FAA learns to get off the property
Meeting and greeting pilots and drug dealers isn’t always an advantage.
MSN
Federal Aviation Administration withdraws from Alaska groups that work on safety
According to AACA Executive Director Will Day, he was told as an explanation that the FAA would no longer be participating “in any industry engagements.” When asked to comment on the series of withdrawals, an FAA spokesperson replied, without getting into specifics, that “FAA employees will continue to attend meetings and engage with stakeholders on safety-related matters.” O’Hare remains out of the convention however and a recent scheduled meeting of a group hosted by the agency — the FAA Alaska Industry Council — was cancelled.
That’s right. You don’t need to eat lunch with people you might have to put in prison or potentially even shoot down from the air. There’s an Air Force with a heavy vice district in the local area playing deaf and dumb to civilian aviation, and drug dealing of red pills and blue pills.
Off duty and they have their civvies on with the drones.
‘It’s not a war zone’: Pentagon ponders policy shifts to protect homeland bases from drones - Breaking Defense
“One of the key things about Falcon Peak is it offers not just the opportunity to look at the technology that’s being tested, but also at our processes,” a senior DoD official told reporters.
