
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 214 (Thursday, November 5, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 68599-68602]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-28151]


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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

Federal Aviation Administration


Aviation Rulemaking Advisory Committee--New Task

AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), DOT.

ACTION: Notice of a new task assignment for the Aviation Rulemaking 
Advisory Committee.

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SUMMARY: The FAA assigned the Aviation Rulemaking Advisory Committee 
(ARAC) a new task to provide recommendations regarding occupant 
protection rulemaking in normal and transport category rotorcraft for 
older certification basis type designs that are still in production. 
The FAA amended regulations to incorporate occupant protection rules, 
including those for emergency landing conditions and fuel system crash 
resistance, for new type designs in the 1980s and 1990s. These rule 
changes do not apply to newly manufactured rotorcraft with older type 
designs or to derivative type designs that keep the certification basis 
of the original type design. This approach has resulted in a very low 
incorporation rate of occupant protection features into the rotorcraft 
fleet, and fatal accidents remain unacceptably high. At the end of 
2014, only 16% of U.S. fleet had complied with the crash resistant fuel 
system requirements effective 20 years earlier, and only 10% had 
complied with the emergency landing requirements effective 25 years 
earlier. A recent fatal accident study has shown these measures would 
have been effective in saving lives.
    This notice informs the public of the new ARAC activity and 
solicits

[[Page 68600]]

membership for the new Rotorcraft Occupant Protection Working Group.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Martin R. Crane, Federal Aviation 
Administration, 10101 Hillwood Parkway, Fort Worth, Texas 76177, 
Martin.R.Crane@faa.gov, phone number 817-222-5110, facsimile number 
817-222-5961.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

ARAC Acceptance of Task

    As a result of the September 17, 2015, ARAC meeting, the FAA 
assigned and ARAC accepted this task establishing the Rotorcraft 
Occupant Protection Working Group. The Rotorcraft Occupant Protection 
Working Group will serve as staff to the ARAC and provide advice and 
recommendations on the assigned task. The ARAC will review and accept 
the recommendation report and will submit it to the FAA.

 Background

    The FAA established the ARAC to provide information, advice, and 
recommendations on aviation-related issues that could result in 
rulemaking to the FAA Administrator, through the Associate 
Administrator of Aviation Safety.
    The Rotorcraft Occupant Protection Working Group will provide 
advice and recommendations to the ARAC on occupant protection 
rulemaking, including both initial certification and continued 
airworthiness. The basic concept of occupant protection is to give all 
occupants the greatest possible chance to egress an aircraft without 
serious injury after a survivable emergency landing or accident. While 
the number of U.S. helicopter accidents and the corresponding accident 
rate over the past 10 years have steadily decreased, during that same 
time period data associated with fatal helicopter accidents and 
fatalities remains virtually unchanged. A number of regulations were 
promulgated in the 1980s and 1990s to address and greatly improve 
occupant protection in a survivable emergency landing or accident. 
These occupant protection improvements involve seat systems that reduce 
the likelihood of fatal injuries to the occupant in a crash (14 CFR 
27.562, 27.785, 29.562, and 29.785); structural requirements that 
maintain a survivable volume and restrain large items of mass above and 
behind the occupant (14 CFR 27.561 and 29.561); and fuel systems that 
reduce the likelihood of an immediate post-crash fire (14 CFR 27.952 
and 29.952). If the occupant protection improvement rules are not 
incorporated in new production helicopters, there will be no meaningful 
reduction in the number of fatalities in helicopter accidents.
    Following a series of accidents involving post-crash fires, the 
Australian Civil Aviation Safety Authority asked the FAA for assistance 
in determining the airworthiness of certain helicopters. This request 
resulted in a collaborative post-crash fire/blunt force trauma study 
performed by the FAA's Rotorcraft Directorate and Civil Aerospace 
Medical Institute (CAMI). The data consisted of 97 fatal accidents 
involving U.S. registered, type-certificated helicopters in a five-year 
timeframe from 2008 to 2013. Part 27 rotorcraft comprised the largest 
mass of data (87 of 97 fatal accidents, 90% of the total) in the study. 
The post-crash fire portion of the study found that post-crash fires 
occurred in 30 of 76 (39%) of fatal accidents involving part 27 
helicopters without fuel systems that meet the full crash resistance 
requirements of 14 CFR 27.952. The post-crash fire contributed to a 
fatality in 20% of these fatal accidents. While the data set for part 
29 rotorcraft was much smaller (10 of 97 fatal accidents, 10% of the 
total), the results were comparable. Through the course of the study, 
the Rotorcraft Directorate further discovered that there were only 
about 16% of U.S. registered, type-certificated rotorcraft that fully 
complied with the fuel system crash resistance provisions in Sec. Sec.  
27.952 and 29.952, despite those rules having been in effect for 20 
years at the time of the study.
    In the time since increased rotorcraft occupant protection 
standards became effective as federal regulations, research efforts 
have studied injury patterns in fatal rotorcraft accidents. In April 
2003, Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine published Narinder 
Taneja and Douglas A. Wiegmann's ``Analysis of Injuries Among Pilots 
Killed in Fatal Helicopter Accidents.'' Using autopsy data from 1993 to 
1999, Taneja and Wiegmann analyzed the pattern of specific bony 
injuries (ribs, skull, and pelvis) and organ/visceral injuries (brain, 
lung, and heart) documented in 74 fatal rotorcraft accidents. They 
found blunt trauma as the cause of death in 88% of the cases, with the 
highest percentages of injuries to the head and core body regions. 
Among the implications cited in their study was, ``Protection of the 
occupants exposed to a crash is a realistic objective that can be 
achieved if crashworthiness becomes a primary element of initial 
helicopter design and future upgrade programs.''
    The second component of the Rotorcraft Directorate/CAMI study 
involved blunt force trauma. Blunt force trauma accounted for cause of 
death in 92% of the 2008-2013 fatal accident data. In addition, blunt 
force trauma also was the cause of death in 80% of the part 27 fatal 
rotorcraft accidents where a post-crash fire occurred. The Rotorcraft 
Directorate and CAMI built their study using the framework and 
methodology previously established by Taneja and Wiegmann's 2003 study. 
Further, they used the percentages of bony injuries and organ/visceral 
injuries documented in Taneja and Wiegmann's study as a baseline for 
comparison. The intent was to see if a statistically significant change 
occurred in blunt force trauma injury patterns in fatal rotorcraft 
accidents in the 10 years since the previous study. They concluded 
there was no statistically significant difference across most 
categories of bony injuries and across all categories of organ/visceral 
injuries. The Rotorcraft Directorate further discovered that only 10% 
of U.S. registered, type-certificated rotorcraft complied with 
increased occupant protection measures related to blunt force trauma 
mandated in the Sec. Sec.  27.562 and 29.562 rules, despite the rules 
being in effect for 25 years at the time of the study. The provisions 
of Sec. Sec.  27.562 and 29.562 were specifically designed for 
increased protection of the head and core body regions, the same 
regions documented with the highest levels of injury in the fatal 
accident studies conducted by Taneja and Wiegmann and the Rotorcraft 
Directorate/CAMI.
    Additional research found that about 9,000 occupants had been 
involved in U.S. helicopter accidents in the 25 years since Sec. Sec.  
27.562 and 29.562 became effective. Only 2% of helicopters in those 
accidents were compliant with Sec. Sec.  27.562 and 29.562. Over 1,300 
occupants were killed in accidents involving the 98% of helicopters 
that were not compliant with Sec. Sec.  27.562 and 29.562.

The Task

    The Rotorcraft Occupant Protection Working Group is tasked to:
    1. Perform a cost-benefit analysis for incorporating the existing 
occupant protection standards 14 CFR 27.561, 27.562, 27.785, 27.952, 
29.561, 29.562, 29.785, and 29.952 via Sec. Sec.  27.2 and 29.2 for 
newly manufactured rotorcraft that addresses the following:
    a. Estimate what the regulated parties would do differently as a 
result of the proposed regulation and how much it would cost.
    b. Estimate the improvement in survivability of future accidents.
    c. Estimate any other benefits (e.g., reduced administrative 
burden) or costs

[[Page 68601]]

that would result from implementation of the occupant protection 
standards identified above.
    2. Develop a cost-benefit analysis report containing the 
information explained in task 1 above.
    3. After the FAA accepts and considers the cost benefit analysis 
report, the FAA will task the Rotorcraft Occupant Protection Working 
Group either to make specific written recommendations on how all or 
part of the existing occupant protection standards 14 CFR 27.561, 
27.562, 27.785, 27.952, 29.561, 29.562, 29.785, and 29.952 should be 
made effective via Sec. Sec.  27.2 and 29.2 for newly manufactured 
rotorcraft, or to propose new alternative performance-based occupant 
protection safety regulations for newly manufactured rotorcraft that 
will be effective via Sec. Sec.  27.2 and 29.2.
    4. If new alternative performance-based occupant protection safety 
regulations effective via Sec. Sec.  27.2 and 29.2 are proposed, 
perform a cost-benefit analysis that addresses the following:
    a. Estimate what the regulated parties would do differently as a 
result of the proposed regulation and how much it would cost.
    b. Estimate the improvement in survivability of future accidents 
from the proposed recommendations.
    c. Estimate any other benefits (e.g., reduced administrative 
burden) or costs that would result from implementation of the 
recommendations.
    5. Develop an initial report containing recommendations on the 
findings and results of the tasks explained above.
    a. The initial recommendation report should document both majority 
and dissenting positions on the findings and the rationale for each 
position.
    b. Any disagreements should be documented, including the rationale 
for each position and the reasons for the disagreement.
    6. Complete the following after the FAA accepts the initial 
recommendation report identified in task 5:
    a. Specifically advise and make written recommendations on 
incorporating rotorcraft occupant protection improvements and standards 
into the existing rotorcraft fleet. Occupant protection standards 
include either all or part of 14 CFR 27.561, 27.562, 27.785, 27.952, 
29.561, 29.562, 29.785, and 29.952, or new alternative proposed 
performance-based regulations.
    b. Develop an addendum report containing recommendations on the 
findings and results of the tasks explained above.
    c. Document both majority and dissenting positions on the findings 
and the rationale for each position.
    d. Any disagreements should be documented, including the rationale 
for each position and the reasons for the disagreement.
    7. The working group may be reinstated to assist the ARAC in 
responding to the FAA's questions or concerns after the recommendation 
report has been submitted.

Schedule

    This tasking notice requires three reports.
     The task 2 cost-benefit analysis report must be submitted 
to the FAA for review and acceptance no later than 6 months after 
publication of this notice in the Federal Register.
     The task 5 initial recommendation report must be submitted 
to the FAA for review and acceptance no later than 12 months after 
initiation of task 3 above.
     The task 6 addendum recommendation report must be 
submitted to the FAA for review and acceptance no later than 6 months 
after the initial recommendation report is submitted.

Working Group Activity

    The Rotorcraft Occupant Protection Working Group must comply with 
the procedures adopted by the ARAC as follows:
    1. Conduct a review and analysis of the assigned tasks and any 
other related materials or documents.
    2. Draft and submit a work plan for completion of the task, 
including the rationale supporting such a plan, for consideration by 
the ARAC.
    3. Provide a status report at each ARAC meeting.
    4. Draft and submit the recommendation reports based on review and 
analysis of the assigned tasks.
    5. Present the cost-benefit analysis report in task 2 at the ARAC 
meeting.
    6. Present the initial recommendation report at the ARAC meeting.
    7. Present the findings from the addendum recommendation report at 
the ARAC meeting.

Participation in the Working Group

    The Rotorcraft Occupant Protection Working Group will be comprised 
of technical experts having an interest in the assigned task. A working 
group member need not be a member representative of the ARAC. The FAA 
would like a wide range of members (normal category rotorcraft 
manufacturers, transport category rotorcraft manufacturers, and 
rotorcraft operators from various segments of the industry such as oil 
and gas exploration, emergency medical services, and air tour 
operators) to ensure all aspects of the tasks are considered in 
development of the recommendations. The provisions of the August 13, 
2014, Office of Management and Budget guidance, ``Revised Guidance on 
Appointment of Lobbyists to Federal Advisory Committees, Boards, and 
Commissions'' (79 FR 47482), continues the ban on registered lobbyists 
participating on Agency Boards and Commissions if participating in 
their ``individual capacity.'' The revised guidance now allows 
registered lobbyists to participate on Agency Boards and Commissions in 
a ``representative capacity'' for the ``express purpose of providing a 
committee with the views of a nongovernmental entity, a recognizable 
group of persons or nongovernmental entities (an industry, sector, 
labor unions, or environmental groups, etc.) or state or local 
government.'' (For further information see Lobbying Disclosure Act of 
1995 as amended, 2 U.S.C 1603, 1604, and 1605.)
    If you wish to become a member of the Rotorcraft Occupant 
Protection Working Group, write the person listed under the caption FOR 
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT expressing that desire. Describe your 
interest in the task and state the expertise you would bring to the 
working group. The FAA must receive all requests by December 7, 2015. 
The ARAC and the FAA will review the requests and advise you whether or 
not your request is approved.
    If you are chosen for membership on the working group, you must 
actively participate in the working group, attend all meetings, and 
provide written comments when requested. You must devote the resources 
necessary to support the working group in meeting any assigned 
deadlines. You must keep your management and those you may represent 
advised of working group activities and decisions to ensure the 
proposed technical solutions do not conflict with the position of those 
you represent. Once the working group has begun deliberations, members 
will not be added or substituted without the approval of the ARAC 
Chair, the FAA, including the Designated Federal Officer, and the 
Working Group Chair.
    The Secretary of Transportation determined the formation and use of 
the ARAC is necessary and in the public interest in connection with the 
performance of duties imposed on the FAA by law.
    The ARAC meetings are open to the public. However, meetings of the

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Rotorcraft Occupant Protection Working Group are not open to the 
public, except to the extent individuals with an interest and expertise 
are selected to participate. The FAA will make no public announcement 
of working group meetings.

    Issued in Washington, DC, on October 30, 2015.
Lirio Liu,
Designated Federal Officer, Aviation Rulemaking Advisory Committee.
[FR Doc. 2015-28151 Filed 11-4-15; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4910-13-P


