by MichaelFarley56 » Mon Aug 04, 2014 10:11 pm
I'm not sure how I feel about this.
At my local airport, the manager of the airport recently kicked out a hangar tenant who had been leasing for the last several years, all under the premise that he was "building an airplane." After two years of this excuse, he was asked what all he had actually done on his project and it was discovered that he had a total of three generic aluminum wing ribs as "proof" he was working on a project. Shortly afterwards, he was asked to forefit his hangar to others with airplanes until he actually needed a hangar, so he bought a rusted out, stripped down tublar fuselage of a Tailwind for a few hundred bucks as further proof he was actually working on an airplane.
After this fuselage sat for another two years untouched, they finally evicted him under the promise that he didn't need a hangar at that point but could lease another hangar in the future when he actually needs one.
I know this is a slippery slope and my first thought is that the FAA should leave management rights to the local airport authorities and managers as to who gets leased a hangar. I'm really sick and tired of the FAA overstepping their oversight and trying to enforce rules they simply create on a whim.
At the same time, in a (slightly twisted) way I can't help but partially agree with the intent of this idea. I had to wait on a hangar for my project for a long time because all were leased, some to people who managed to shoehorn an abandoned airplane into their hangar completly full of junk. Even now, out of the nearly 50 hangars at my home base, only around 15-20 of the airplanes actually stored there get flown with any regularity. If a local homebuilder is nearing completion on a project and needs a hangar, is it fair they don't get one because someone else is using a hangar as a storage bin?
Just for the record, my home base is very pro-experimental airplanes and has one of the only local maintenance shops that is willing to work on homebuilts. For the tenants, the rules are that each hangar must have an airplane with a current Airworthiness Certificate, or be an Experimental that's actually being assembled on a regular basis. And there are at least 4 different projects currently under construction there.
Is it any wonder why general aviation is quickly dying off? So sad... :cry:
Mike Farley
Waiex #0056 - N569KM (sold)
Onex #245