Bilateral aviation safety agreements (BASAs) are meant to improve international regulatory coordination. Reaching that goal – elusive as it is – requires constant attention to the realities of how civil aviation authorities actually interact and what those interactions mean for certificate or approval holders.
In September, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) sought assistance from ARSA regarding the processes used by the FAA and foreign CAAs to validate imported aviation articles. The association now seeks input from membership via this month’s “quick question,” about broad experiences with foreign oversight of approvals and certificates.
Though ARSA represents international entities across the world, for the purposes of these questions “foreign” means outside the United States:
Note: The question is displayed in its own, embedded window. If the “Submit” button is not visible on the screen, you must scroll within the survey window in order to submit your response.
If the embedded survey does not appear/load, open the survey independently by visiting: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/qq-foreignvalidations.
Click here to see what questions have been asked and answered…and keep a lookout for more.
More from ARSA
On April 26, the FAA published to the Federal Register its new rule expanding Safety Management Systems (SMS) requirements to all operators of commuter and on-demand service and commercial air…
Read More
April 23, 2024 | Categories:
ARSA News & Updates
ARSA has been approached by a government contractor preparing a Commercialization Readiness Assessment Report for a product developed through the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program. The product being assessed…
Read More
April 16, 2024 | Categories:
Act Now,
ARSA News & Updates
March 12-15, 2024
Sponsors | Information
Arlington, Virginia and Washington, D.C. with Livestream Options for Conference Ambassadors
Conference Highlight – In the Fire with AVS-1
On March 14, ARSA Executive Director…
Read More
On April 8, ARSA and four other industry trade associations commented on an FAA notice of proposed rulemaking to consolidate the many falsification sections across 14 CFR into a single…
Read More
April 09, 2024 | Categories:
ARSA News & Updates,
ARSA Works,
Aviation Policy,
Drug and Alcohol,
EASA,
FAA,
Legislative,
Operations,
Press Releases,
Regulatory,
Rulemaking
On April 5, a group of seven aviation trade associations submitted joint comments to the FAA’s notice of proposed rulemaking to extend drug and alcohol testing requirements to repair station…
Read More