Code of Federal Regulations (Last Updated: November 8, 2024) |
Title 14 - Aeronautics and Space |
Chapter I - Federal Aviation Administration, Department of Transportation |
SubChapter G - Air Carriers and Operators for Compensation or Hire: Certification and Operations |
Part 136 - Commercial Air Tours and National Parks Air Tour Management |
Subpart A - National Air Tour Safety Standards |
§ 136.1 - Applicability and definitions.
-
§ 136.1 Applicability and definitions.
(a) This subpart applies to each person operating or intending to operate a commercial air tour in an airplane, powered-lift, or helicopter rotorcraft and, when applicable, to all occupants of the airplane or helicopter those aircraft engaged in a commercial air tour. When any requirement of this subpart is more stringent than any other requirement of this chapter, the person operating the commercial air tour must comply with the requirement in this subpart.
(b) As of September 11, 2007, this subpart is applicable This subpart applies to:
(1) Part 121 or 135 operators conducting a commercial air tour and holding a part 119 certificate;
(2) Part 91 operators conducting flights as described in § 119.1(e)(2); and
(3) Part 91 operators conducting flights as described in 14 CFR 91.146
(c) This subpart is does not applicable apply to operations conducted in balloons, gliders (powered or and un-powered), parachutes (powered or and un-powered), gyroplanes, or airships.
(d) For the purposes of this subpart the following definitions apply:
Air TourCommercial
helicopterair tour means a flight conducted for compensation or hire in an airplane, powered-lift, or
1rotorcraft where a purpose of the flight is sightseeing. The FAA may consider the following factors in determining whether a flight is a commercial air tour for purposes of this subpart:
(
2i) Whether there was a holding out to the public of willingness to conduct a sightseeing flight for compensation or hire;
(
3ii) Whether the person offering the flight provided a narrative that referred to areas or points of interest on the surface below the route of the flight;
(
4iii) The area of operation;
(
5iv) How often the person offering the flight conducts such flights;
(
6v) The route of the flight;
(
7vi) The inclusion of sightseeing flights as part of any travel arrangement package;
(
8vii) Whether the flight in question would have been canceled based on poor visibility of the surface below the route of the flight; and
(
viii) Any other factors that the FAA considers appropriate.
Commercial Air Tour operator means any person who conducts a commercial air tour.
Life preserver means a flotation device used by an aircraft occupant if the aircraft ditches in water. If an inflatable device, it must be un-inflated and ready for its intended use once inflated. In evaluating whether a non-inflatable life preserver is acceptable to the FAA, the operator must demonstrate to the FAA that such a preserver can be used during an evacuation and will allow all passengers to exit the aircraft without blocking the exit. Each occupant must have the physical capacity to wear and inflate the type of device used once briefed by the commercial air tour operator. Seat cushions do not meet this definition.
Raw terrain means any area on the surface, including water, devoid of any person, structure, vehicle, or vessel.
Shoreline means that area of the land adjacent to the water of an ocean, sea, lake, pond, river or tidal basin that is above the high water mark and excludes land areas unsuitable for landing such as vertical cliffs or land intermittently under water during the particular flight.
helicoptersSuitable landing area for
without damage to equipment orrotorcraft means an area that provides the operator reasonable capability to land
Suitablein an emergency without causing serious injury to persons.
-These suitable landing areas must be site
These site-specific areas would provide an emergency landing area for a single-engine helicopter or a multiengine helicopter that does not have the capability to reach a safe landing area after an engine power loss.specific, designated by the operator, and accepted by the FAA.
(e) In an in-flight emergency requiring immediate action, the pilot in command may deviate from any rule of this subpart to the extent required to meet that emergency.
[Docket No. FAA–1998–4521, 72 FR 6912, Feb. 13, 2007, as amended by Docket No. FAA–2022–1563; Amdt. No. 136–2, 88 FR 48091, July 26, 2023]