May 26
Sunny Nights Fly-in Pudasjärvi (EFPU) 28.6-1.7.2012
Sunny Nights Fly-in, Finland, Pudasjärvi (EFPU) 28.6-1.7.2012
Traditional fly-in at Pudasjärvi airfield during the midnight summer period just 200 kilometres from the Arctic Circle. The event will be organised with a modern way emphasizing local culture and tradition.
More information from here!
May 03
Kysely APV-lähestymismenetelmästä
GA survey on APV (SBAS) approaches
Good day all,
Following on from the IAOPA EUR regional meeting in London, we agreed to distribute a survey from the European GNSS Agency (GSA) looking at the appetite, priorities and constraints for deployment of APV approaches in Europe (using EGNOS, similar to the WAAS approaches in the USA). It is being coordinated by the UK consultancy firm Helios. In particular, the aim of this survey is to investigate the interest of individual pilots and GA organisations for deployment of the new procedures in their local aerodromes, by finding out more about their operations and the perception of the benefits and costs. This will be used to prioritise future deployment.
The online link to the survey, and more information, is at https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/sbas_survey_ga
Many thanks to all for your assistance in disseminating this.
With best regards,
Ben
Ben Stanley
AOPA UK
Apr 24
AOPA Finland – Neuvontapuhelin
If you have any problems on your flight trip, you can call our Help Service tel. +358 44 307 5000.
Our member on duty will answer you and will help you as well as possible
or inform you to call any other number.
Apr 24
(English) EASA lightens up on certificate conversions
EASA lightens up on certificate conversions
By Thomas A. Horne
But there has been much confusion. The new rules have been understood in many different ways—many of them incorrect—and rumors abound. In an effort to clear the air, so to speak, EASA called a press conference that sounded a conciliatory tone. Entitled “Better Regulations for GA,” EASA’s presentation emphasized that each of the European Union’s 27 participating nations have the opportunity to temporarily opt out of applying the new rules. Turns out that “temporary” has several meanings. Stick with me here, because we’re about to tread—lightly—upon EASA’s massive bureaucratic landscape.
First comes the “20-day rule,” which kicked in the day after April 8. As I understand it, the original April 8 rules don’t really take effect until these magical 20 days pass. Then it’s official—unless a member nation decides to opt out of adopting the rules, in which case it has until April 8, 2013, to fall in line. This time frame gives pilots an extra year to take the tests and otherwise comply with the new rules.
But wait—there’s another opt-out period for those nations wanting to participate. This one applies to what EASA calls LAPLs (light airplane licenses—the kind you and I possess). This opt-out period lasts until April 8, 2015, and gives general aviation pilots two years to comply. Airline pilots both domestic and foreign are not affected by the new rules, by the way; they have their own sets of rules.
Here’s the kicker: EASA admits that it doesn’t know who has already opted out under the 20-day or two-year grace period provisions. “We haven’t had time to assess the situation,” an EASA official said. “It’s too soon.” So yet another deadline applies for declaring an opt-out either by April 8, 2013, or April 8, 2015. This declaration to opt for the opt-outs kicks in on June 8, 2012. “Then we’ll know who has opted out,” EASA said.
Clear as mud? I feel your pain. But the bottom line is that it will be quite some time before the new rules are official, with the exact time depending on which date a member nation has chosen as an opt-out period. You can thank the European AOPAs for all these delays. “If this keeps up,” one official of a European AOPA said, “we’ll be able to keep putting off this rule based on the increasingly negative feedback we’re voicing to EASA. EASA says this is all to improve safety. But we tell them, how do you measure this? And why is there such conviction that simply adding more oppressive rules will translate into a safer flying environment?”
Last but not least, there’s been great concern that those with U.S. pilot certificates will not be able to fly in Europe without going through the hoops and earning the new certificate. Not so, according to those in the know. The prevailing interpretation is that the new rules apply only to those “domiciled” in the European Union. In other words, those holding European citizenship or holding European passports. So if you’re an American planning on flying your airplane to Europe for a vacation, go right ahead. Living in a hotel room or renting a house in Europe doesn’t make you a European citizen.
Besides, EASA hasn’t established a means to enforce the new rules yet—for any type of citizen. Or any type of pilot for that matter. Neither has it published any handbooks, learning standards, or teaching materials that address the new certification rules. So until these new rules gel—and it looks like that will be later rather than sooner—the status quo will prevail. Unless a nation fails to opt out of one of the opt-out grace periods, that is. Stay tuned for news on any future developments and clarifications of what promises to be a monumental saga of rulemaking for rulemaking’s sake.

