PPRuNe Forums - View Single Post - Avalon Airshow, the military industrial complex (MIC), GA a distant second place
Old 4th Mar 2017, 05:53
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Sandy Reith
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Victoria Australia
Age: 82
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Avalon Airshow, the military industrial complex (MIC), GA a distant second place

A few Avalon Airshow comments having flown in on the Tuesday and attended again by car on Thursday.

This gathering is a far cry from the great early days of Airshows Downunder when General Aviation was a major participant. At this airshow only a small showing remains of GA, and almost no showing at all in the three main exhibitor halls which are practically all given over to the spending of taxpayer dollars through military equipment providers.

Observing the strictures to follow the business style dress code required by the Airshow promoters, and being a hot and dusty day, it was gratifying to find that no tie and (pretty snappy) knee length shorts did not preclude entry, maybe the polished leather shoes without socks did the trick. Otherwise the MIC crowd were, to a man or woman, in dark suits, with black shoes and pant legs well dusted.

Flight planning for Tuesday trade day I was exhorted by the Airservices Notam that pilots would need to display a high level of airmanship and situational awareness due to traffic congestion. Presumably this means that Airservices believes that the average pilot may not be capable and, like children about to cross a busy road, must be sternly admonished to behave carefully. This is typical of the insulting attitude of our aviation regulators. As it happened I was distracted on the approach attempting to find the non existent painted containers that were supposed to be the markers for base and final to Avalon East runway 17, as per the 16 page notam. I think ATC Avalon East were pleased to see me, they must have been bored stiff with so little business. Probably the last of the day to fly in, after a bone shaking touchdown on a very rough grass surface not fit for most aircraft, we were directed by numerous bat waving ground marshalls to line up with the maybe twenty other aircraft in a parking area capable of taking perhaps four or five hundred. The marshals told me that, as at previous airshows, CASA inspectors were conducting ramp checks on all arrivals.

Can't help wondering if these several CASA inspectors couldn't be retrained for motor cars and put to better use checking (tyre wear, GPS data bases, factory recommended maintenance and compliant levels of washer fluid etc.) all the vehicles parking at footy venues on the weekends. Yes, they would have to be issued with weapons and protective clothing.

But back to my Tuesday fly in and park experience, the CASA inspectors were a no show for me, must have been at lunch so disappointingly I was left wondering if me and my aircraft were really fit to fly.

Attending the AOPA Pacific Forum at Avalon on Thursday one could be forgiven for a feeling of being underwhelmed. Coming off a slow start, in part due to an unusually foggy morning, chairman Spencer Ferrier introduced the four speakers who had ten minutes each to address the audience of about sixty (?) mostly GA people.

CASA Acting Director of Air Safety Mr. Carmody repeatedly stated he would act on evidence based proposals. He said that there were 40,000 pilots. We know this is not true. We know that years ago licences were deemed to be "perpetual", and the question has been asked before does CASA take note of those licence holders who have died? But this has little to do with how many pilots, that is those with current medicals, let alone those who fly regularly. In a dying industry the CEO of CASA should be across the facts, should be aware of the evidence.

Jason Harfield of Airservices made an important point that they, Airservices Australia, are required to promote and facilitate aviation, too bad CASA doesn't have the same imperative.

Australia Transport Safety Bureau CEO Greg Hood, peculiarly dressed in a high vis ATSB inspector's jacket, spoke about the work of ATSB and notably told us that his railway accident experts had little to do most of the time. In which case would it not be sensible to fly in some experts when needed? As he spoke he ran a series of aircraft accident photos dispaying on a large screen for the edification of the audience. These several photos were run on a loop so we got a second dose of the unfortunate crumples, but we were also treated, in ghoulish fashion, to stills of the Perth Mallard in its fatal nose dive when its occupants were about to die. I could not ascertain why Greg had this slide show, whether to create a distracting emotional response or frighten us wasn't clear, but it was embarrassingly weird. If it was to distract it certainly accomplished that aim, few, if any, would remember what Greg's speech was all about. Pelair was not mentioned, or raised by any of the audience, probably because we ran out of time.

Ben Morgan was to the point regarding reform for GA and covered the live issues and certainly gave lie to the 40,000 pilot number with his graph showing the precipitous decline of pilot numbers.

Question time evoked plenty of audience participation with many grievances being put to Shane Carmody. Predictably these were deflected or "let me look at that". The AVMED catastrophe probably took up the most time in questions.

The proceedings confirmed to me that there's no substantial reform in the offing, that delay and obscurantism are situation normal in the failed model of governance, the Commonwealth Corporate Body. These independent bodies have the greatest incentive to perpetuate and improve their feather beds. Without day to day departmental oversight it's just human nature to glorify one's status, climb the ladder and creatively make work (the rules rewrite 29 years, $hundreds of millions, still not finished and what's foisted onto GA so far is unworkable).

Incredible really, Can'tberra, 400,000 of the best paid with cushy jobs and great super cannot provide cost efficient governance. A city of virtually no freehold, practically no free enterprise, the most planned, stratified socialist capital of any in the developed world throttling what should be a great Aussie industry.

Parliament is the only hope for change and we need the media to get their attention.
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