From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mike
Borgelt
Sent: Wednesday, 3 September 2014 10:19
To: Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.
Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] Competition licenses - the emperor has no clothes


Ullrich,

 Rob Izatt is correct.

"when operating independently" is the catch phrase. 



*         That is a very 'elastic' phrase (which should be better defined).
If you use club equipment or want to fly from a club owned airfield you are
of course dependent on their whims. Even the "proper" licensing overseas
does not change that. But if you operate at a location where neither the
aircraft/equipment nor the airfield are owned by the resident club (and all
else including the independent control check is in order) I can't see how it
would be *illegal* for you to choose to do so independently against the
screams of a red faced club CFI. I'm not saying there wouldn't be
ramifications.

 

Don't forget also that an L2 independent operator rating can fail to be
renewed by a club at a whim. If you don't believe that this can't happen
due to personal feuds and vendettas or political differences I think you are
naive. I know of one club where nearly half the membership was grounded and
left the club because they had the temerity to call a special general
meeting to get the club to buy its own tug so that the club would own a
launch means  which it owned instead relying on tugs owned by a syndicate of
the old guard which were only intermittently available and were restricting
flying. The old guard called up people they knew whose membership had lapsed
years ago, signed thm up with a current year's subs and won the vote by 3
votes whereupon the losers were grounded by the club. 



*         There probably always have been and always will be club politics
and/or individuals overstepping the mark. Welcome to humanity. But I agree
that the "parallel path" should be an option for those who have the means if
that is what you were trying to get at.


To get any kind of instructor rating in power you need a commercial licence
(at least 150 maybe 200 hours or so depending how and where you do it) and a
proper instructor course which involves something like 30 to 40 hours of
flying and a similar amount of ground instruction. Don't hold me to that as
it was a while ago at the aero club where a couple of blokes were going
through that. I'm sure the requirements haven't decreased. Seems a
reasonable thing to me.

 

*         Sure, so add a few more hours - sensible minima should be roughly
in line with what it takes in a competency-based system anyway. Any more and
it becomes increasingly a waste of effort.

 

*         Beyond here you also raise some valid points as usual. Certainly a
discussion that needs to be had but it is going far off my original topic
and I don't want to get drawn further into swallowing the entire elephant in
one piece. I had not intended to kick off a mega-thread but if it helped to
get the various issues to the attention of our GFA officials (as Chris'
participation here indicates) and they constructively act on it I'm glad I
did. If not I regret having wasted my and all the list members' time.


When you talk of discouraging people by raising the instructor hours
required the question arises - what problem are we trying to solve with the
gliding instruction system? Are we trying to provide free flying for
instructors at the students' expense? If so, the system is successful albeit
at a fairly horrendous cost in dead and injured students and large numbers
of discouraged would glider pilots. If we are trying to turn out competent
glider pilots I'd say the system is very inefficient.

The pity is that just about everyone (including I'm sure the people who own
the private "non-profit" organisation known as the GFA)* recognises that
gliding is in a fragile state but nobody with the ability to do anything
about this wants to change anything about the way business is done.

* Mark is wrong about one thing in his other wise excellent post - the GFA
is not membership based. Take a look at how to get on the Board. You need
nomination by existing Board members. The Board (membership by invitation
only) are the effective owners of the GFA and there is NOTHING you or even
all the rest of the membership can do about it. The GFA can continue to
exist without any members other than those on the board.

Which, Ron, is why all you are hearing from the direction of Christopher
Thorpe is the sound of crickets. 

Mike







Mike, you are probably referring to the L1 IO rating (which in my opinion
should be abolished - why should anyone be responsible for my flying unless
I am in training).
 
The current MOSP says:
"13.2 LEVEL 2 'UNRESTRICTED' INDEPENDENT OPERATOR 
Unlike the Level 1 Independent Operator authority, where club responsibility
of independent operations is of primary importance, holders of Level 2
Independent Operator authority are solely responsible for all aspects of
their operations when operating independently. This includes airways
clearances, tower clearances, SAR notification and accident/incident
reporting."
 
To my knowledge it has been like that for many years.
 
I agree with you that the minimum hours for instructor ratings seem low but
in practice it requires a lot more hours to gain the abilities and convince
the CFIs and L3 instructors to give you an L1 let alone L2 rating. What
should the minimum be in your opinion? No matter where you set that it will
not be enough for some and increasingly discouraging for others the higher
that number is.
 
On the rest, including independent control checks for IOs, I'm also with you
although I would choose less GFA-bashing words.
 
Ulrich
 
From: [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>  [
mailto:[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> ] On Behalf Of Mike
Borgelt
Sent: Tuesday, 2 September 2014 11:07
To: Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.
Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] Competition licenses - the emperor has no clothes
 
At 11:02 AM 2/09/2014, you wrote:

Let's stick to the facts please. A Level 2 Independent Operators Rating does


that and with less bureaucracy and overregulation than "in other parts of 

the world". It is also a product of the GFA - let's acknowledge that.



No, you are still under an instructor if one is present, last time I looked.

200 hours? You can get a PPL for powered aircraft in 60 to 70 hours from
scratch.

You get a bi annual and a medical every two years. Apart from that you are
completely free to go wherever and whenever you like with as many people as
fit in the aircraft.






A shame really that the GPL was not based on the L2 IO rating, perhaps with 

the bar lowered a little (e.g. reducing the 200hrs requirement - the 100hrs 

for an L2 instructors rating seem to be sufficient to allow the holder to be


responsible for OTHER peoples flying). At least we would not have the 

current inconsistencies. I cannot imagine that negotiations with CASA would 

have been any harder on that basis.



I consider giving anyone an instructor's rating of any sort with 100 hours
an act of gross irresponsibility. I wouldn't let anyone I cared about learn
to fly with somebody like that.




It will be interesting to see whether the first GPL holder rocking up 

somewhere in Europe will be allowed to fly without more hassles than 

European license holders.



Maybe EASA will find out the GPL doesn't work back home. As I said before
the ICAO deal is that you get the foreign licence on the fact that it is
valid at home in your own country.

The GFA negotiation with CASA was just a cosy deal to maintain the GFA
monopoly on gliding in Australia. "Umbrella" my arse, it is a boot heel.

Mike






Ulrich 

-----Original Message----- 

From: [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>  

[ mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Future 

Aviation 

Sent: Tuesday, 2 September 2014 07:08 

To: 'Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.' 

Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] Competition licenses - the emperor has no clothes

Hi Simon

You have raised a very valid point here! 

I have often wondered why one can have all the qualifications in the world 

but cannot operate a glider in Australia independently and without 

instructor oversight. As far as I know Australia is the only first world 

country that denies their glider pilots privileges that power pilots, 

parachutists, balloonists or other aviators rightly take for granted. 

Over the years I have discussed this issue with several GFA officials but I 

have never been given any reason as to why the current state of affairs 

exists. Gliding operations based on instructor oversight has now been 

standard GFA procedure for many decades. Therefore it is quite 

understandable that allowing a competent and responsible glider pilot to 

operate without oversight has become a bit too foreign to even contemplate. 

I'm the first to acknowledge that not everyone aspires to independent 

operations (or even a licence) and I understand that they can continue to 

fly as usual. However, I firmly believe that denying suitably qualified 

glider pilots the right to operate without interference by others is partly 

to blame for our current woes. 

When our newcomers realise that they will always be treated as second class 

aviators we can't blame them when they vote with their feet. 

Isn't it time that suitably qualified glider pilots are treated just like 

glider pilots in other parts of the world? As long as our current system 

denies responsibly acting glider pilots fully independent operations many of


them will find less restrictive and more rewarding aviation activities - far


too many, if you ask me. 

Simon, can you (and other members of this newsgroup) let me in on your 

thinking, please? 

Kind regards 

  

Bernard 



-----Original Message----- 

From: [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>  

[ mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Simon 

Hackett 

Sent: Monday, 1 September 2014 2:39 PM 

To: Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia. 

Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] Competition licenses - the emperor has no clothes

Just want to call out one other thing from the thread that I have just had 

confirmed separately.

The Australian CASA Glider Pilot License doesn't allow a pilot to fly a 

Glider in Australia.

SRSLY?

Its 2014. Why can't we live in a place where the GFA issues (or authorises) 

Glider Pilot Licenses for Australian glider pilots to fly Australian Gliders


with (including ... in Australia)? 

I'm not bothered about an underlying requirement to be a GFA member in good 

standing (or to be separately authorised by CASA) if that floats the GFA's 

boat. 

Rather, I'm talking about the crazy notion that the outcome of doing 

everything right in the GFA system isn't an outcome where one can be a pilot


licensed to fly a glider with a license to fly a glider called a Glider 

Pilot License - and where such a thing now exists but it doesn't actually 

work in the country of issue.

I actually *have* a US glider license of precisely that form (a US pilots 

license with 'Glider' as an endorsement on it). I don't see that cramping 

the style of glider pilots in the USA. Quite the opposite, actually. 

I'm not really interested in how we got precisely here.

I'm interested in what possible reason the GFA would have, today, to *not* 

to support the notion of a Glider Pilot License as something routinely 

issued to Australians to let them fly gliders in Australia - and for that to


be the thing that people get issued with routinely (when, for instance, they


achieve Silver C standard). 

Is there actually a valid reason for this state of affairs (as opposed to 

'thats just not how we roll, son...') why this isn't the case - or why it 

shouldn't become the case? 

In other words, if I have a CASA issued Glider Pilot License, what, 

precisely, makes it unable to be sufficient to be permitted to fly a glider 

here (assuming one has a valid and current flight review)? 

I apologise for not having (yet) dug up the shiny new 1st September-onward 

regulations that govern the Glider Pilot License (and as already noted, CASA


haven't yet actually published the application form on their web site 

either). But do those legally engaged regulations actually say that you 

can't use a Glider Pilot License to... fly a glider with?  

Coming at this cold, honestly, this reads like a Monty Python script :)

Regards, 

Simon

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