valuable data that allow us to take proactive safety actions. Now you can see that I am already adapting quite well to the Washington environmentjust in that last sentence I used four acronyms! Seriously, these safety reporting programs require collaboration between the operator, the regulator and labor. The benefits of this collaboration in enhancing safety have been demonstrated time and again. We will do everything in our power to ensure the FAA promotes and walks the walk on employee safety reporting programs. And you can expect us to take actions to ensure this same philosophy permeates all sectors of the aviation system.

FAA strives to be a constructive partner with the wider industry, but we can never and will never forget that we are a regulator whose first responsibility is the safety of the flying public. FAA will seek out consensus, but ultimately will act in the best interests of the safety of the aviation system as a whole.

As we work together, it is important to recognize that we will not always agree. But you can count on me to deal with each issue with honesty, integrity and from a standpoint of mutual respect. My team at the FAA will, too.

Maintaining the highest levels of safety while adapting to technological advancements will be a key part of our success. The rate of change is something that will require the focus and attention of the FAA and all aviation stakeholders. Innovation, automation, new entrants coming into the systemyou see it every day in the headlines. To be successful as a regulator and air navigation service provider, the FAA must be able to operate ahead of that rate of change. I will not allow FAA to be bureaucratic or to ever accept the inertia that can be so prevalent in large organizations. Our mantra must be continuous improvement, because what we did yesterday will simply not be good enough tomorrow.

It is such a privilege to stand before you today with the opportunity to lead the premier aviation authority in the world. Id like to thank the Secretary again for her support, advice, and leadership of this Department. Im grateful to the President for this nomination and the opportunity to serve our country again.

I am honored to be able to help write the next chapter in the history of the FAA. Im excited to come on board and roll up my sleeves, and am humbled to work with all of you and the team at the FAA. I believe our best days are ahead of us.

Thank you again for being here today.

Speech – AirVenture 2019 Meet the Administrator

Acting Administrator Daniel Elwell
Oshkosh, Wisconsin

Remarks as Delivered

Thank you for that introduction Jack.

This is my sixth AirVenture and my second time here as Acting Administrator.

What a privilegeto be on stage at the Theater in the Woods, in the great State of Wisconsin, at whats become the greatest airshow in the World, bar none.

Wow.

For me, AirVenture is the perfect marriage of innovation and passion a pure love of things that fly. AirVenture is also the perfect marriage of old and new; past, present and future.

We aviators are able to embrace the next new thing without losing our reverence for what got us here.

Like you, I get goosebumps when those big radial engines and Merlins resonate and rumble into the sky.

Im left speechless by the aluminum overcast of the airshow every afternoon,

And I never tire walking among the 10,000 flying machines of all shapes and sizes that decorate the airport turf, each one reflecting the unique character and qualities of its owner, often waiting nearby to proudly share his or her story.

I too have a story to tellnon-fiction of course. Its a story about the FAAs work for the GA community and three outstanding members of that community, the winners of this years General Aviation Awards.

Theyll join me later on stage. The awards are presented by the General Aviation Awards program, a cooperation between the FAA and industry.

My story starts with a very exciting development for GA.

As you know, several years ago we overhauled the old prescriptive Part 23 aircraft design rules with performance-based rules and we also offered new policies like NORSEE (which stands for non-required safety enhancing equipment) so that owners of legacy Part 23 aircraft could more easily acquire and install safety equipment like AOA sensors.

But Part 23 Reform and NORSEE are just warmups for MOSAICthe Modernization of Special Airworthiness Certification program -that were working on.

This is a big one. Weve been talking about it for several years, but when Congress last year asked us to change the rules so that drone builders could use light sport-type consensus standards, we saw a great opportunity to kick it into high gear.

Here are just a few of the benefits for seven aircraft categories were looking to modernize:

For light sport aircraft, well be able to do things like safely bump up the maximum weight so that instructors can now have some margin when flying with guys like me who like brats and beer a little too much.

They will also be able to have four seats and an electric motor.

For experimentals, if theyre not actually doing experimental work, theyll likely fit into a more appropriate Special Airworthiness category.

Say goodbye to those lovely big EXPERIMENTAL stickers.

For legacy Part 23 aircraft, an owner of a small plane that is not using it for commercial purposes, will be able to exchange the standard airworthiness certificate for a special airworthiness certificate.

That means the owner will be able to install lower-cost safety equipment the kind that is widely available for the Experimental market without an STC or 337.

There are tradeoffs of course like new operating limitations.

As I said, you would not be able to use it for compensation or hire, and you probably wouldnt be able to take it into Canada. For many owners though, the benefits will far outweigh the limitations.

Its not a free pass to do whatever you likeyou still have to do quality work.

Take it from a mechanic whos seen it all. Not me, Dave Monti, the winner of the 2019 National Aviation Technician of the Year.

We asked Dave what we could do better in the maintenance area to improve GA safety. His answereducation for what owner/operators can or cant do to their certified aircraft.

We see a lot of owner maintenance that is just poor, Monti told us. That kind of intel is essential for us as we craft new rules.

Dave is also a pilot. He first soloed in 1962 at the ripe old age of 16 in an Aeronca Champ AND a Beech Bonanzaand hes been flying ever since.

Along the way he started a maintenance business. 40 years and 8,000 flight hours later, hes at the same maintenance company.

I cant say exactly when the MOSAIC proposal will come out, but it will be worth the wait. And its not just me saying it. Jack will tell you MOSAIC is a huge priority for EAA.

Its definitely a high priority for the FAA too, but its not our number one. Thats safety. Always has been. Always will be.

Safety is the second part of my story.

You all know that some of the very same traits that make for great pilots being goal-oriented and mission-minded are behind many of the accidents weve seen for all too long in GA.

Wanting to complete the mission can result in tunnel vision and risky decisions.

To be sure, our collective focus on the issue has resulted in a reduction in the fatal accident rate by approximately 20% from 2009 to 2018.

But heres the bad newsOur preliminary data for 2018 shows that the GA fatal accident rate will be slightly higher than it was in 2017.

Were still well below our overall fatal accident rate reduction target of 1% year-over-year, but I think we can all agree 2018 is not the direction we want to be heading.

For my part, I will be convening a government-industry GA Safety Roundtable this Fall in Washington.

Well bring to the table our perspectives on the causes of the increase in GA fatalities, and well look for ways to effectively address those causes.

Interventions will be targeted, and based on data. And well work with you and with industry to voluntarily make the changes that need to be made basically the same approach the airlines have taken.

We really need the general aviation communitythe people in this roomto step up with your can-do attitude and work with us and industry to figure this out and turn it around.

Weve already got an infrastructure in placewe formed the GA Joint Steering Committee, or GAJSC, precisely for this reason to combat fatal accidents.

The committee made up of the GA community, industry and the FAA analyzes data and develops consensus-based training, procedural and technological approaches to target problem areas, the worst of which has beenand remainsloss of control.

We also provide, through the FAA Safety Team, continuous training opportunities and a Wings program designed to get pilots to learn and stay proficient by fine tuning their flying skills.

We have one of the FAA Safety teams finest here today, Karen Kalishek (CallisShek). Shes our 2019 FAA Safety Team Representative of the Year award winner.

Karens a full-time flight instructor whose passion is emergency preparedness as a way to prevent accidents.

She says that on her flight reviews, shell do something unexpected with the goal of eliciting the proverbial deer in the headlights look from her clients as they become startled.

Its no secret that many pilots will avoid an instructor like Karen when they venture out for their preferably boring biennial check.

But what Karen is offering is precisely what happens in the real world something unexpected that will cause the unprepared pilot to freeze up and possibly make a bad decision.

Another safety resource that Karen is passionate about is the FAA Wings Program. On the web at FAA Safety dot Gov.

As I said, its chock full of relevant training materials and its free. Sign up and start taking classes and attending seminars and using it for your flight reviews. Youll be a safer, more knowledgeable pilot because of it.

And theres a new sweepstakes where well be giving out at least $10,000 a year in prizes.

You enter the pool of potential prize winners every time you finish a Wings phase, or for instructors, any time you sign-off a Wings phase.

Another firm believer in the Wings program is our CFI of the Year, Gary Reeves. He signed off 5,000 Wings credits last yearthats an average of 14 a day.

You can attend his free courses here at AirVenture for credits, and in fact there are loads of presentations here that will get you credits.

Unfortunately, at the moment, both Gary and Karen say there are too many pilots who dont even know the Wings program exists.

Thats something all of us here can help with lets get the word out about Wings and other safety initiatives to other pilots you know who are not as engaged.

Heres another safety effort I want to promotethe FAA is working on a plain language, sensible retooling of the NOTAM system that will work better for you.

I promised you last year that wed do it, and Im a man of my word.

Were going to fix it and were going to take your advice as we do it.

Part of the fix will be to either redesign the existing Notam information management system, or start from scratch on a new one, with single technology gateways for entering, processing and retrieving Notam data.

And we cant forget about the contributions technology is making to improve GA safety.

We have deployed advanced technologies like ADS-B Out and In to boost situational awareness for pilots so they can do a better job with avoiding mid-air, controlled flight into terrain and weather-related accidents.

In the event of an accident, first responders can very quickly get a bead on your location based on ATC-provided ADS-B information.

We have a new study quantifying the safety advantages that pilots get when they equip with ADS-B OUT and ADS-B IN, including moving map displays.

We found that aircraft using the technology in the contiguous US experienced 50 percent fewer mid-air, CFIT and weather-related accidents between 2013 and 2017 as compared to unequipped aircraft.

That translates into 36 avoided accidents over that time period.

As equipage increases, we expect the accidents avoided by using ADS-B to increase significantly.

Ill speak a bit more about ADS-B when Jack and I talk a little later.

So on to the final part of my story I promise firing up the next generation of aviation and aerospace professionals.

Demand is high. Here in the U.S., some analysts say well need more than 100,000 new pilots over the next 20 years, but our numbers are shrinking.

Already we have about 30% fewer private pilots and 20% fewer commercial pilots than we had a decade ago.

There are other reasons we need more pilots they develop skills that can translate to success in business and in life.

Pilots are self-starters and go-getters and goal-oriented people.

We want to get from point A to point B by the most direct and expeditious route above the earth, and typically with the blue side upwell, you acro people might see it differently But those are admirable traits for any new generation.

Where do new pilots come from? One of our award winners, Dave Monti, took a very traditional route, soloing at age 16 and never stopping.

But Karen and Gary took quite different roads. Gary was a paramedic who then operated a pet ambulance service yes, I said pet ambulance

He dabbled with flying as a hobby before selling the fluffy 911 business. He then became a CFI at age 36 and now calls his specialized flight instruction service his dream job.

Karen was a bank executive, graduate school teacher and globetrotting consultant in 35 countries before getting her private pilots license. at age 50.

She says starting to fly later in life helps with being patient with students and all that international experience has paid off in being able to better understand diversity in talents and skills of her students and clients.

Their stories are an inspiration to others. Think about the folks you see at the airport fence with their kids or grandkids, who look longingly at the sky and are probably thinking, You know Ive always thought about being a pilot some day.

Why not reach out and tell them that some day can be today. One of Karens students is in his mid-70s.

And its not just pilots, mechanics and flight attendants we need a new workforce for the entire aerospace industry.

One of my highest priorities at the FAA is to bring new, well trained men and women into the aviation system.

Back in DC, we are working internally to double down on our Science Technology Engineering and Math (STEM) outreach efforts, and have established the FAA Aviation Workforce Steering Committee to focus on these efforts at the agency level.

Wherever you stand on this, one thing is for sure:Unless and until each one of us takes an active and personal stand on getting kids interested in aviation and STEM, the pipeline will run dry.

OkIve had my say, and then some. Lets get our winners up here for their awards.

Please join me in congratulating:

Dave Monti of Gardnerville, NevadaNational Aviation Maintenance Technician of the Year

Karen Kalishek of DePere, WisconsinNational FAA Safety Team Representative of the Year

And Gary Reeves of Decatur, TexasNational Certified Flight Instructor of the Year.

These folks embody the very best of the aviation community and we at the FAA thank them for everything they do to make General Aviation a better, safer and more vibrant community.

Lets give them a big round of applause.

News and Updates – U.S. Department of Transportation Announces $478 Million in Infrastructure Grants to 232 Airports in 43 States

Projects will advance safety, improve travel, generate jobs and provide other economic benefits for local communities.

News and Updates – Redesigned B4UFLY App Available Now

Today, the FAA in partnership with Kittyhawk relaunched its B4UFLY mobile application that allows recreational drone flyers know where they can and cannot fly in the national airspace system (NAS). The new B4UFLY app is now available to download for free at theApp Storefor iOS andGoogle Play storefor Android.

As we continue our efforts to safely integrate drones into the NAS, working with our industry partners to provide innovative technology is critical, said FAA Acting Administrator Dan Elwell. The B4UFLY app is another tool the FAA can provide recreational drone flyers to help them fly safely and responsibly.

Some of the key features users can expect include:

  • A clear “status” indicator that informs the operator whether it is safe to fly or not. (For example, it shows flying in the Special Flight Rules Area around Washington, D.C. is prohibited.)
  • Informative, interactive maps with filtering options.
  • Information about controlled airspace, special use airspace, critical infrastructure, airports, national parks, military training routes and temporary flight restrictions.
  • A link to LAANC, the FAAs Low Altitude Authorization and Notification Capability, to obtain authorization to fly in controlled airspace.
  • The ability to check whether it is safe to fly in different locations by searching for a location or moving the location pin.
  • Links to other FAA drone resources and regulatory information.

The app provides situational awareness to recreational flyers and other drone users. It does not allow users to obtain airspace authorizations to fly in controlled airspace, which are only available through LAANC.

For more information, view B4UFLY.