https://www.federalregister.gov/arti...alregister.gov
Flightcrew Member Duty and Rest Requirements
A Rule by the
Federal Aviation Administration on
12/09/2014
Publication Date:
Tuesday, December 09, 2014Agencies:
Department of TransportationFederal Aviation AdministrationDates:Effective December 9, 2014.Effective Date:12/09/2014Entry Type:RuleAction: Notification of availability.Document Citation:79 FR 72970Page: 72970 -72975 (6 pages) CFR:
14 CFR 11714 CFR 121Agency/Docket Number

ocket No. FAA-2009-1093RIN:
2120-AJ58Document Number:2014-28868Shorter URL:
https://federalregister.gov/a/2014-28868
Regulations.gov Docket Info
Docket Number
FAA-2009-1093Docket NameFlight Crewmember Duty and Rest RequirementsDocket RIN
2120-AJ58Public Comments
2425 commentsSupporting/Related Materials
GRA, Incorporated - Summary of Crew Pairings AnalysisU.S. DOT/FAA - Wyatt et al AmJPhys 1999U.S. DOT/FAA - Wegmann-Klein 1985U.S. DOT/FAA - Rosekind et al Mnging Fatigue ops2U.S. DOT/FAA - Rosekind et al Mnging fatigue ops1U.S. DOT/FAA - Rosekind 2005U.S. DOT/FAA - NASA Study on Pilot CommutingU.S. DOT/FAA - NASA StudyU.S. DOT/FAA - NASA Rosekind et al 2001U.S. DOT/FAA - NASA Priciples Guidelines 1996See all 67 supporting documents
Action
Notification Of Availability.
Summary
The FAA is issuing a Final Supplemental Regulatory Impact Analysis (Final SRIA) of its final rule that amended its existing flight, duty and rest regulations applicable to certain certificate holders and their flightcrew members. A copy of the Final SRIA may be found in the docket for the rulemaking. The Final SRIA responds to comments that were made in response to the Initial Supplemental Regulatory Impact Analysis, and, where appropriate, incorporates new information provided by the commenters. In addition, the Final SRIA makes adjustments to the methodology used to estimate the costs and benefits of applying the final flight, duty, and rest rule to cargo-only operations, and includes additional sensitivity analyses. The results of the Final SRIA concludes that the base-case benefits of applying the flight, duty, and rest rule to cargo-only operations would be about $3 million, and the high-case benefits of doing so would be about $10 million. Conversely, the costs of applying the flight, duty, and rest rule to cargo-only operations would be about $452 million. Because the results of the analysis continue to indicate that the costs of mandating all-cargo operation compliance with the new flight, duty, and rest rule significantly outweigh the benefits, the FAA has determined that no revisions to the final rule are warranted.