“flight 2816” “Continental Express” rochester minneapolis passengers “passenger bill of rights” constitution “4th amendment” “false imprisonment” delay “air traffic”
Continue Reading Passengers Detained Have Constitutional and Other Legal Rights
Barbara E. Lichman, Ph.D., J.D.
Trouble in Paradise – Dissension Surrounds the Surface Trasnportation Authorization Act of 2009
The House of Representatives Subcommittee on Highway and Transit is planning to start the transportation reauthorization process on June 24, 2009 at 11:00 a.m. EST by marking up the Surface Transportation Act of 2009 (“Act”). House Transportation and Infrastructure Chairman, James Oberstar, has made a proposal which would fundamentally overhaul surface transportation programs drawing on many of the recommendations by a federally mandated Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Commission as well as on White House policy priorities. The Obama Administration, however, has a completely different political and legislative strategy in mind, causing a public disconnect between leaders of the legislative and executive branches.
First, on a negative note, the Act would consolidate or eliminate 75 existing Federal highway and transit programs including the “Indian Reservation Road Bridges Program,” and “The Public Transportation Participation Pilot Program.
On the positive side, the Act would create a new rail section to promote President Obama’s proposal of a high speed passenger rail network. Also, at the urging of the Administration, Oberstar would create an Office of Livability in the Transportation Department, to link transportation planning to housing and business development. The Act would also overhaul the Transportation Department’s inner workings by creating a position of Undersecretary of Intermodalism. That Undersecretary would help coordinate planning by agencies responsible for different methods of transportation, including the aviation, railroad, transit, highway and maritime administrations, along with Amtrak, the Coast Guard and the Army Corps of Engineers. “It’s an opportunity to restructure all of transportation,” Oberstar said at a briefing Wednesday. “Those modal administrators have not done so much as what we’re doing here – sat around a table, had coffee together – in 40 years. It’s time to do that.”Continue Reading Trouble in Paradise – Dissension Surrounds the Surface Trasnportation Authorization Act of 2009
East Coast Airspace Redesign Challenge Heard at D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals
A multi-year challenge to the Federal Aviation Administration’s reorganization of the airspace in four East Coast states culminated on May 11, 2009 with oral argument at the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals before Chief Judge David Sentelle, and Judges Douglas Ginsberg and Ray Randolph. The litigation team was made up of 12 law firms representing public entities and environmental organizations from Connecticut, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. The team designated three of its members to present the oral argument: (1) Richard Blumenthal, Attorney General of the State of Connecticut; (2) Larry Liebesman, of Holland & Knight, representing communities in Rockland County, New York; and (3) Dr. Barbara Lichman of Chevalier, Allen & Lichman, representing Delaware County, Pennsylvania. The FAA was represented by Department of Justice attorneys Mary Gay Sprague and Lane McFadden.
In the 30 minutes allotted to the opening presentation, the team emphasized the FAA’s failure to adhere to governing statutes and regulations in implementing the Airspace Redesign Project. Specifically, Attorney General Blumenthal presented the Court with a litany of FAA lapses in conducting the analysis of the project’s noise impacts. The Attorney General argued that the mistakes and omissions from the analysis resulted in artificial and inaccurate minimization of those impacts. In addition, the Attorney General challenged FAA’s failure to reveal even the artificially minimized noise impacts to the affected public for review and comment, as it is obligated to do under the National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. § 4321, et seq. Continue Reading East Coast Airspace Redesign Challenge Heard at D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals
The Camel’s Nose of Self-Interest Under the Tent of Environmental Regulation
The California Environmental Quality Act (“CEQA”) is once again under attack. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, in a letter to President-Elect Obama, has conditioned agreement to a budget reconciliation package on the suspension of CEQA compliance for 10 highway projects, ranging from carpool lanes on Routes 50 in Sacramento and 805 in San Diego, to road…
Would Re-Regulating Airlines Decrease Their Woes?
Anyone who has recently traveled for business, read the business section of the local newspaper, or watched CNN knows that the airline industry is in dire economic straits. Pundits typically attribute that weakness to increased fuel prices. But the reality is that the deterioration began at almost the same time as the passage of the…
Recent Court Decisions Regarding Aviation and Airport Development Law
Here are a few court decisions that have come down recently regarding aviation and airport development law:
- Nadal v. FAA, Case No. 08-9509 (10th Cir., April 30, 2008). Petitioner sought review of a NTSB order affirming the forty-day suspension of his pilot certificate. The court concluded that his petition for review was not
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FAA’s Response to Congress: You Want Safety? We’ll Give You Safety!
The Federal Aviation Administration’s recent paroxysm of safety concern– forcing airlines to immediately cancel thousands of MD-80 flights because of a 1/4 inch deviation in the location of an electrical bundle in the wheel well — reveals at least two “inconvenient truths”: (1) despite it repeated use of the safety rationale to justify repeated violations…
Trapped Airline Passengers Have Rights
UPDATE: See also Dr. Lichman’s recent post "Passengers Detained Have Constiutional and Other Legal Rights," which was posted August 13, 2009.
Most of us have been caught in airplanes delayed on the tarmac for what seems like an eternity. Some of us have really been trapped for as long as 10 hours, often…