Insurance companies would maintain a list of qualified pilots willing to volunteer to fly down and fly airplanes out of harm’s way. I’m retired and wouldn’t mind doing something like that to help folks out. I bet there’s a lot of other guys (both literal and figurative) who would be willing and able to help out. This would free aircraft owners up to take care of the family. No one argues that moving the airplane is the smart move. The issues of course are logistics and reality. Even if you had time and could move your own plane, you still need to get back down there - in monumental traffic - only to bug out in that same traffic back north. It’s plain which process should take priority. The family’s safety is paramount. But maybe some of us could pitch in to help. A quick flight down yonder, pick up the plane and fly it where the owner wants it flown. Then fly home from there and the owner can go get it at their convenience. I’m game. It’s an idea anyhow.
Bill, I had the same idea. There is a good fit between out-of-area pilots and rescue flights: there is no need for a difficult return to the danger area to evacuate the pilot’s family, and if the rescue flight arrives near their home then there is no difficult trip from rescue location to the pilot’s home.
However, I could pretty quickly come up with five objections. I can’t see an easy way to overcome them with a structure which would scale:
Skill vs task matching: how do you match up task of flying the rescue aircraft with a pilot who has the skill for that task? Trust me, you do not want me flying your twin-engine piston to safety.
Trust #1: how does the plane owner get confidence that the rescue pilot can be trusted with their precious aircraft?
Trust #2: how does the rescue pilot get confidence that the rescue aircraft is a condition which the rescue pilot feels is safe? This requires in part some trust that the plane owner has maintained the plane to the rescue pilot’s standards.
Acceptance of some failure: As the Hurricane Air Force scales, there will be some failures. Some planes won’t get rescued as planned. Some pilots will wreck their rescue planes. Some rescue planes (and their owners’ sloppy maintenance) will wreck some rescue pilots. A form of insurance can turn this risk into premiums and payouts, sure. But you need to ensure that the reputation of the Hurricane Air Force idea does not get destroyed.
Paying attention between crises: it is easy to think about disaster safety just before and after a disaster. It is harder to maintain attention in the long lulls in between. But that is exactly the right time to be dealing with objections #1-4 above.
Personal knowledge and experience between individuals is one way to overcome those objections — but that is hard to scale.
Pompei is an obvious example of a city built in a wrong place – in fact when you are in Naples and the volcano is cross, you get the sense that it too is in the wrong place. There is a lot of faith in the wind blowing in the right direction on the day.
Most American cities and towns are very new, compared to Europe. Europe has many examples of places which have been abandoned for various reasons but, apart from mining ghost towns, there are relatively few in the States.
New Orleans is a prime candidate to be abandoned because of flood and hurricane risk, and Miami is another, along with LA after a quake or three.
Yes and no. Government should also protect us from the stupidity of others when the consequences of their actions negatively affect the rest of us. For instance, any “careless or reckless behavior” laws. The difficulty (and grey area) is in determining where the line is between individual freedom and the societal impacts of the freedom to make poor choices.
In the case of hangars built to hurricane standards, I would argue that it should be a requirement that such be built in affected areas, and substandard ones should have to be rebuilt in, say, 10 years time. But the private individuals who use such structures should be the ones to pay for it.
The individual freedom is whether to locate to a hurricane-prone region, and the government requirement is that structures at least be built to withstand the expected storms. I don’t live anywhere near FL (other than being on the east coast), yet my tax dollars are still going to pay for the rebuild of FL, so the least I would expect is that my tax dollars be spent wisely on storm-resistant buildings.
1 Skill Vs Task Matching - pre qualification. This is why I mentioned the insurance companies. Either FEMA or a consortium of insurance companies keeps the lists. Of course if you’re insured you’re good for that type. Create a series of minimum qualifications. X hours in type… etc. Perhaps a competency check ride with a CFI generates a form then sent to the controlling agency. If I own and fly say a Cessna 182, I’d expect to be qualified for 150’s and 172’s as well. Not the other way round of course. Basically the controlling agency maintains the list - and each potential volunteers qualification.
Trust 1 - being identified and verified - again by the controlling agency removes the ability to swipe an airplane. If we know who you are, we know where to look for the airplane.
Trust 2 - This one is a biggie and a toughie. Rescue pilot shows up and the airplane isn’t in airworthy condition as determined by the rescue pilot - that pilot calls and is reassigned to another flight from that area. No one should ever fly an airplane they’re not comfortable with. The rescue pilot has to be the final word, but we all know there are “those guys” too. We need to emphasize this is a near emergency process; a pan pan flight if you will.
Acceptance of failure. This is what GA is worst at . The owners insurance people have to be on board and the rescue pilot covered at least for liability. This IS a charitable undertaking after all. There ARE going to be accidents and incidents. The better the controlling agency plans for this at the outset, the better this plan would work.
Between crises. I agree this is the time to do the work. The fleet needs to be reminded of qualification currency and such. Owners of aircraft in likely rescue zones need to be reminded to undertake repairs and maintenance so the plane is always ready. A network of potential refuges needs to be charted so when things hit the fan, there’s already a list of places to call to find out who has space out of danger’s path.
So it would require a lot of work and it must have some form of controlling agency; whether that be a bunch of citizens running a website and volunteering , or FEMA, or even a shared effort by a bunch of Insurance companies. Somebody’s got to get it together and keep it together and ready.
But I still think it’s a workable idea that could severely mitigate the GA impact of Natural Disasters that we could see coming.
Something is changing in hurricanes. When Andrew blew through MIA in 1992 and leveled several smaller airports clear to the ground with its winds, I was putting together CFI materials for the edification of future students and monitored the METARs, TAFs and NOTAMS as winds increased, services were taken out, and towers were evacuated, mostly at the last minute. Wind velocities reached into the high 90s. Checking the same sort of information for the Florida west coast this time I never saw winds exceeding 45 in the reports, and I suspect that towers and fields simply cleared out much earlier. But the damage in Sanibel Island and several other places seem to have come from extreme flooding. Is that west coast vs east coast, when you talk about Florida, or is the extra water load carried by modern hurricanes (see Houston and New Orleans for other recent examples) a change due to climate evolution?
It will be interesting to see how well the public accepts unsubsidized insurance costs. And of course the federal government will be spending billions of borrowed dollars in the recovery effort. People love to rail against the government, until the wind and water comes for them.
How about a “sister airport” program? One or more airports out of the danger zone partners with an airport on the sandbar that is Florida. Volunteers offer to host families. The owners fly their own planes out of harm’s way. Volunteers also help evacuate families that won’t fit in Mom’s J-3. The local airport & FBO agrees to make arrangements to park the aircraft. It’s much easier to bug-out if a plan is in place.
I don’t think modern hurricanes are any different than those of 100 years ago with one exception: the number of intense hurricanes–Cat 3 and above–has a slightly higher incidence than even 20 years ago. It may may be due to the Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillation, which is in a high period and may be aggravated by climate change. Near record ocean heat content spun up Ian, just as the models said it would.
I think you’re underestimating wind-caused structural damage, even on Sanibel. Punta Gorda airport had a 155 MPH maximum gust. This is just screaming wind. I saw a picture of the new hangar blocks built after Charley. They were intact. Adjacent buildings, older, were flattened. There’s a lot of missing roofs and caved in walls in the Englewood/Northport/Punta Gordon region. They were in the northern eyewall for at least two hours.
But the larger order effect here is the number of people and stuff we’re putting in the path of these storms. The more we do that, the more expensive and painful recovery will be. It’s untenable, really.
Just FYI, I raised this with several insurance companies after Charley. No takers. One executive explained to me that the storm losses weren’t that much of an impact for them and were spread out among many companies. It didn’t even make a blip on the re-insurance market radar. Lloyds was non-plussed.
Their real worry was high-dollar liability “bell ringers” associated with sponsoring loss prevention movements. They had the storm losses built into the spread sheet.
Now this may have changed since 2004, but we haven’t seen much evidence of it.
Perhaps the little old lady who moved from Mass into a Florida trailer did that because with inflation and a meager fixed-income retirement it was all she could afford. Her ranks are swelling.
IMHO, no matter where you live, you will have to deal with some type of negative weather. The local building codes do not always reflect the inherent needs to deal with their particular weather issues. It is incumbent upon the homeowner to properly assess the weather risks for their home or airport. Where I live you cannot build without the proper engineered roof snow load and you typically cannot build in flood zones unless you are willing to pay a structural engineer to design mitigation based on 100 year flood data. We also experience constant winds and/or gusts in excess of 110 mph. How do I know this? Simple our anemometer was designed to withstand 110 mph which we saw before it broke in pieces.
I became impatient while reading all the various opinions below about whether or not WE the PEOPLE owe some financial responsibility for those who chose to live in Hurricane Zones and are rich enough to own airplanes but are willing to hangar them in cheap hangars to avoid higher hangar fees…and then when they suffer loss… somehow want US to help bail them out of their own choices.
FBO have insurance. If they had “hurricane proof” hangars they’d have lower insurance costs. So would lessors. But the cost of construction and maintenance of those facilities would mandate higher rental/lease fees.
HEY FOLKS! GET OVER IT! Those who chose to live in Florida…NYC…or Paris France …do so AT THEIR OWN CHOICES AND EXPENSES. It is NOT up to the rest of us to protect them from hazards of their own choices. THEY can buy their own insurance…and WHERE I hangar MY airplane is considered by my underwriter when I buy MY insurance…. As it should be.