On Jan 30, 2017, at 11:09 AM, Richard Frawley <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> in time my view is the sport will change. electric self launchers and more 
> ownership will be the norm. small clubs will die. big clubs will go 
> commercial. it will take 15 years to migrate to a new model.

In my direct observation, people who are exposed (particularly early in their 
flying career) to the command-and-control mentality of gliding don’t buy 
$200,000 electric self-launch gliders. They join RAAus instead, where the basic 
pilot certificate is equivalent to a GFA Level 2 Independent Operator rating 
which almost nobody in gliding holds, and buy Kitfoxes or Jabirus or SportStars.

Of all the trainees I had as a GFA L2 instructor, and all the AEFs I introduced 
to the sport, far more of them have gone on to PPL, RPL and RAAus than GPC. 
I’ve notched up 3 PPL and RAAus pilot certificates in the last five years by 
giving people first flights in my RV-6, which fills me with immense 
satisfaction; In contrast, I feel like I busted my guts out for a decade in GFA 
to simply maintain the status quo. 

So I’m not a member anymore. Too hard, too many alternatives.

(maybe, as someone who has drifted away, it’d be worth GFA’s while to consult 
with people like me: I’m clearly a person who’s been prepared to invest 
significant effort in the past, and now I’m not, maybe they’d like to 
understand why)

Anyway:

My view of 2017 GFA is that it’s a top-heavy organization whose primary purpose 
is to distribute the cost of training, regulation and administration for a very 
small number of aircraft owners and competition pilots across a larger number 
of members. If you’re not an aircraft owner or competition pilot, your duty and 
function as a GFA member is little more than to pay your membership fees, so 
that they can be used to subsidize those who are aircraft owners or competition 
pilots, so they can keep doing what they enjoy doing.

Which is fine, as far as it goes — There’s nothing wrong with that, as long as 
it’s transparent, and the people involved in it aren’t in denial about it.



I think it’s prudent to view the future of gliding and the future of GFA as two 
independent concepts.

The largest aviation marketplace on the planet has six decades of demonstrated 
track record to show that you don’t need a national private quasi-regulator to 
tell everyone how to fly gliders: The real regulator already does that job at 
least as well.

Richard is speculating about a future in which the club scene changes and GFA 
remains roughly the same. A more realistic alternative, in my view, is a future 
in which the GFA shrinks to become a membership-optional FAI-sanctioned 
competition administration body like the SSA, and much of the rest of their 
day-to-day functions are overseen by CASA. Give it another decade worth of 
retirements and membership shrinkage, and GFA simply won’t have the manpower to 
be effective or safe for many of the functions that it fulfills right now even 
if it still has a million bucks in the bank, and the regulator will simply take 
them off GFA’s plate.

It may very well be that the most important work the GFA could be doing is to 
influence CASA to make that almost inevitable transition agreeable to GFA 
members.

Working with CASA to make sure that the GPC syllabus is a qualification for a 
CASA RPL (in the same way that an RAAus certificate is) would be an excellent 
first step. At present, if GFA collapses, so do all the pilot credentials it 
has issued, and nobody will be able to legally fly the electric self-launchers 
you’re envisaging as the future of gliding. If GFA members qualified for an RPL 
with a glider endorsement, at least there’d be a path forward for them to fly 
domestically under the CASA system when the GFA system stops working.

Regards,

  -  mark


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