Crockrocket94 said:
Now we just need a way to get the FAA to enforce it.
In addition to prohibiting certificate holders from assigning duty, the reg states that "no crewmember may accept an assignment" unless the rest requirements stated therein are satisfied. So if by "enforce" you mean penalizing what you perceive to be a violation of the rest and duty rules then you would be equally liable and subject to certificate action by the FAA.
Your response is likely that you have no choice because if you refuse the trip then you would be fired and lose your income. But this is the same rationale--money--that is driving the operator's decision to ignore the reg (assuming your interpretation is correct).
So why is the operator he only one who should be liable? Why are you not equally responsible for violating the reg (assuming your interpretation is indeed correct)?
People are often quick to judge and point the finger at everyone else. No one wants to take responsibility for their own actions, or to do what is necessary to break the chain of events to prevent an accident or a violation.
The FAA is not going to do your job for you. If you sincerely believe that you are being asked to do something illegal or unsafe, it is your duty to refuse and offer alternatives. The fact that you may lose money does not justify you looking the other way, no more than it justifies the operator from doing the same to boost his bottom line.
That being said, keep in mind three things:
First, there is no reg does that explicitly states that rest must be prospectively determined. That is an interpretation of the applicable regs in an FAA counsel opinion. If the reg was clear on this point, pilots wouldn't be questioning the meaning of the reg and the FAA counsel wouldn't have wasted time researching and preparing an opinion.
Second, the FAA counsel's opinions are advisory. The FAA counsel's office has no rulemaking or enforcement authority. It prosecutes the case once an inspector initiates an enforcement action (if the airman decides to contest the action). An FAA counsel opinion is merely a lawyer's opinion of what an unclear or ambiguous reg means, which the FAA may rely on in an enforcement action (if it suits their needs). A judge may ultimately agree or disagree with that position. In this regard, a counsel opinion more like an advisory circular or the AIM, than a regulation. And even if the judge agrees, he or she may decide that the airman's or operator's interpretation was reasonable under the circumstances.
And last, if it is indeed industry practice to follow an interpretation of the regs that is contrary to yours, and the FAA is routinely not enforcing what you perceive to be violations, then isn't it possible that your interpretation is wrong?