Speech – Helicopter Safety Time to Think Outside the Box

Administrator Stephen Dickson
Anaheim, CA

Remarks As Delivered

Good morning, everyone.

By now, everyone is aware of the tragedy that happened Sunday morning, only 50 miles northwest of this convention center.

I speak for all of us at the FAA when I say that we are saddened by this accident and the loss of so many lives, and our hearts go out to the family and friends of those onboard.

It is much too early to speak intelligently about why this may have happened, but suffice it to say that the NTSB, FAA and others are already hard at work to discover the causes. Despite what the investigators ultimately determine, we in this room know that all too often, helicopter accidents and GA accidents, in general, turn out in hindsight to have been preventable.

I left Washington on Friday prepared to deliver a safety message here and to lead the charge for action on helicopter safety. The events of Sunday morning make that mission all the more urgent. If not now, then when. If not us, then who?

Though we meet here with heavy hearts, it is good to be among such an esteemed group of aviation professionals here today with a shared focus on aviation safety.

Of course, I recognize that the helicopter community deals with safety and operational threats that are much different from my experiences in all my years in fixed-wing fighter aircraft and commercial aviation. So I felt it was particularly important to come here in person today to see for myself the depth and breadth of your industry and to hear about your challenges and concerns.

Aside from a few pleasure rides in air tour helicopters, I do not have much personal experience in your operational world, but its clear to me from a professional perspective that rotary wing aviation is an essential element of our transportation system, particularly when it comes to helping people. How many of our citizens owe their lives to rescue helicopters, or the operators that spring into action on a moments notice to carry critically ill patients to the hospital?

These aircraft are extremely versatile with unique capabilities and handle a wide variety of operations 24/7/365.

We remember now that it is only a little more than 80 years since Igor Sikorsky hovered the worlds first practical helicopter in Stratford, Connecticut. Yet today vertical lift has become a mainstay in the American aviation landscape, and theres much more to come when you think about drones and urban air mobility.

While helicopters represent a relatively small portion of our general aviation fleetabout 6% their impact is significant and even disproportionate compared to other forms of aviationparticularly when you count the benefits to society from medivac, search and rescue, police, infrastructure inspection and air taxi operations, to name just a few.

Actually, one look in the exhibit hall or in the news, makes it clear that the notion of a rotorcraft as I just described earlierone rotor spinning above your headis sorely out of date. From relatively inexpensive quadcopters the size of a basketballto faster, quieter and more autonomous traditional helicopters and tiltrotors to automobile-sized electric flying taxis that are quickly jumping from the drawing boards to the test area, todays rotary wing aviation is quickly moving outside the box that Sikorsky first flew in.

Unmanned Aircraft Systems, known as UAS or drones, are now flying in the airspace that used to be largely the domain of helicopters. I dont have to tell you the growth has been exponential.

Weve been registering drones for a little more than four years, and weve already got more than 1.5 million on the books, with more than 400,000 listed for commercial use, and weve approved two Part 135 operators.

We have also approved 27 part 137 UAS operatorswhich you may know as crop dusters. Consider for reference, weve been registering aircraft for more than 90 years, and weve got just shy of 300,000 in the manned aircraft registry.

We are learning a great deal about the innovative ways that drones can help society and be operated in the NAS through our Integration Pilot Program. Our strategy of operations first, is allowing us to use the existing regulatory regime, which helps us ensure innovation can drive forward.

UPS and FedEx are actively participating in trials to speed up the delivery of small packages and working on type certificates for small autonomous drones. Innovators up in Alaska are looking to do the same with much larger vehicles.

Said another way, over the last 3 years, weve shifted our strategy from writing rules to getting machines in the air and flyingand taking lessons learned from the operations approval process to write better rules.

Our goal in the United States, in contrast to many areas of the world, is to integrate, rather than segregate, UAS operations into the NAS. At the moment I dont have to tell you that this strategy is nowhere more important than to the helicopter community, as in many respects the need for integration is felt more acutely in the airspace where you operate than it is in the airspace where we typically find fixed-wing operations.

Knowing the location of drones is a key requirement for accomplishing the vision. Thats why the FAA recently issued a long-awaited notice of proposed rulemaking to require drone operators to provide remote identification for their vehicles.

Weve received over 6000 comments so far and welcome the public input as it will help us craft a rule that meets the safety and security needs now and for the future.

Flying taxis are on the horizon and manufacturers are getting ready for testing. According to my UAS team, we are currently engaged with the builders of more than 15 electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft projects. At CES in Las Vegas earlier this month, we saw Uber and the Hyundai Motor Company unveil a full-scale aircraft concept in their partnership to create Uber Air Taxis, and shortly after, Toyota announced a hefty investment in flying taxi developer Joby Aviation.

Also in January, we saw North Americas first public demonstration of an autonomous two-seat flying taxian eHang EH216 taking flight in Raleigh, albeit with no passengers.

Of course, the FAA has to ensure that these new entrants are safe before they can take part in regular National Airspace System operations. Were using a crawl, walk, run approach as we mature the vehicle technologies and air traffic management procedures to do this, and at this point, Ill note that were still in the crawling phase for both, but we are making rapid progress.

A key question we get from new entrants is how safe is safe? Will the fatal accident risk we accept for rotorcraft operations today be acceptable for Uber riders tomorrow? Probably not.

Wethe FAA and industryhave some important work to do in the name of rotary wing safety right now. Sundays crash comes one month to the day after the loss of seven people on a Safari Helicopters air tour on Kauai on December 26th.

These are tragic stories, particularly when families on an adventure or a quick ride to an event become the unwitting victims of accidents that, far too often, are preventable. In the aftermath of any crash, the reputation of the entire helicopter community is questioned, and the public may question whether the benefits are worth the risks.

We know from the U.S. Helicopter Safety Teams latest numbers that the helicopter sector has a fatal accident rate of approximately 0.63 per 100,000 hours, based on a five-year moving average. Thats well below the overall general aviation rate of approximately 0.94, but its not enough.

Just like the broader GA sector, pilot error is the predominant factor in fatal accidents. In fact, even when there is a mechanical component failure that leads to a crash, we often find that the component failed, because the helicopter was being operated outside its limits or the maintenance instructions were not being followed.

A key challenge we all face is that place where we have the largest number of paying passengers experiencing fatalities in our airspaceair tour operations. Im here to tell you this needs to change. We need to find ways to move that part of the industry toward the level of safety achieved by the commercial airline sector.

The good news is that with certain targeted interventions, the fatal accident rate has continued to declineand well discuss some of those initiatives later. The bad newsor it should be bad news to all of usis that the rate is still too high, and making interventions more difficult is that many of the pilots and operators in the personal/private helicopter sector are difficult to reach.

While an accident rate of zero is the ultimate goal, our Part 121 commercial airline industry today is the closest we have come to that. In the past 10 years, there have been more than 90 million commercial flights in our NAS, carrying more than 7 billion passengers, with two fatalities.

Thats a safety record thats hard to get your mind around in any human endeavor, much less one where youre carrying people in highly advanced aerospace vehicles at more than 500 mph and miles above the earth.

Granted, helicopters fly lower and slower, but theres no need for your safety goals to be lower, and frankly, for the flying taxi model to succeed, riders will likely expect an airline-like assurance of a safe flight. And why shouldnt they?

As I said earlier, the long-term GA fatal accident rate, including helicopters, is declining but we cant be satisfied. Its our responsibility to ask ourselves the hard questions and determine what more we can do to enhance Helicopter safety.

Consider that the helicopter offshore industry has a fatal accident rate that is a factor of two below the combined rate for the sector. How are they doing it and what are their lessons learned?

Thats one of the reasons why I came here to Heli-Expo, to take stock of your industry, hear your concerns, and to get up to speed on the unique aspects of helicopter operations.

When it comes to rotorcraft, Im a neophyte, and Im all ears.

I do have plenty of experience and perspective to offer from the world of fixed-wing commercial aviation safety, as you probably know: twenty-seven years at Delta, the last 12 of which I spent as Senior VP of flight operations. I was responsible for the safety and operational performance of the companys global flight operations of more than a million flights a year on six continents, as well as pilot training, crew resources, crew scheduling and regulatory compliance.

The commercial airline industrys stellar safety record in the NAS over the past decade is a testament to the evolution and adoption of risk-based decision-making processes by government and industry.

This is happening in part through initiatives like the Commercial Aviation Safety Team, or CAST, and effective tools like Safety Management Systems, voluntary safety reporting programs, flight data monitoring and sharing through data initiatives like ASIAS.

But we always, always, always need to stay humble and vigilant. We all know in our business youre only as good as your last takeoff and your last landing, and the number of takeoffs and landings need to equal each other.

Theres too much at stake to wait until the next accident occurs to figure out how to operate more safely. We have to identify accident and incident precursors so we can take actions to prevent themand shared data allows us to do that.

Some of these processes obviously are applicable to the GA and helicopter communities, and some may not be. As you probably know, weve migrated the data-driven analysis model over to GA through the GA Joint Steering Committee and through other government-industry initiatives like the U.S. Helicopter Safety Team.

Business aviation and portions of the flight training community are also well on their way to implementing data gathering, analyzing and sharing to help them and the broader industry figure out how it is performing.

In 2013, the FAA started with two members of the business aviation community participating in the ASIAS program. Seven years later, we have 100.

Thats impressive, and its a success story for our industry. But we dont rest on our laurels, because there are thousands of flight departments, single-pilot, and owner-flown operators, both fixed-wing and rotary-wing, out there who could, at minimum, find real value in Flight Data Monitoring and pilot reports, even if its just to monitor their own operations.

Using Flight Data Monitoring as feedback into your training program is a good example of a safety management system process. Safety management also relies on having a Just Culture in place so that pilots and aviation workers feel empowered to report honest mistakes and issues without fear of retribution. That atmosphere gives workers the freedom to report and provide their management with data they can use to get a heads-up on what might be an accident in the making.

Without that information, all bets are off. One year ago, tomorrow, a pilot and two air crewmembers were killed when their Bell 407, on a Part 135 flight, slammed into terrain near Zaleski, Ohio, while en route to a hospital for a patient pickup.

While the NTSB has not yet issued its conclusions, we know from the operational and human factors factual report, which was released in September, that there were issues with safety culture in that flight department.

A healthy safety culture requires some basic elements:

The organization must encourage employees to voluntarily report issues without the threat of retribution. It has to have data analysis capability to make sense of the flight data and safety reports. It needs a method of tracking and trending issues and the effects of corrective actions, and it must provide feedback to let employees know what became of their reports.

The factual material from this accident provides some good examples of what an unhealthy safety culture can look like. For example, numerous pilots and medical crew told investigators about incidents where they received, or they witnessed, pilots being reprimanded or challenged for declining flights. One pilot said he was not aware of a way to report safety concerns without getting himself in trouble.

The NTSB noted that while personnel were aware of the ways to report concerns, a number of them were uncomfortable voicing concerns due to fear of reprimand by management and the lack of previous management action on voiced safety concerns.

You can imagine how the inability to speak out might lead a pilot to take a mission when others would not. In fact, the accident flight had been rejected by two other providers. Making matters worse, the operator had stated in written materials to hospitals that they would take flights when other operators turned them down due to weather.

This accident is, unfortunately, not an isolated case of a safety culture vacuum when it comes to the helicopter and overall GA sector.

We, at the FAA, in concert with youindustryare working to improve helicopter safety on multiple frontsincluding information sharing, education about risk management and safety management systems, safety-boosting technology, and enhanced training, among othersand were always open to new ideas about how we can be more effective.

Adopting best practices is certainly a path to reducing risks. A great way to share your experiences and learn about the best practices of others is to participate in our new helicopter InfoShare program, which had its first meeting in October. Im told a key topic of discussion at the meeting was the importance of SMS, and how it can truly help helicopter operators reduce their risks. Another avenue for sharing best practices for oil and gas industry rotary-wing operators is through the Helicopter Safety Advisory Council, which has developed recommended practices that are easily adaptable to other helicopter sectors.

And have you heard of the USHSTs Safety Workshop in a Box? This is an education program where the FAAs Safety Team, or FAAST Team, along with industry safety experts, take their safety message directly to helicopter pilots.

Its a deep dive on one specific accident that educates pilots on decision-making. We tested the idea in Phoenix last year and, this year, will be taking it on the road to 10 cities and adding a second accident scenario.

The FAA is also working to bolster training related to loss-of-control awareness, pilot competency, and technical support.

In the technology area, were doing research with enhanced vision technologies to help pilots see in reduced visibilities and stability augmentation systems to make it easier to fly the machine when times are tough. Were also looking into algorithms that will make simulators accurate through a certain range outside the typical flight envelope, so that pilots can have more realistic training opportunities.

Were also working with industry to develop new helicopter Airman Certification Standards to replace the current practical test standards. The new standards will include risk management elements in all areas of operation and tasks to help develop better-prepared and safer helicopter pilots.

These efforts are a good start, but as I said earlier, were always in search of thinking that is outside the box on how we can address the accident rate.

We are serious about getting on top of the safety challenges we face in the helicopter air tour industry.

And frankly as many of you may know there is a lot of energy in Congress right now as it relates to both safety and noise concerns associated with helicopter air tours; if there isn’t meaningful action on both of these fronts very soon, I suspect the path forward will be dictated to this industry.

Our safety experts have begun developing an action plan to address the issues, and we look forward to sharing the details with our partners and stakeholders in the near future. Upon sharing this plan, we hope to receive your valuable input and support.

Before I close, I want to flag another issue we, and Im sure many of the operators in this room, are focused on helicopter noise. There is growing concern in many parts of this country about the impact of helicopter noise on communities.

This is part of a larger challenge that has been developing across the country with respect to aviation noise both around airports and often associated with air tours. And there are ongoing collaborative efforts to address noise. For example, FAA is engaged with HAIs Fly Neighborly Committee to promote community friendly flying and to educate operators on community engagement best practices.

However, without more engagement and action by the rotorwing sector, I suspect noise concerns will increasingly impact not just todays operations but our ability to integrate new users UAS and urban air mobility into the NAS.

I would urge operators to be much more proactive in their engagement with communities on noise issues and try to find constructive approaches to manage these challenges.

Thanks again for your attention. I look forward to learning more about this fascinating side of our industry and personally getting involved in making vertical flight as safe as possibleas safe as the public expects it to be. I hope to see many of you in the near future as we explore new ways to improve general aviation and helicopter safety. Together, we can do itwe must do it!

I do want to encourage you to attend the FAA: Meet the Regulators session taking place this Thursday at 8:3010:30 am, where you will get to meet several members of my senior leadership team. They plan to share information on rotorcraft safety initiatives and entertain your questions. Lets keep the dialog going.

Thanks for inviting me; I very much look forward to continuing this dialogue and our work together.

News and Updates – Novel Coronavirus Update

The current outbreak of 2019 novel coronavirus originated in China but has now spread internationally, impacting an increasing number of countries. In the coming days and weeks, we expect more confirmed cases in the United States, including more person-to-person spread.

The goal of an aggressive ongoing public health response is to prevent spread of this virus in the community in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) provide the following guidance to the public:

What You Should Do

  • Stay informed CDC is updating its website daily with the latest information and advice for the public. (www.cdc.gov/ncov)
  • Currently, there is no vaccine to prevent 2019-nCoV infection.CDC recommends routine preventive actions to help prevent the spread of respiratory viruses.These are everyday habits that can help prevent the spread of several viruses.

These actions include:

  • Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. If soap and water are not available, use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer.
  • Avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth with unwashed hands.
  • Avoid close contact with people who are sick.
  • Stay home when you are sick.
  • Cover your cough or sneeze with a tissue, then throw the tissue in the trash.
  • Clean and disinfect frequently touched objects and surfaces.

CDC also has specific guidance for travelers.

The federal government has our best people working on this problem.And we have one of the strongest public health systems in the world.

What You Should Not Do

  • CDC does not currently recommend the use of facemasks for the general public. This virus is not spreading in the community. While it is cold and flu season, we dont routinely recommend the use of facemasks by the public to prevent respiratory illness and we certainly are not recommending that at this time for this virus.
  • We understand the recent recommendations including avoiding travel to China and the quarantine of U.S. citizens returning from Wuhan is concerning. The actions the federal government is taking are science-based and with the aim of protecting the health and safety of all Americans.
  • Please do not let fear or panic guide your actions. For example, please dont assume that just because someone is of Asian descent that they have this new coronavirus. There are about 4 million Chinese-Americans in the United States.

Guidance for Air Carriers and Crews

Speech – Helicopter Safety Time to Think Outside the Box

Administrator Stephen Dickson
Anaheim, CA

Remarks As Delivered

Good morning, everyone.

By now, everyone is aware of the tragedy that happened Sunday morning, only 50 miles northwest of this convention center.

I speak for all of us at the FAA when I say that we are saddened by this accident and the loss of so many lives, and our hearts go out to the family and friends of those onboard.

It is much too early to speak intelligently about why this may have happened, but suffice it to say that the NTSB, FAA and others are already hard at work to discover the causes. Despite what the investigators ultimately determine, we in this room know that all too often, helicopter accidents and GA accidents, in general, turn out in hindsight to have been preventable.

I left Washington on Friday prepared to deliver a safety message here and to lead the charge for action on helicopter safety. The events of Sunday morning make that mission all the more urgent. If not now, then when. If not us, then who?

Though we meet here with heavy hearts, it is good to be among such an esteemed group of aviation professionals here today with a shared focus on aviation safety.

Of course, I recognize that the helicopter community deals with safety and operational threats that are much different from my experiences in all my years in fixed-wing fighter aircraft and commercial aviation. So I felt it was particularly important to come here in person today to see for myself the depth and breadth of your industry and to hear about your challenges and concerns.

Aside from a few pleasure rides in air tour helicopters, I do not have much personal experience in your operational world, but its clear to me from a professional perspective that rotary wing aviation is an essential element of our transportation system, particularly when it comes to helping people. How many of our citizens owe their lives to rescue helicopters, or the operators that spring into action on a moments notice to carry critically ill patients to the hospital?

These aircraft are extremely versatile with unique capabilities and handle a wide variety of operations 24/7/365.

We remember now that it is only a little more than 80 years since Igor Sikorsky hovered the worlds first practical helicopter in Stratford, Connecticut. Yet today vertical lift has become a mainstay in the American aviation landscape, and theres much more to come when you think about drones and urban air mobility.

While helicopters represent a relatively small portion of our general aviation fleetabout 6% their impact is significant and even disproportionate compared to other forms of aviationparticularly when you count the benefits to society from medivac, search and rescue, police, infrastructure inspection and air taxi operations, to name just a few.

Actually, one look in the exhibit hall or in the news, makes it clear that the notion of a rotorcraft as I just described earlierone rotor spinning above your headis sorely out of date. From relatively inexpensive quadcopters the size of a basketballto faster, quieter and more autonomous traditional helicopters and tiltrotors to automobile-sized electric flying taxis that are quickly jumping from the drawing boards to the test area, todays rotary wing aviation is quickly moving outside the box that Sikorsky first flew in.

Unmanned Aircraft Systems, known as UAS or drones, are now flying in the airspace that used to be largely the domain of helicopters. I dont have to tell you the growth has been exponential.

Weve been registering drones for a little more than four years, and weve already got more than 1.5 million on the books, with more than 400,000 listed for commercial use, and weve approved two Part 135 operators.

We have also approved 27 part 137 UAS operatorswhich you may know as crop dusters. Consider for reference, weve been registering aircraft for more than 90 years, and weve got just shy of 300,000 in the manned aircraft registry.

We are learning a great deal about the innovative ways that drones can help society and be operated in the NAS through our Integration Pilot Program. Our strategy of operations first, is allowing us to use the existing regulatory regime, which helps us ensure innovation can drive forward.

UPS and FedEx are actively participating in trials to speed up the delivery of small packages and working on type certificates for small autonomous drones. Innovators up in Alaska are looking to do the same with much larger vehicles.

Said another way, over the last 3 years, weve shifted our strategy from writing rules to getting machines in the air and flyingand taking lessons learned from the operations approval process to write better rules.

Our goal in the United States, in contrast to many areas of the world, is to integrate, rather than segregate, UAS operations into the NAS. At the moment I dont have to tell you that this strategy is nowhere more important than to the helicopter community, as in many respects the need for integration is felt more acutely in the airspace where you operate than it is in the airspace where we typically find fixed-wing operations.

Knowing the location of drones is a key requirement for accomplishing the vision. Thats why the FAA recently issued a long-awaited notice of proposed rulemaking to require drone operators to provide remote identification for their vehicles.

Weve received over 6000 comments so far and welcome the public input as it will help us craft a rule that meets the safety and security needs now and for the future.

Flying taxis are on the horizon and manufacturers are getting ready for testing. According to my UAS team, we are currently engaged with the builders of more than 15 electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft projects. At CES in Las Vegas earlier this month, we saw Uber and the Hyundai Motor Company unveil a full-scale aircraft concept in their partnership to create Uber Air Taxis, and shortly after, Toyota announced a hefty investment in flying taxi developer Joby Aviation.

Also in January, we saw North Americas first public demonstration of an autonomous two-seat flying taxian eHang EH216 taking flight in Raleigh, albeit with no passengers.

Of course, the FAA has to ensure that these new entrants are safe before they can take part in regular National Airspace System operations. Were using a crawl, walk, run approach as we mature the vehicle technologies and air traffic management procedures to do this, and at this point, Ill note that were still in the crawling phase for both, but we are making rapid progress.

A key question we get from new entrants is how safe is safe? Will the fatal accident risk we accept for rotorcraft operations today be acceptable for Uber riders tomorrow? Probably not.

Wethe FAA and industryhave some important work to do in the name of rotary wing safety right now. Sundays crash comes one month to the day after the loss of seven people on a Safari Helicopters air tour on Kauai on December 26th.

These are tragic stories, particularly when families on an adventure or a quick ride to an event become the unwitting victims of accidents that, far too often, are preventable. In the aftermath of any crash, the reputation of the entire helicopter community is questioned, and the public may question whether the benefits are worth the risks.

We know from the U.S. Helicopter Safety Teams latest numbers that the helicopter sector has a fatal accident rate of approximately 0.63 per 100,000 hours, based on a five-year moving average. Thats well below the overall general aviation rate of approximately 0.94, but its not enough.

Just like the broader GA sector, pilot error is the predominant factor in fatal accidents. In fact, even when there is a mechanical component failure that leads to a crash, we often find that the component failed, because the helicopter was being operated outside its limits or the maintenance instructions were not being followed.

A key challenge we all face is that place where we have the largest number of paying passengers experiencing fatalities in our airspaceair tour operations. Im here to tell you this needs to change. We need to find ways to move that part of the industry toward the level of safety achieved by the commercial airline sector.

The good news is that with certain targeted interventions, the fatal accident rate has continued to declineand well discuss some of those initiatives later. The bad newsor it should be bad news to all of usis that the rate is still too high, and making interventions more difficult is that many of the pilots and operators in the personal/private helicopter sector are difficult to reach.

While an accident rate of zero is the ultimate goal, our Part 121 commercial airline industry today is the closest we have come to that. In the past 10 years, there have been more than 90 million commercial flights in our NAS, carrying more than 7 billion passengers, with two fatalities.

Thats a safety record thats hard to get your mind around in any human endeavor, much less one where youre carrying people in highly advanced aerospace vehicles at more than 500 mph and miles above the earth.

Granted, helicopters fly lower and slower, but theres no need for your safety goals to be lower, and frankly, for the flying taxi model to succeed, riders will likely expect an airline-like assurance of a safe flight. And why shouldnt they?

As I said earlier, the long-term GA fatal accident rate, including helicopters, is declining but we cant be satisfied. Its our responsibility to ask ourselves the hard questions and determine what more we can do to enhance Helicopter safety.

Consider that the helicopter offshore industry has a fatal accident rate that is a factor of two below the combined rate for the sector. How are they doing it and what are their lessons learned?

Thats one of the reasons why I came here to Heli-Expo, to take stock of your industry, hear your concerns, and to get up to speed on the unique aspects of helicopter operations.

When it comes to rotorcraft, Im a neophyte, and Im all ears.

I do have plenty of experience and perspective to offer from the world of fixed-wing commercial aviation safety, as you probably know: twenty-seven years at Delta, the last 12 of which I spent as Senior VP of flight operations. I was responsible for the safety and operational performance of the companys global flight operations of more than a million flights a year on six continents, as well as pilot training, crew resources, crew scheduling and regulatory compliance.

The commercial airline industrys stellar safety record in the NAS over the past decade is a testament to the evolution and adoption of risk-based decision-making processes by government and industry.

This is happening in part through initiatives like the Commercial Aviation Safety Team, or CAST, and effective tools like Safety Management Systems, voluntary safety reporting programs, flight data monitoring and sharing through data initiatives like ASIAS.

But we always, always, always need to stay humble and vigilant. We all know in our business youre only as good as your last takeoff and your last landing, and the number of takeoffs and landings need to equal each other.

Theres too much at stake to wait until the next accident occurs to figure out how to operate more safely. We have to identify accident and incident precursors so we can take actions to prevent themand shared data allows us to do that.

Some of these processes obviously are applicable to the GA and helicopter communities, and some may not be. As you probably know, weve migrated the data-driven analysis model over to GA through the GA Joint Steering Committee and through other government-industry initiatives like the U.S. Helicopter Safety Team.

Business aviation and portions of the flight training community are also well on their way to implementing data gathering, analyzing and sharing to help them and the broader industry figure out how it is performing.

In 2013, the FAA started with two members of the business aviation community participating in the ASIAS program. Seven years later, we have 100.

Thats impressive, and its a success story for our industry. But we dont rest on our laurels, because there are thousands of flight departments, single-pilot, and owner-flown operators, both fixed-wing and rotary-wing, out there who could, at minimum, find real value in Flight Data Monitoring and pilot reports, even if its just to monitor their own operations.

Using Flight Data Monitoring as feedback into your training program is a good example of a safety management system process. Safety management also relies on having a Just Culture in place so that pilots and aviation workers feel empowered to report honest mistakes and issues without fear of retribution. That atmosphere gives workers the freedom to report and provide their management with data they can use to get a heads-up on what might be an accident in the making.

Without that information, all bets are off. One year ago, tomorrow, a pilot and two air crewmembers were killed when their Bell 407, on a Part 135 flight, slammed into terrain near Zaleski, Ohio, while en route to a hospital for a patient pickup.

While the NTSB has not yet issued its conclusions, we know from the operational and human factors factual report, which was released in September, that there were issues with safety culture in that flight department.

A healthy safety culture requires some basic elements:

The organization must encourage employees to voluntarily report issues without the threat of retribution. It has to have data analysis capability to make sense of the flight data and safety reports. It needs a method of tracking and trending issues and the effects of corrective actions, and it must provide feedback to let employees know what became of their reports.

The factual material from this accident provides some good examples of what an unhealthy safety culture can look like. For example, numerous pilots and medical crew told investigators about incidents where they received, or they witnessed, pilots being reprimanded or challenged for declining flights. One pilot said he was not aware of a way to report safety concerns without getting himself in trouble.

The NTSB noted that while personnel were aware of the ways to report concerns, a number of them were uncomfortable voicing concerns due to fear of reprimand by management and the lack of previous management action on voiced safety concerns.

You can imagine how the inability to speak out might lead a pilot to take a mission when others would not. In fact, the accident flight had been rejected by two other providers. Making matters worse, the operator had stated in written materials to hospitals that they would take flights when other operators turned them down due to weather.

This accident is, unfortunately, not an isolated case of a safety culture vacuum when it comes to the helicopter and overall GA sector.

We, at the FAA, in concert with youindustryare working to improve helicopter safety on multiple frontsincluding information sharing, education about risk management and safety management systems, safety-boosting technology, and enhanced training, among othersand were always open to new ideas about how we can be more effective.

Adopting best practices is certainly a path to reducing risks. A great way to share your experiences and learn about the best practices of others is to participate in our new helicopter InfoShare program, which had its first meeting in October. Im told a key topic of discussion at the meeting was the importance of SMS, and how it can truly help helicopter operators reduce their risks. Another avenue for sharing best practices for oil and gas industry rotary-wing operators is through the Helicopter Safety Advisory Council, which has developed recommended practices that are easily adaptable to other helicopter sectors.

And have you heard of the USHSTs Safety Workshop in a Box? This is an education program where the FAAs Safety Team, or FAAST Team, along with industry safety experts, take their safety message directly to helicopter pilots.

Its a deep dive on one specific accident that educates pilots on decision-making. We tested the idea in Phoenix last year and, this year, will be taking it on the road to 10 cities and adding a second accident scenario.

The FAA is also working to bolster training related to loss-of-control awareness, pilot competency, and technical support.

In the technology area, were doing research with enhanced vision technologies to help pilots see in reduced visibilities and stability augmentation systems to make it easier to fly the machine when times are tough. Were also looking into algorithms that will make simulators accurate through a certain range outside the typical flight envelope, so that pilots can have more realistic training opportunities.

Were also working with industry to develop new helicopter Airman Certification Standards to replace the current practical test standards. The new standards will include risk management elements in all areas of operation and tasks to help develop better-prepared and safer helicopter pilots.

These efforts are a good start, but as I said earlier, were always in search of thinking that is outside the box on how we can address the accident rate.

We are serious about getting on top of the safety challenges we face in the helicopter air tour industry.

And frankly as many of you may know there is a lot of energy in Congress right now as it relates to both safety and noise concerns associated with helicopter air tours; if there isn’t meaningful action on both of these fronts very soon, I suspect the path forward will be dictated to this industry.

Our safety experts have begun developing an action plan to address the issues, and we look forward to sharing the details with our partners and stakeholders in the near future. Upon sharing this plan, we hope to receive your valuable input and support.

Before I close, I want to flag another issue we, and Im sure many of the operators in this room, are focused on helicopter noise. There is growing concern in many parts of this country about the impact of helicopter noise on communities.

This is part of a larger challenge that has been developing across the country with respect to aviation noise both around airports and often associated with air tours. And there are ongoing collaborative efforts to address noise. For example, FAA is engaged with HAIs Fly Neighborly Committee to promote community friendly flying and to educate operators on community engagement best practices.

However, without more engagement and action by the rotorwing sector, I suspect noise concerns will increasingly impact not just todays operations but our ability to integrate new users UAS and urban air mobility into the NAS.

I would urge operators to be much more proactive in their engagement with communities on noise issues and try to find constructive approaches to manage these challenges.

Thanks again for your attention. I look forward to learning more about this fascinating side of our industry and personally getting involved in making vertical flight as safe as possibleas safe as the public expects it to be. I hope to see many of you in the near future as we explore new ways to improve general aviation and helicopter safety. Together, we can do itwe must do it!

I do want to encourage you to attend the FAA: Meet the Regulators session taking place this Thursday at 8:3010:30 am, where you will get to meet several members of my senior leadership team. They plan to share information on rotorcraft safety initiatives and entertain your questions. Lets keep the dialog going.

Thanks for inviting me; I very much look forward to continuing this dialogue and our work together.

Speech – Helicopter Safety Time to Think Outside the Box

Administrator Stephen Dickson
Anaheim, CA

Remarks As Delivered

Good morning, everyone.

By now, everyone is aware of the tragedy that happened Sunday morning, only 50 miles northwest of this convention center.

I speak for all of us at the FAA when I say that we are saddened by this accident and the loss of so many lives, and our hearts go out to the family and friends of those onboard.

It is much too early to speak intelligently about why this may have happened, but suffice it to say that the NTSB, FAA and others are already hard at work to discover the causes. Despite what the investigators ultimately determine, we in this room know that all too often, helicopter accidents and GA accidents, in general, turn out in hindsight to have been preventable.

I left Washington on Friday prepared to deliver a safety message here and to lead the charge for action on helicopter safety. The events of Sunday morning make that mission all the more urgent. If not now, then when. If not us, then who?

Though we meet here with heavy hearts, it is good to be among such an esteemed group of aviation professionals here today with a shared focus on aviation safety.

Of course, I recognize that the helicopter community deals with safety and operational threats that are much different from my experiences in all my years in fixed-wing fighter aircraft and commercial aviation. So I felt it was particularly important to come here in person today to see for myself the depth and breadth of your industry and to hear about your challenges and concerns.

Aside from a few pleasure rides in air tour helicopters, I do not have much personal experience in your operational world, but its clear to me from a professional perspective that rotary wing aviation is an essential element of our transportation system, particularly when it comes to helping people. How many of our citizens owe their lives to rescue helicopters, or the operators that spring into action on a moments notice to carry critically ill patients to the hospital?

These aircraft are extremely versatile with unique capabilities and handle a wide variety of operations 24/7/365.

We remember now that it is only a little more than 80 years since Igor Sikorsky hovered the worlds first practical helicopter in Stratford, Connecticut. Yet today vertical lift has become a mainstay in the American aviation landscape, and theres much more to come when you think about drones and urban air mobility.

While helicopters represent a relatively small portion of our general aviation fleetabout 6% their impact is significant and even disproportionate compared to other forms of aviationparticularly when you count the benefits to society from medivac, search and rescue, police, infrastructure inspection and air taxi operations, to name just a few.

Actually, one look in the exhibit hall or in the news, makes it clear that the notion of a rotorcraft as I just described earlierone rotor spinning above your headis sorely out of date. From relatively inexpensive quadcopters the size of a basketballto faster, quieter and more autonomous traditional helicopters and tiltrotors to automobile-sized electric flying taxis that are quickly jumping from the drawing boards to the test area, todays rotary wing aviation is quickly moving outside the box that Sikorsky first flew in.

Unmanned Aircraft Systems, known as UAS or drones, are now flying in the airspace that used to be largely the domain of helicopters. I dont have to tell you the growth has been exponential.

Weve been registering drones for a little more than four years, and weve already got more than 1.5 million on the books, with more than 400,000 listed for commercial use, and weve approved two Part 135 operators.

We have also approved 27 part 137 UAS operatorswhich you may know as crop dusters. Consider for reference, weve been registering aircraft for more than 90 years, and weve got just shy of 300,000 in the manned aircraft registry.

We are learning a great deal about the innovative ways that drones can help society and be operated in the NAS through our Integration Pilot Program. Our strategy of operations first, is allowing us to use the existing regulatory regime, which helps us ensure innovation can drive forward.

UPS and FedEx are actively participating in trials to speed up the delivery of small packages and working on type certificates for small autonomous drones. Innovators up in Alaska are looking to do the same with much larger vehicles.

Said another way, over the last 3 years, weve shifted our strategy from writing rules to getting machines in the air and flyingand taking lessons learned from the operations approval process to write better rules.

Our goal in the United States, in contrast to many areas of the world, is to integrate, rather than segregate, UAS operations into the NAS. At the moment I dont have to tell you that this strategy is nowhere more important than to the helicopter community, as in many respects the need for integration is felt more acutely in the airspace where you operate than it is in the airspace where we typically find fixed-wing operations.

Knowing the location of drones is a key requirement for accomplishing the vision. Thats why the FAA recently issued a long-awaited notice of proposed rulemaking to require drone operators to provide remote identification for their vehicles.

Weve received over 6000 comments so far and welcome the public input as it will help us craft a rule that meets the safety and security needs now and for the future.

Flying taxis are on the horizon and manufacturers are getting ready for testing. According to my UAS team, we are currently engaged with the builders of more than 15 electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft projects. At CES in Las Vegas earlier this month, we saw Uber and the Hyundai Motor Company unveil a full-scale aircraft concept in their partnership to create Uber Air Taxis, and shortly after, Toyota announced a hefty investment in flying taxi developer Joby Aviation.

Also in January, we saw North Americas first public demonstration of an autonomous two-seat flying taxian eHang EH216 taking flight in Raleigh, albeit with no passengers.

Of course, the FAA has to ensure that these new entrants are safe before they can take part in regular National Airspace System operations. Were using a crawl, walk, run approach as we mature the vehicle technologies and air traffic management procedures to do this, and at this point, Ill note that were still in the crawling phase for both, but we are making rapid progress.

A key question we get from new entrants is how safe is safe? Will the fatal accident risk we accept for rotorcraft operations today be acceptable for Uber riders tomorrow? Probably not.

Wethe FAA and industryhave some important work to do in the name of rotary wing safety right now. Sundays crash comes one month to the day after the loss of seven people on a Safari Helicopters air tour on Kauai on December 26th.

These are tragic stories, particularly when families on an adventure or a quick ride to an event become the unwitting victims of accidents that, far too often, are preventable. In the aftermath of any crash, the reputation of the entire helicopter community is questioned, and the public may question whether the benefits are worth the risks.

We know from the U.S. Helicopter Safety Teams latest numbers that the helicopter sector has a fatal accident rate of approximately 0.63 per 100,000 hours, based on a five-year moving average. Thats well below the overall general aviation rate of approximately 0.94, but its not enough.

Just like the broader GA sector, pilot error is the predominant factor in fatal accidents. In fact, even when there is a mechanical component failure that leads to a crash, we often find that the component failed, because the helicopter was being operated outside its limits or the maintenance instructions were not being followed.

A key challenge we all face is that place where we have the largest number of paying passengers experiencing fatalities in our airspaceair tour operations. Im here to tell you this needs to change. We need to find ways to move that part of the industry toward the level of safety achieved by the commercial airline sector.

The good news is that with certain targeted interventions, the fatal accident rate has continued to declineand well discuss some of those initiatives later. The bad newsor it should be bad news to all of usis that the rate is still too high, and making interventions more difficult is that many of the pilots and operators in the personal/private helicopter sector are difficult to reach.

While an accident rate of zero is the ultimate goal, our Part 121 commercial airline industry today is the closest we have come to that. In the past 10 years, there have been more than 90 million commercial flights in our NAS, carrying more than 7 billion passengers, with two fatalities.

Thats a safety record thats hard to get your mind around in any human endeavor, much less one where youre carrying people in highly advanced aerospace vehicles at more than 500 mph and miles above the earth.

Granted, helicopters fly lower and slower, but theres no need for your safety goals to be lower, and frankly, for the flying taxi model to succeed, riders will likely expect an airline-like assurance of a safe flight. And why shouldnt they?

As I said earlier, the long-term GA fatal accident rate, including helicopters, is declining but we cant be satisfied. Its our responsibility to ask ourselves the hard questions and determine what more we can do to enhance Helicopter safety.

Consider that the helicopter offshore industry has a fatal accident rate that is a factor of two below the combined rate for the sector. How are they doing it and what are their lessons learned?

Thats one of the reasons why I came here to Heli-Expo, to take stock of your industry, hear your concerns, and to get up to speed on the unique aspects of helicopter operations.

When it comes to rotorcraft, Im a neophyte, and Im all ears.

I do have plenty of experience and perspective to offer from the world of fixed-wing commercial aviation safety, as you probably know: twenty-seven years at Delta, the last 12 of which I spent as Senior VP of flight operations. I was responsible for the safety and operational performance of the companys global flight operations of more than a million flights a year on six continents, as well as pilot training, crew resources, crew scheduling and regulatory compliance.

The commercial airline industrys stellar safety record in the NAS over the past decade is a testament to the evolution and adoption of risk-based decision-making processes by government and industry.

This is happening in part through initiatives like the Commercial Aviation Safety Team, or CAST, and effective tools like Safety Management Systems, voluntary safety reporting programs, flight data monitoring and sharing through data initiatives like ASIAS.

But we always, always, always need to stay humble and vigilant. We all know in our business youre only as good as your last takeoff and your last landing, and the number of takeoffs and landings need to equal each other.

Theres too much at stake to wait until the next accident occurs to figure out how to operate more safely. We have to identify accident and incident precursors so we can take actions to prevent themand shared data allows us to do that.

Some of these processes obviously are applicable to the GA and helicopter communities, and some may not be. As you probably know, weve migrated the data-driven analysis model over to GA through the GA Joint Steering Committee and through other government-industry initiatives like the U.S. Helicopter Safety Team.

Business aviation and portions of the flight training community are also well on their way to implementing data gathering, analyzing and sharing to help them and the broader industry figure out how it is performing.

In 2013, the FAA started with two members of the business aviation community participating in the ASIAS program. Seven years later, we have 100.

Thats impressive, and its a success story for our industry. But we dont rest on our laurels, because there are thousands of flight departments, single-pilot, and owner-flown operators, both fixed-wing and rotary-wing, out there who could, at minimum, find real value in Flight Data Monitoring and pilot reports, even if its just to monitor their own operations.

Using Flight Data Monitoring as feedback into your training program is a good example of a safety management system process. Safety management also relies on having a Just Culture in place so that pilots and aviation workers feel empowered to report honest mistakes and issues without fear of retribution. That atmosphere gives workers the freedom to report and provide their management with data they can use to get a heads-up on what might be an accident in the making.

Without that information, all bets are off. One year ago, tomorrow, a pilot and two air crewmembers were killed when their Bell 407, on a Part 135 flight, slammed into terrain near Zaleski, Ohio, while en route to a hospital for a patient pickup.

While the NTSB has not yet issued its conclusions, we know from the operational and human factors factual report, which was released in September, that there were issues with safety culture in that flight department.

A healthy safety culture requires some basic elements:

The organization must encourage employees to voluntarily report issues without the threat of retribution. It has to have data analysis capability to make sense of the flight data and safety reports. It needs a method of tracking and trending issues and the effects of corrective actions, and it must provide feedback to let employees know what became of their reports.

The factual material from this accident provides some good examples of what an unhealthy safety culture can look like. For example, numerous pilots and medical crew told investigators about incidents where they received, or they witnessed, pilots being reprimanded or challenged for declining flights. One pilot said he was not aware of a way to report safety concerns without getting himself in trouble.

The NTSB noted that while personnel were aware of the ways to report concerns, a number of them were uncomfortable voicing concerns due to fear of reprimand by management and the lack of previous management action on voiced safety concerns.

You can imagine how the inability to speak out might lead a pilot to take a mission when others would not. In fact, the accident flight had been rejected by two other providers. Making matters worse, the operator had stated in written materials to hospitals that they would take flights when other operators turned them down due to weather.

This accident is, unfortunately, not an isolated case of a safety culture vacuum when it comes to the helicopter and overall GA sector.

We, at the FAA, in concert with youindustryare working to improve helicopter safety on multiple frontsincluding information sharing, education about risk management and safety management systems, safety-boosting technology, and enhanced training, among othersand were always open to new ideas about how we can be more effective.

Adopting best practices is certainly a path to reducing risks. A great way to share your experiences and learn about the best practices of others is to participate in our new helicopter InfoShare program, which had its first meeting in October. Im told a key topic of discussion at the meeting was the importance of SMS, and how it can truly help helicopter operators reduce their risks. Another avenue for sharing best practices for oil and gas industry rotary-wing operators is through the Helicopter Safety Advisory Council, which has developed recommended practices that are easily adaptable to other helicopter sectors.

And have you heard of the USHSTs Safety Workshop in a Box? This is an education program where the FAAs Safety Team, or FAAST Team, along with industry safety experts, take their safety message directly to helicopter pilots.

Its a deep dive on one specific accident that educates pilots on decision-making. We tested the idea in Phoenix last year and, this year, will be taking it on the road to 10 cities and adding a second accident scenario.

The FAA is also working to bolster training related to loss-of-control awareness, pilot competency, and technical support.

In the technology area, were doing research with enhanced vision technologies to help pilots see in reduced visibilities and stability augmentation systems to make it easier to fly the machine when times are tough. Were also looking into algorithms that will make simulators accurate through a certain range outside the typical flight envelope, so that pilots can have more realistic training opportunities.

Were also working with industry to develop new helicopter Airman Certification Standards to replace the current practical test standards. The new standards will include risk management elements in all areas of operation and tasks to help develop better-prepared and safer helicopter pilots.

These efforts are a good start, but as I said earlier, were always in search of thinking that is outside the box on how we can address the accident rate.

We are serious about getting on top of the safety challenges we face in the helicopter air tour industry.

And frankly as many of you may know there is a lot of energy in Congress right now as it relates to both safety and noise concerns associated with helicopter air tours; if there isn’t meaningful action on both of these fronts very soon, I suspect the path forward will be dictated to this industry.

Our safety experts have begun developing an action plan to address the issues, and we look forward to sharing the details with our partners and stakeholders in the near future. Upon sharing this plan, we hope to receive your valuable input and support.

Before I close, I want to flag another issue we, and Im sure many of the operators in this room, are focused on helicopter noise. There is growing concern in many parts of this country about the impact of helicopter noise on communities.

This is part of a larger challenge that has been developing across the country with respect to aviation noise both around airports and often associated with air tours. And there are ongoing collaborative efforts to address noise. For example, FAA is engaged with HAIs Fly Neighborly Committee to promote community friendly flying and to educate operators on community engagement best practices.

However, without more engagement and action by the rotorwing sector, I suspect noise concerns will increasingly impact not just todays operations but our ability to integrate new users UAS and urban air mobility into the NAS.

I would urge operators to be much more proactive in their engagement with communities on noise issues and try to find constructive approaches to manage these challenges.

Thanks again for your attention. I look forward to learning more about this fascinating side of our industry and personally getting involved in making vertical flight as safe as possibleas safe as the public expects it to be. I hope to see many of you in the near future as we explore new ways to improve general aviation and helicopter safety. Together, we can do itwe must do it!

I do want to encourage you to attend the FAA: Meet the Regulators session taking place this Thursday at 8:3010:30 am, where you will get to meet several members of my senior leadership team. They plan to share information on rotorcraft safety initiatives and entertain your questions. Lets keep the dialog going.

Thanks for inviting me; I very much look forward to continuing this dialogue and our work together.

Speech – 23rd Annual Commercial Space Transportation Conference

Administrator Stephen Dickson
Washington, D.C.

Remarks as prepared for delivery

Thank you. Let me start by saying how much I appreciate the significant contributions of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation. You are bringing a high level of expertise and collaboration to the table. When the history of the commercial space industry is written, I hope it recognizes how you and this organization helped set the path for success.

You know, Nextflix has a documentary running right now about Scott Kelly: A Year in Space. You see, NASA wanted some data on how the human body stands up to long-term space travel. They got it. The idea of a trip to Mars isnt as far-fetched as it used to be.

In the documentary, one point struck me of all the multiple systems involved in a trip to space, the most fragile and destructible system is actually the human body.

Its true. Space is an unforgiving environment. Ive done 13 hours in a row in a fighter cockpit, and after a while, it gets tight. Space is a whole nother level. But while the human body is indeed fragile, the human spirit is stronger than steel.

And the American spirit has been on display up there in space for six decades. The people who made space history have shown that we can defy our physical limitations, defy the odds, and do the impossible.

Now having said that, I guess I cant really use the word impossible anymore.

You can all take some credit for that. America has found a home in commercial space, and the view from there seems to be pretty darn good. As we say in aviation, ceiling and visibility unlimited!

We all grew up watching those rockets poke a hole in the atmosphere. And although I myself am still kind of partial to flying an F-15, or even watching an F-22 or F-35 at an air show, after all these years, there are few things more inspiring in life than to see a rocket lift off, especially from American soil.

Or see an astronaut make a spacewalk, or float around in micro or zero gravity.

Today, a new generation of pioneers, like Beth Moses, are making it happen. They are ready to capitalize on the space economy.

By some estimates, it could be worth a trillion dollars by 2040. And 2040 is going to roll up on us a whole lot faster than we think.

You know the big ticket items: space travel and tourism, satellite servicing, space debris removal, in-space manufacturing, and mini satellites to provide high speed internet across the globe.

Hopefully one day, we will be looking at point-to-point suborbital travel.

And maybe someday, one of your companies can make the Kessel run like Han Solo did in less than 12 parsecs.

Now first, well have to figure out if thats a measure of time or distance. It wasnt really clear. But I digress

Seriously, one thing is crystal clearthese pursuits will have a lasting impact on America, the world, and our leadership around the world.

And as long as every business plan has safety as an essential component, this industry can grow beyond what your projections forecast. But only if it is safe. If its not safe, take it from a pilot, youre better off staying on the launch pad.

The FAAs top priority is the safety of people and property on the ground. And if its not your top priority, it needs to be. Otherwise you will miss out on the next big thing.

In Fiscal Year 2019, we licensed 32 space operations. This year, that number could easily reach into the 40s just about approaching one operation per week.

We at the FAA are leaning in, and in a big way. We dont want to just keep pace with you. We want to be an enabler of your safe operations.

Thats why were committed to a process of stakeholder engagement. This past year, we received final reports from three Aviation Rulemaking Committees, including the Airspace Access and Integration and Spaceport Categorization committees.

These two committees, supported by many of you in this room, provided numerous suggestions on how we integrate space vehicles into the National Airspace System. And how we develop the spaceport infrastructure that America needs to support our preeminence in space.

The fact that we had aviation rulemaking committees focused on space speaks volumes on how far commercial space transportation has come. If you want to carve out a spot in the National Airspace System, you have to have a regulatory framework to make it all work. In fact, I think we need to start calling it the National Aerospace System.

We are evaluating the committee recommendations now. And while this process plays out, the FAA continues evolving toward more flexible and efficient ways of doing business.

Last year, we issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to safely streamline launch licensing requirements. We received hundreds of comments that are under review. And we expect to issue a final rule by the fall of this year.

The proposed rule will let operators use a single license for multiple launches from multiple launch sites. And we will replace cumbersome, prescriptive requirements with flexible, performance-based criteria.

These steps will reduce the burden on operators and help to foster more innovation without sacrificing safety.

More fundamentally, the FAA is reorganizing our Office of Commercial Space Transportation. For starters, we have strong, knowledgeable, capable and innovative leadership in place. Wayne and his team are doing a great job. They are looking for ways to say yes to the continued development and success of this exciting industry.

We are placing all licensing activities under one directorate.

We have also hired a new Executive Director of Operations Lirio Liu. She comes from our aviation safety rulemaking office. Lirios reputation for action precedes her. So Commercial Space may the Force be with you!

And we now have an office dedicated to spaceport policy. We currently have 11 licensed spaceports with a half dozen potential sites in the pre-application phase.

This office is helping us determine what services, rules and regulations will be needed to support spaceports. It will help us determine funding streams, including grants, to develop and sustain the infrastructure.

We look forward to collaborating with state and local governments on spaceport investment, AND integrating spaceports into our nations critical intermodal transportation networks.

Spaceports are one visible aspect of the infrastructure. But there are important parts of our infrastructure that are not physical in nature or visible to our citizens. The adaptations of systems and processes that will enable changes to the way we manage airspace are critically important. Were making our airspace more flexible and dynamic. We have to.

In the past, space launches were few in number. We could accommodate them by blocking off large swaths of airspace. But this affects the routing of aircraft in a big way. Its like when youre favorite road is closed, and you have to take that long detour.

But were developing a whole suite of game-changing tools to integrate space operations into the National Airspace System. These tools are a necessary enabler of growth for commercial space, as the operational tempo and frequency of launches and re-entries ramp up over the coming years.

In August, we plan to deploy the Space Data Integrator. SDI will feed real-time data from the space vehicle into the FAAs Traffic Flow Management System.

Having that data during an actual operation is a big deal. Itll be like having our own C-3PO but not nearly as annoying.

Well know exactly where the aircraft hazard areas need to be, and how long they need to be there.

And to complement SDI, we are developing an enhanced aircraft hazard area generator. This will help us do all of this much more quickly. Well be able to block off less airspace, and release that airspace faster, so its available for other airspace users.

SDI is just one of several capabilities under development at the FAA.There are other ones, such as Space Integration Capabilities, that will provide air traffic controllers with the automation to more efficiently, surgically and safely route air traffic around space operations, even with the increased cadence we are projecting in the future.

And were already starting to apply several procedural efficiencies.

For example, were using time-based procedures, where we can let planes approach the aircraft hazard area, because we will know exactly what time that airspace will become available again.

And we expect that, one day, we will be able to reduce the current larger-than-required aircraft hazard areas, and reduce the number of aircraft affected by a space mission.

Adding on that, were developing dynamic launch/reentry windows. Well take triggers from the operators mission sequence countdown.

For instance, if the operator starts a procedure say for instance, loading liquid oxygen then we know that triggers a launch within 30 minutes. And we can block that airspace more efficiently.

We want to know from operators what the various launch triggers are, and then we can work with you to develop these procedures. The better we can make use of telemetry data exchange, and coordination in pre-mission planning phases, the more we can achieve efficiency gains that will give space operators more access to the airspace they need.

In closing, todays space pioneers are inspiring a new generation of Americansjust as many of us were inspired decades ago, with the Apollo Moon landings and the Space Shuttle missions.

Lets continue to collaborate. Lets continue to find better ways to enable this industry. But through it all, together, lets make safety the launch pad from which we make it all happen.

As we do that, we will unleash the benefits of the space economy.

America will continue to lead the world in this arena.

And well be able to take that next giant leap in space transport which could be the Mars trip.

Then, after all of that, MAYBE well talk about that Kessel run in less than 12 parsecs.