95-19356. Reporting of Public Aircraft Accidents  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 151 (Monday, August 7, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 40111-40113]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-19356]
    
    
    
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    NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION SAFETY BOARD
    
    49 CFR Parts 800, 830, and 831
    
    
    Reporting of Public Aircraft Accidents
    
    AGENCY: National Transportation Safety Board.
    
    ACTION: Final rules.
    
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    SUMMARY: Following review of the comments received, the NTSB is 
    adopting revisions to its rules to implement Public Law 103-411, which 
    expands the scope of its jurisdiction to include investigations of 
    certain public aircraft accidents.
    
    DATES: The rules are effective September 6, 1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jane F. Mackall, (202) 382-6540.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On October 25, 1994, President Clinton 
    signed H.R. 2440, the Independent Safety Board Act Amendments of 1994. 
    Codified as Public Law 103-411 (the Act), it was effective on April 23, 
    1995, and directly affects aircraft operated by and for Federal, State 
    and local governments. In addition to expanding the Federal Aviation 
    Administration's (FAA) safety regulation to previously exempt 
    ``public'' aircraft, the Act expanded the jurisdiction of the National 
    Transportation Safety Board (NTSB or Safety Board) to encompass the 
    investigation of all public aircraft other than those operated by the 
    Armed Forces or by a United States intelligence agency.
        By notice of proposed rulemaking (NPR) published in the Federal 
    Register March 15, 1995 (60 FR 13948), we proposed and sought comment 
    on rules to implement this new authority. We received 14 
    comments.1 The States welcome the Board's investigation, in the 
    unfortunate event that a State aircraft is involved in an accident, and 
    either support or have no comment on the proposed rules themselves. 
    ALPA favors this expansion of the Board's authority, but urges that 
    funding levels be adequate for the Board to continue to investigate 
    thoroughly public and civil aircraft accidents.
    
        \1\ We received comments from 10 States (Alaska, Connecticut, 
    Hawaii, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Mississippi, Montana, Pennsylvania, 
    and Wisconsin), three associations (the Air Line Pilots Association 
    (ALPA), the Helicopter Association International, and the National 
    Business Aircraft Association, Inc.), one government agency (the 
    Department of Agriculture, Forest Service), and one individual 
    (Joseph D. Kuchta).
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        The Forest Service and Helicopter Association International are 
    concerned that the exception for aircraft operated by the Armed Forces 
    and U.S. intelligence agency aircraft not be read too broadly. The 
    Forest Service's letter notes:
    
        The Forest Service supplements its aerial firefighting resources 
    during times of extreme fire activity with aircraft and flight crews 
    from the Armed Forces. These resources are furnished to us by active 
    military, Reserve, and National Guard units. The Forest Service pays 
    the Armed Forces an hourly rate for this service, has operational 
    control over their movement, and uses them for the same missions as 
    civil and other public aircraft which includes the transportation of 
    passengers. In the case of Reserve and National Guard units, the 
    flight crews are often pilots that normally fly commercial aircraft, 
    including airliners, and fly the Armed Forces aircraft on a part-
    time basis.
    
        The Forest Service considers these flights to be under its auspices 
    and control and therefore ``public'' for investigation purposes. It 
    objects to the proposal in the NPR to define ``operated by the Armed 
    Forces'' only with reference to the actual, physical manipulation of 
    the controls. The Forest Service requests that we reconsider this 
    approach and interpret the Armed Forces exception narrowly and exclude 
    aircraft from Reserve and National Guard units that are under the 
    operational control of non-defense agencies (that is, to define control 
    not in a physical sense but in a sense of directing the use to which 
    the aircraft is put).
        Mr. Kuchta argues that the Armed Forces/intelligence agency 
    exception, as we have proposed to interpret it, is too narrow. He cites 
    the Federal Aviation Act's definition of ``operation of aircraft,''
    
        ``operate aircraft'' and ``operation of aircraft'' mean using 
    aircraft for the purposes of air navigation, including--
        (A) the navigation of aircraft; and
        (B) causing or authorizing the operation of aircraft with or 
    without the right of legal control of the aircraft.2
    
        \2\ 49 U.S.C. 40102(a)(32), as recodified.
    
        Thus, the definition includes both types of control we have 
    discussed. Mr. Kuchta also notes that, in its adjudication of FAA-
    instituted certificate actions (the so-called enforcement docket), the 
    Board interprets the term ``operation'' expansively to include other 
    than actual physical manipulation of the controls.
        The comments of the parties should demonstrate, and have convinced 
    us, that defining our jurisdiction with regard to the exception is not 
    as straightforward as we had hoped. At the same time, however, FA Act 
    definitions, while they may inform the process, do not control the 
    interpretation of language in our enabling statute, nor does Board 
    precedent from other contexts. The critical consideration is to ensure 
    that the exception is not so broad as to unduly limit our investigatory 
    role, and not so narrow as to intrude improperly in military concerns 
    that have little or no implication for civilian air safety.
        On review of the comments, we will revise our future approach. We 
    will consider both the physical manipulation of the controls and the 
    broader operational control concept in determining whether an aircraft 
    is operated by the Armed Forces or an intelligence agency so as to 
    remove it from our investigatory responsibility. Using this approach, 
    we would find, for example, that a cloud-seeding flight using a 
    National Guard pilot and aircraft, but arranged and contracted for by 
    the Forest Service, is not a flight ``operated by'' the Armed Forces. 
    Indeed, such a flight, because cloud seeding is also conducted by 
    civilian aircraft, has implications for civilian aircraft safety and, 
    therefore, prompts exercise of our statutory role to promote air 
    safety. On the other hand, investigations of accidents involving combat 
    aircraft, combat maneuvers, or military surveillance or air 
    navigational control are clearly on the other side of the equation and 
    we believe that it is examples such as these that prompted Congress' 
    exception.
        There may be instances where analysis under the standards of (A) 
    and (B) above produces opposite conclusions. For example, if the Army 
    
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    uses a civilian aircraft and crew to transport troops, application of 
    (A) would produce a conclusion that the aircraft was a civil aircraft, 
    not ``operated by'' the Armed Forces, but consideration under (B) would 
    lead to the conclusion that, because the Army ``caused'' the operation, 
    it involved aircraft operated by the Armed Forces and not subject to 
    our investigation jurisdiction. Again, we would resolve the question by 
    analyzing the circumstances with special reference to our statutory 
    responsibility: With a civilian aircraft and crew, there are such 
    implications for civilian air safety that the exception should not 
    apply. This result is consistent with our discussion in the NPR to 
    assert jurisdiction in the event that such an aircraft was involved in 
    an accident.3
    
        \3\ We are confident that, with experience, we will develop a 
    mutually agreeable understanding with the Armed Forces and Federal 
    intelligence agencies regarding investigatory roles. We note in this 
    context that, in the past, interagency agreements and other more 
    informal processes have led to our participation, despite any 
    argument that we lacked jurisdiction, in Armed Forces aircraft 
    investigations, whether because the Armed Forces sought our 
    assistance in an aspect of the investigation or because we believed 
    our participation would contribute to furthering our statutory role. 
    We expect this spirit of cooperation will continue and that 
    jurisdictional disputes will be rare.
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        We received no comment on the other issues we raised. Therefore, we 
    adopt our proposal to consider the National Guard, and the Coast Guard 
    within the definition of Armed Forces and to construe the term 
    ``intelligence agency'' only to apply to those Federal agencies that 
    are so named or categorized (for example, in their enabling statutes).
        We remind all those now required to report accidents and incidents 
    to us immediately that the scope of reportable events is quite broad 
    and that all personnel involved in aviation matters should be familiar 
    with Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations, part 800, which 
    identifies all the instances we investigate and sets forth rules (at 
    part 830) for notifying us of what are termed ``accidents or 
    incidents.''
        This amendment of our interpretation does not translate into any 
    change in the rules we proposed. Those rules will be adopted, with one 
    minor editorial change.4 Accordingly, 49 CFR parts 800, 830, and 
    831 are amended as set forth below.5
    
        \4\ In Sec. 831.2(a)(1), the phrase ``where the accident 
    involves civil aircraft and certain public aircraft'' is, for 
    clarity, changed to read ``where the accident involves any civil 
    aircraft or certain public aircraft.''
        \5\ As we noted in the NPR, various rules in these parts require 
    changes to reflect current organization at the Safety Board or 
    recent legislative change. Other rulemakings will shortly be 
    conducted to update these provisions. This proceeding proposes only 
    the changes needed to implement Pub. L. No. 103-411.
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    List of Subjects
    49 CFR part 800
        Authority delegations--Government agencies, Organization and 
    functions--Government agencies.
    49 CFR Part 830
        Aviation safety, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    49 CFR Part 831
    
        Aviation safety, Highway safety, Investigations, Marine safety, 
    Pipeline safety, Railroad safety.
    
    PART 800--ORGANIZATION AND FUNCTIONS OF THE BOARD AND DELEGATIONS 
    OF AUTHORITY
    
        1. The authority citation for part 800 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Independent Safety Board Act of 1974, as amended (49 
    U.S.C. 1101 et seq.); Federal Aviation Act of 1958, as amended (49 
    U.S.C. 40101 et seq.).
    
        2. Section 800.3 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 800.3  Functions.
    
        (a) The primary function of the Safety Board is to promote safety 
    in transportation. The Safety Board is responsible for the 
    investigation, determination of facts, conditions, and circumstances 
    and the cause or probable cause or causes of: all accidents involving 
    civil aircraft, and certain public aircraft; highway accidents 
    including railroad grade-crossing accidents, the investigation of which 
    is selected in cooperation with the States; railroad accidents in which 
    there is a fatality, substantial property damage, or which involve a 
    passenger train; pipeline accidents in which there is a fatality or 
    substantial property damage; and major marine casualties and marine 
    accidents involving a public and non-public vessel or involving Coast 
    Guard functions. The Safety Board makes transportation safety 
    recommendations to Federal, State, and local agencies and private 
    organizations to reduce the likelihood of recurrence of transportation 
    accidents. It initiates and conducts safety studies and special 
    investigations on matters pertaining to safety in transportation, 
    assesses techniques and methods of accident investigation, evaluates 
    the effectiveness of transportation safety consciousness and efficacy 
    in preventing accidents of other Government agencies, and evaluates the 
    adequacy of safeguards and procedures concerning the transportation of 
    hazardous materials.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 830--NOTIFICATION AND REPORTING OF AIRCRAFT ACCIDENTS OR 
    INCIDENTS AND OVERDUE AIRCRAFT, AND PRESERVATION OF AIRCRAFT 
    WRECKAGE, MAIL, CARGO, AND RECORDS
    
        3. The authority citation for part 830 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    
        Authority: Federal Aviation Act of 1958, as amended (49 U.S.C. 
    40101 et seq.), and the Independent Safety Board Act of 1974, as 
    amended (49 U.S.C. 1101 et seq.).
    
        4. Section 830.1 is revised to read as follows:
    
    Sec. 830.1  Applicability.
    
        This part contains rules pertaining to:
    
        (a) Initial notification and later reporting of aircraft incidents 
    and accidents and certain other occurrences in the operation of 
    aircraft, wherever they occur, when they involve civil aircraft of the 
    United States; when they involve certain public aircraft, as specified 
    in this part, wherever they occur; and when they involve foreign civil 
    aircraft where the events occur in the United States, its territories, 
    or its possessions.
    
        (b) Preservation of aircraft wreckage, mail, cargo, and records 
    involving all civil and certain public aircraft accidents, as specified 
    in this Part, in the United States and its territories or possessions.
    
    * * * * *
    
        5. Section 830.2 is amended by revising the definition of ``public 
    aircraft'' to read as follows:
    
    Sec. 830.2  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
    
        Public aircraft means an aircraft used only for the United States 
    Government, or an aircraft owned and operated (except for commercial 
    purposes) or exclusively leased for at least 90 continuous days by a 
    government other than the United States Government, including a State, 
    the District of Columbia, a territory or possession of the United 
    States, or a political subdivision of that government. ``Public 
    aircraft'' does not include a government-owned aircraft transporting 
    property for commercial purposes and does not include a government-
    owned aircraft transporting passengers other than: transporting (for 
    other than commercial purposes) crewmembers or other persons aboard the 
    aircraft whose presence is required to perform, or is associated with 
    the performance of, a governmental function such as 
    
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    firefighting, search and rescue, law enforcement, aeronautical 
    research, or biological or geological resource management; or 
    transporting (for other than commercial purposes) persons aboard the 
    aircraft if the aircraft is operated by the Armed Forces or an 
    intelligence agency of the United States. Notwithstanding any 
    limitation relating to use of the aircraft for commercial purposes, an 
    aircraft shall be considered to be a public aircraft without regard to 
    whether it is operated by a unit of government on behalf of another 
    unit of government pursuant to a cost reimbursement agreement, if the 
    unit of government on whose behalf the operation is conducted certifies 
    to the Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration that the 
    operation was necessary to respond to a significant and imminent threat 
    to life or property (including natural resources) and that no service 
    by a private operator was reasonably available to meet the threat.
    * * * * *
        6. Section 830.5 is amended by revising the introductory text to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 830.5  Immediate notification.
    
        The operator of any civil aircraft, or any public aircraft not 
    operated by the Armed Forces or an intelligence agency of the United 
    States, or any foreign aircraft shall immediately, and by the most 
    expeditious means available, notify the nearest National Transportation 
    Safety Board (Board) field office \1\ when:
    
        \1\ The Board field offices are listed under U.S. Government in 
    the telephone directories of the following cities: Anchorage, AK, 
    Atlanta, GA, West Chicago, IL, Denver, CO, Arlington, TX, Gardena 
    (Los Angeles), CA, Miami, FL, Parsippany, NJ (metropolitan New York, 
    NY), Seattle, WA, and Washington, DC.
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    * * * * *
        7. Section 830.15 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 830.15  Reports and statements to be filed.
    
        (a) Reports. The operator of a civil, public (as specified in 
    Sec. 830.5), or foreign aircraft shall file a report on Board Form 
    6120.\1/2\ (OMB No. 3147-0001) \2\ within 10 days after an accident, or 
    after 7 days if an overdue aircraft is still missing. A report on an 
    incident for which immediate notification is required by Sec. 830.5(a) 
    shall be filed only as requested by an authorized representative of the 
    Board.
    
        \2\ Forms are available from the Board field offices (see 
    footnote 1), from Board headquarters in Washington, DC, and from the 
    Federal Aviation Administration Flight Standards District Offices.
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    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 830.20  (Subpart E)--[Removed]
    
        8. Subpart E consisting of Sec. 830.20 of Part 830 is removed.
    
    PART 831--ACCIDENT/INCIDENT INVESTIGATION PROCEDURES
    
        9. The Authority citation for part 831 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Federal Aviation Act of 1958, as amended (49 U.S.C. 
    40101 et seq.), and the Independent Safety Board Act of 1974, as 
    amended (49 U.S.C. 1101 et seq.).
    
        10. Section 831.2 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(1) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.2  Responsibility of Board.
    
        (a) Aviation. (1) The Board is responsible for the organization, 
    conduct and control of all accident investigations within the United 
    States, its territories and possessions, where the accident involves 
    any civil aircraft or certain public aircraft (as specified in 
    Sec. 830.5 of this chapter), including an accident investigation 
    involving civil or public aircraft (as specified in Sec. 830.5) on the 
    one hand and an Armed Forces or intelligence agency aircraft on the 
    other hand. It is also responsible for investigating accidents that 
    occur outside the United States, and which involve civil aircraft and 
    certain public aircraft, when the accident is not in the territory of 
    another state (i.e., in international waters).
    * * * * *
        11. Section 831.9 is amended to revise paragraph (b) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.9  Authority of Board Representatives.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Aviation. Any employee of the Board, upon presenting 
    appropriate credentials, is authorized to examine and test to the 
    extent necessary any civil or public aircraft (as specified in 
    Sec. 830.5), aircraft engine, propeller, appliance, or property aboard 
    such aircraft involved in an accident in air commerce.
    * * * * *
        Issued in Washington, DC, on this 1st day of August, 1995.
    Jim Hall,
    Chairman.
    [FR Doc. 95-19356 Filed 8-4-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 7533-01-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
9/6/1995
Published:
08/07/1995
Department:
National Transportation Safety Board
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rules.
Document Number:
95-19356
Dates:
The rules are effective September 6, 1995.
Pages:
40111-40113 (3 pages)
PDF File:
95-19356.pdf
CFR: (11)
49 CFR 830.5)
49 CFR 830.5)
49 CFR 800.3
49 CFR 830.1
49 CFR 830.2
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