Posted on 07/28/2016 7:24:02 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Last year, a company called Flytenow was poised to revolutionize air travel by allowing private pilots already going to a destination to share their costs with would-be travelerskind of like a college rideshare bulletin board, but on the Internet. The service would pair pilots with potential passengers, for a small fee no greater than the cost of fuel. Its been called Uber in the sky. But in December, Flytenow shut down after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit upheld the Federal Aviation Administrations determination that the service must obtain the highest levels of licensing, akin to what major airlines and their pilots secure.
The FAA decided that these pilots were not simple private individuals sharing cost, but were common carriers, subject to heightened liability and expensive professional licensing. Common carrierslike buses, trains, and commercial airlineshave been treated specially in the law since medieval times, and they differ from Flytenows online bulletin board.
As Flytenow seeks review in the Supreme Court, Cato Institute, joined by TechFreedom, has filed an amicus brief in support.
First, common carriage is a term defined by common law, stretching back to way before the founding of the FAAindeed hundreds of years before the Wright Brothersand the FAAs interpretation here directly contravenes that established meaning. One glaring consistency across the last 600 years of common law is that the carrier must hold itself out for indiscriminate public hire. Flytenow pilots, as a matter of right, can turn down any passenger for any reason (or no reason) and thus are by definition not common carriers. This alone is reason enough to reverse the courts decision and overturn the FAA ruling.
But second, and more basically, the D.C. Circuit granted very broad deference to the FAAs interpretation of what constitutes common carriage, despite that being a term defined at common law. Courts often defer to an agencys expertise in a particular subject matterwhich essentially means that the agencys decision is usually upheld under some deference framework. But according to the Supreme Courts ruling in Texas Gas Transmission Corp. v. Shell Oil Co. (1960), when an agency interprets the common law, a reviewing court shouldnt simply defer to the agencys interpretation.
That makes perfect sense: there is no greater expert in the common law than the courts, and the FAA lacks the expertise to engage in judicial decisionmaking. But instead of applying any existing law on the negligible deference that is due to agencies interpreting common-law terms, the D.C. Circuit went off on a doctrinal frolic entirely of its own invention. The lower court thereby not only contravened Texas Gas, but also went far beyond what little latitude any other circuit court had given agencies interpreting common-law terms.
By doing so, the court plainly delegates to the FAA what is the province and duty of the judicial department, which is to interpret the common law and say what the law is. Marbury v. Madison (1803). Such a delegation offends constitutional order and the separation of powers. Because the D.C. Circuit has neatly packed an abdication of the judicial role into a decision that contravenes 600 years of established law, we urge the Supreme Court to take up the case.
The justices will decide early in the new term this fall whether to review Flytenow, Inc. v. FAA.
I’m sure the major airlines had something to do with this regulation. They don’t like the competition, IMO.
Nanny State PING!
FAA, FDA, and the EPA (the head of the serpent) need to be ABOLISHED. Let the free-market dictate what is necessary.
This must be stopped. What the hell happened to FREEDOM?
See how that works out for them the first time they turn down a protected class member.
This is clearly a “for hire” situation well inside the bounds of “commercial” aviation. I’m surprised to see members of the FreeRepublic agreeing with a liberal think tank. While I agree with some aspects of the abolish the FAA now attitude, the absence of all governance is anarchy.
Under Part 91, FAR, as I read it, a private pilot can split the cost of a flight equally, as to not be of profit to the pilot.
I have done that many times.
So Uber in the Sky ... pays with Diamonds?
Considering the expense of GA nowadays, it’s almost a requirement to take a passenger willing to pay for fuel. Government control/regulations/insurance have all but priced most of Middle America out of GA.
Looking sharp America.
As a recovering, and occasionally relapsing, aerospace engineer I am intimately familiar with FAA regulations. It is one of the few federal agencies that is run by people that are from the industry and do a good public service most of the time.
There are reasons for these regulations. A ‘for hire’ aircraft must meet different FARs than a “kit plane.” And once a pilot hires out for cash (regardless if it’s just “sharing costs”) he must meet commercial requirements.
Oy Vey!
If I understand correctly, a private pilot can fly himself and 3 friends from A to B without meeting the commercial requirements. But, if he flies a stranger who pays for the fuel, then he must meet those commercial requirements.
What is the rationale for that?
When “expense sharing” trips went from the local airport bulletin board to the Internet the FAA got “uppity”...here is what was happening before the brew-ha-ha: http://cospilot.com/documents/Pilot%20privileges%20and%20limitations_Sharing%20expenses.pdf
and the relevant FAR part:
https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/14/61.113 (easier to read)
http://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?node=14:2.0.1.1.2.5.1.8&rgn=div8 (official govt. site)
Hope this helps
Federal Aviation Regulations Part 135
http://www.risingup.com/fars/info/135-index.shtml
I expect more lawsuits about this. General Aviation would probably expand 100 times if private pilots could charge for services.
If Kodak could have used useful idiot politicians to kneecap their competition, they would still be in business.
Tax cell phone cameras 800,000%.
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