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- 2024-16954
2024-16954
Programa de Avaliação da Segurança da Aviação Internacional (IASA)
Resumo Rápido
- Número AD
- 2024-16954
- Autoridade
- FAA
- Data de emissão
- 16/08/2024
- Data efetiva
- —
- Criticidade
- routine
Autoridade
Federal Aviation Administration (EUA)
Data de Publicação
16 de agosto de 2024
Data Efetiva
Não informada
Prazo de Cumprimento
Antes do próximo voo
Resumo da Diretiva
Em 28 de setembro de 2022, a FAA publicou uma Declaração de Política no Federal Register que descrevia mudanças de política no programa de Avaliação Internacional de Segurança Aeronáutica (IASA) da FAA, bem como esclarecimento ou reafirmação de políticas anteriores para "aprimorar o engajamento com autoridades de aviação civil (CAAs) através de avaliações pré e pós-IASA e promover maior transparência". Após receber consultas e questionamentos sobre as mudanças descritas naquela declaração de política, a FAA está suspendendo a implementação da Declaração de Política de 28 de setembro de 2022 enquanto a agência reavalia a política. A declaração de política publicada em 8 de março de 2013 permanece ativa.
On September 28, 2022, the FAA published a Policy Statement in the Federal Register that described policy changes to the FAA's International Aviation Safety Assessment (IASA) program as well as clarification or restatement of prior policy to "enhance engagement with civil aviation authorities (CAAs) through pre- and post-IASA assessment and to promote greater transparency." After receiving inquiries and questions about the changes described in that policy statement, the FAA is suspending implementation of the September 28, 2022, Policy Statement while the agency reassesses the policy. The policy statement published March 8, 2013, remains active.Texto Completo da Diretiva
Expandir texto completo (Federal Register)Texto completo (Federal Register)
Document Headings Document headings vary by document type but may contain the following: • the agency or agencies that issued and signed a document • the number of the CFR title and the number of each part the document amends, proposes to amend, or is directly related to • the agency docket number / agency internal file number • the RIN which identifies each regulatory action listed in the Unified Agenda of Federal Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions See the Document Drafting Handbook for more details. Department of Transportation Federal Aviation Administration • 14 CFR Part 129 AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Department of Transportation (DOT). ACTION: Suspension of policy statement. SUMMARY: On September 28, 2022, the FAA published a Policy Statement in the Federal Register that described policy changes to the FAA's International Aviation Safety Assessment (IASA) program as well as clarification or restatement of prior policy to “enhance engagement with civil aviation authorities (CAAs) through pre- and post-IASA assessment and to promote greater transparency.” After receiving inquiries and questions about the changes described in that policy statement, the FAA is suspending implementation of the September 28, 2022, Policy Statement while the agency reassesses the policy. The policy statement published March 8, 2013, remains active. DATES: The policy statement published at 87 FR 58725 (September 28, 2022) is suspended as of August 16, 2024. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rolandos Lazaris, Division Manager, International Program Division (AFS-50), Flight Standards Service, Federal Aviation Administration, 800 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20591; (202) 267-3719. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Background The IASA program is the means by which the FAA determines whether another country's oversight of its air carriers that (1) operate, or seek to operate, services to/from the United States using their own aircraft and crews, or (2) seek to display the code of a U.S. air carrier on any services, complies with safety standards established by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). The published IASA results of a country's placement in Category 1 or Category 2 is the notification to the U.S. traveling public as to whether a foreign air carrier's homeland civil aviation authority meets ICAO safety standards. A Category 1 rating indicates that the civil aviation authority meets ICAO safety standards for these operations, and a Category 2 rating indicates that the civil aviation authority does not meet ICAO safety standards. The IASA program was established by a document published in the Federal Register in 1992. Subsequent published documents in the Federal Register notified of the program's evolution. These Federal Register documents are as follows: • August 24, 1992—Established the FAA Procedures for Examining and Monitoring Foreign Air Carriers (57 FR 38342). • September 8, 1994—Established the Public Disclosure of the Results of Foreign Civil Aviation Authority Assessments, through a three-category numbered rating system (59 FR 46332). • October 31, 1995—DOT Notice Clarification Concerning Examination of Foreign Carriers' Request for Expanded Economic Authority, clarified the Department's licensing policy regarding requests for expanded economic authority from foreign air carriers whose CAA's safety oversight capability has been assessed by the FAA as conditional (Category II) or unacceptable (Category III) (60 FR 55408). • May 25, 2000—Changes to the International Aviation Safety Assessment program removed the Category 3 rating and combined it with Category 2 (65 FR 33751). • March 8, 2013—Changes to the International Aviation Safety Assessment program removed inactiv…
Fonte: Federal Register (federalregister.gov). Texto original em inglês. Conteúdo sanitizado por segurança.
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