Flight Information Publication
Policy
The following is in essence, the statement issued by the FAA Administrator
and published in the December 10, 1964, issue of the Federal Register, concerning the FAA
policy as pertaining to the type of information that will be published as NOTAM's and in
the Aeronautical Information Manual.
a. It is a pilot's inherent responsibility to be alert at all times
for and in anticipation of all circumstances, situations, and conditions affecting the
safe operation of the aircraft. For example, a pilot should expect to find air traffic at
any time or place. At or near both civil and military airports and in the vicinity of
known training areas, a pilot should expect concentrated air traffic and realize
concentrations of air traffic are not limited to these places.
b. It is the general practice of the agency to advertise by NOTAM
or other flight information publications such information it may deem appropriate;
information which the agency may from time to time make available to pilots is solely for
the purpose of assisting them in executing their regulatory responsibilities. Such
information serves the aviation community as a whole and not pilots individually.
c. The fact that the agency under one particular situation or
another may or may not furnish information does not serve as a precedent of the agency's
responsibility to the aviation community; neither does it give assurance that other
information of the same or similar nature will be advertised, nor, does it guarantee that
any and all information known to the agency will be advertised.
d. This publication, while not regulatory, provides information
which reflects examples of operating techniques and procedures which may be requirements
in other federal publications or regulations. It is made available solely to assist pilots
in executing their responsibilities required by other publications.
Consistent with the foregoing, it shall be the policy of the Federal
Aviation Administration to furnish information only when, in the opinion of the agency, a
unique situation should be advertised and not to furnish routine information such as
concentrations of air traffic, either civil or military. The Aeronautical Information
Manual will not contain informative items concerning everyday circumstances that pilots
should, either by good practices or regulation, expect to encounter or avoid. |