Re: Metar says wx below mins. Forecast above mins. 45 min fl
Tried to find the exact exemption but this was all I could find:
<nobr>January 28, 2009</nobr>
<nobr>U.S. Department of Transportation</nobr>
<nobr>Docket Management System</nobr>
<nobr>400 7</nobr>
<nobr>th</nobr>
<nobr>Street SW, Plaza 401</nobr>
<nobr>Washington, DC 20591-0001</nobr>
<nobr>Re: Exemption No. 3585, as amended; Docket No. FAA-2001-9379</nobr>
<nobr>Ladies/Gentlemen:</nobr>
<nobr>In accordance with Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations (14CFR) § 11.61, the Air Transport</nobr>
<nobr>Association of America, Inc. (ATA), on behalf of its member airlines</nobr>
<nobr>1</nobr>
<nobr>petitions the Administrator</nobr>
<nobr>for an extension of Exemption No. 3585P (Docket No. FAA-2001-9379). This exemption is</nobr>
<nobr>scheduled to expire on June 30, 2009.</nobr>
<nobr>Exemption 3585 provides relief, under certain conditions and limitations, from 14 CFR §§ 121.613,</nobr>
<nobr>121.619(a), and 121.625 to the extent necessary to: (1) dispatch an airplane, under IFR, to a</nobr>
<nobr>destination airport; and (2) list an alternate airport for that destination airport when the Aerodrome</nobr>
<nobr>Forecast (TAF) for either one or both of those airports indicates by the use of conditional language</nobr>
<nobr>such as “BECMG,” “PROB,” or “TEMPO,” in the TAF that the weather could be below authorized</nobr>
<nobr>weather minimums at the time of arrival. Dispatch under these circumstances is permitted if the</nobr>
<nobr>information contained in the main body of the TAF used by the certificate holder’s dispatch center</nobr>
<nobr>shows, for each flight to be dispatched, that the weather at the destination airport and alternate</nobr>
<nobr>airport listed in the dispatch release will be at or above authorized weather minimums at the time of</nobr>
<nobr>arrival.</nobr>
<nobr>This exemption has been used to the benefit of the traveling public for more than twenty-one</nobr>
<nobr>years, with no known compromise of safety. With regard to public interest and equivalent levels </nobr>
<nobr>of safety, the circumstances that warranted the initial grant of exemption continue to exist</nobr>
Tried to find the exact exemption but this was all I could find:
<nobr>January 28, 2009</nobr>
<nobr>U.S. Department of Transportation</nobr>
<nobr>Docket Management System</nobr>
<nobr>400 7</nobr>
<nobr>th</nobr>
<nobr>Street SW, Plaza 401</nobr>
<nobr>Washington, DC 20591-0001</nobr>
<nobr>Re: Exemption No. 3585, as amended; Docket No. FAA-2001-9379</nobr>
<nobr>Ladies/Gentlemen:</nobr>
<nobr>In accordance with Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations (14CFR) § 11.61, the Air Transport</nobr>
<nobr>Association of America, Inc. (ATA), on behalf of its member airlines</nobr>
<nobr>1</nobr>
<nobr>petitions the Administrator</nobr>
<nobr>for an extension of Exemption No. 3585P (Docket No. FAA-2001-9379). This exemption is</nobr>
<nobr>scheduled to expire on June 30, 2009.</nobr>
<nobr>Exemption 3585 provides relief, under certain conditions and limitations, from 14 CFR §§ 121.613,</nobr>
<nobr>121.619(a), and 121.625 to the extent necessary to: (1) dispatch an airplane, under IFR, to a</nobr>
<nobr>destination airport; and (2) list an alternate airport for that destination airport when the Aerodrome</nobr>
<nobr>Forecast (TAF) for either one or both of those airports indicates by the use of conditional language</nobr>
<nobr>such as “BECMG,” “PROB,” or “TEMPO,” in the TAF that the weather could be below authorized</nobr>
<nobr>weather minimums at the time of arrival. Dispatch under these circumstances is permitted if the</nobr>
<nobr>information contained in the main body of the TAF used by the certificate holder’s dispatch center</nobr>
<nobr>shows, for each flight to be dispatched, that the weather at the destination airport and alternate</nobr>
<nobr>airport listed in the dispatch release will be at or above authorized weather minimums at the time of</nobr>
<nobr>arrival.</nobr>
<nobr>This exemption has been used to the benefit of the traveling public for more than twenty-one</nobr>
<nobr>years, with no known compromise of safety. With regard to public interest and equivalent levels </nobr>
<nobr>of safety, the circumstances that warranted the initial grant of exemption continue to exist</nobr>