§ 44701. General requirements
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/usc/title-49/section-44701A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
(a)Promoting Safety.— The Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration shall promote safe flight of civil aircraft in air commerce by prescribing—
(1)minimum standards required in the interest of safety for appliances and for the design, material, construction, quality of work, cybersecurity, and performance of aircraft, aircraft engines, and propellers;
(2)regulations and minimum standards in the interest of safety for—
(A)inspecting, servicing, and overhauling aircraft, aircraft engines, propellers, and appliances;
(B)equipment and facilities for, and the timing and manner of, the inspecting, servicing, and overhauling; and
(C)a qualified private person, instead of an officer or employee of the Administration, to examine and report on the inspecting, servicing, and overhauling;
(3)regulations required in the interest of safety for the reserve supply of aircraft, aircraft engines, propellers, appliances, and aircraft fuel and oil, including the reserve supply of fuel and oil carried in flight;
(4)regulations in the interest of safety for the maximum hours or periods of service of airmen and other employees of air carriers; and
(5)regulations and minimum standards for cybersecurity and other practices, methods, and procedures the Administrator finds necessary for safety in air commerce and national security.
(b)Prescribing Minimum Safety Standards.— The Administrator may prescribe minimum safety standards for—
(1)an air carrier to whom a certificate is issued under section 44705 of this title; and
(2)operating an airport serving any passenger operation of air carrier aircraft designed for at least 31 passenger seats.
(c)Reducing and Eliminating Accidents.— The Administrator shall carry out this chapter in a way that best tends to reduce or eliminate the possibility or recurrence of accidents in air transportation. However, the Administrator is not required to give preference either to air transportation or to other air commerce in carrying out this chapter.
(d)Considerations and Classification of Regulations and Standards.— When prescribing a regulation or standard under subsection
(a)or
(b)of this section or any of sections 44702–44716 of this title, the Administrator shall—
(1)consider—
(A)the duty of an air carrier to provide service with the highest possible degree of safety in the public interest; and
(B)differences between air transportation and other air commerce; and
(2)classify a regulation or standard appropriate to the differences between air transportation and other air commerce.
(e)Bilateral Exchanges of Safety Oversight Responsibilities.—
(1)In general.— Notwithstanding the provisions of this chapter, the Administrator, pursuant to Article 83 bis of the Convention on International Civil Aviation and by a bilateral agreement with the aeronautical authorities of another country, may exchange with that country all or part of their respective functions and duties with respect to registered aircraft under the following articles of the Convention: Article 12 (Rules of the Air); Article 31 (Certificates of Airworthiness); or Article 32a (Licenses of Personnel).
(2)Relinquishment and acceptance of responsibility.— The Administrator relinquishes responsibility with respect to the functions and duties transferred by the Administrator as specified in the bilateral agreement, under the Articles listed in paragraph
(1)for United States-registered aircraft described in paragraph (4)(A) transferred abroad and accepts responsibility with respect to the functions and duties under those Articles for aircraft registered abroad and described in paragraph (4)(B) that are transferred to the United States.
(3)Conditions.— The Administrator may predicate, in the agreement, the transfer of functions and duties under this subsection on any conditions the Administrator deems necessary and prudent, except that the Administrator may not transfer responsibilities for United States registered aircraft described in paragraph (4)(A) to a country that the Administrator determines is not in compliance with its obligations under international law for the safety oversight of civil aviation.
(4)Registered aircraft defined.— In this subsection, the term “registered aircraft” means—
(A)aircraft registered in the United States and operated pursuant to an agreement for the lease, charter, or interchange of the aircraft or any similar arrangement by an operator that has its principal place of business or, if it has no such place of business, its permanent residence in another country; and
(B)aircraft registered in a foreign country and operated under an agreement for the lease, charter, or interchange of the aircraft or any similar arrangement by an operator that has its principal place of business or, if it has no such place of business, its permanent residence in the United States.
(5)Foreign airworthiness directives.—
(A)Acceptance.— Subject to subparagraph (D), the Administrator may accept an airworthiness directive, as defined in section 39.3 of title 14, Code of Federal Regulations, issued by an aeronautical safety authority of a foreign country, and leverage that authority’s regulatory process, if—
(i)the country is the state of design for the product that is the subject of the airworthiness directive;
(ii)the United States has a bilateral safety agreement relating to aircraft certification with the country;
(iii)as part of the bilateral safety agreement with the country, the Administrator has determined that such aeronautical safety authority has an aircraft certification system relating to safety that produces a level of safety equivalent to the level produced by the system of the Federal Aviation Administration;
(iv)the aeronautical safety authority of the country utilizes an open and transparent notice and comment process in the issuance of airworthiness directives; and
(v)the airworthiness directive is necessary to provide for the safe operation of the aircraft subject to the directive.
(B)Alternative approval process.— Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), the Administrator may issue a Federal Aviation Administration airworthiness directive instead of accepting an airworthiness directive otherwise eligible for acceptance under such subparagraph, if the Administrator determines that such issuance is necessary for safety or operational reasons due to the complexity or unique features of the Federal Aviation Administration airworthiness directive or the United States aviation system.
(C)Alternative means of compliance.— The Administrator may—
(i)accept an alternative means of compliance, with respect to an airworthiness directive accepted under subparagraph (A), that was approved by the aeronautical safety authority of the foreign country that issued the airworthiness directive; or
(ii)notwithstanding subparagraph (A), and at the request of any person affected by an airworthiness directive accepted under such subparagraph, approve an alternative means of compliance with respect to the airworthiness directive.
(D)Limitation.— The Administrator may not accept an airworthiness directive issued by an aeronautical safety authority of a foreign country if the airworthiness directive addresses matters other than those involving the safe operation of an aircraft.
(f)Exemptions.— The Administrator may grant an exemption from a requirement of a regulation prescribed under subsection
(a)or
(b)of this section or any of sections 44702–44716 of this title if the Administrator finds the exemption is in the public interest.
(g)Exclusive Rulemaking Authority.— Notwithstanding any other provision of law and except as provided in section 40131, the Administrator, in consultation with the heads of such other agencies as the Administrator determines necessary, shall have exclusive authority to prescribe regulations for purposes of assuring the cybersecurity of civil aircraft, aircraft engines, propellers, and appliances.
(h)Policies, Orders, and Guidance.—
(1)Consistency of application.— The Administrator shall ensure consistency in the application of policies, orders, and guidance of the Administration by—
(A)audits of the application and interpretation of such material by Administration personnel from person to person and office to office;
(B)updating policies, orders, and guidance to resolve inconsistencies and clarify demonstrated ambiguities, such as through repeated inconsistent interpretation; and
(C)ensuring officials are properly documenting findings and decisions throughout a project to decrease the occurrence of duplicative work and inconsistent findings by subsequent officials assigned to the same project.
(2)Alterations.— The Administrator shall consult as appropriate with regulated entities who will be impacted by proposed changes to the content or application of policies, orders, and guidance before making such changes.
(3)Authorities and regulations.— The Administrator shall issue policies, orders, and guidance documents that are related to a law or regulation or clarify the intent of or compliance with specific laws and regulations.
(Pub. L. 103–272, § 1(e), July 5, 1994, 108 Stat. 1185; Pub. L. 103–429, § 6(55), Oct. 31, 1994, 108 Stat. 4385; Pub. L. 106–181, title VII, § 714, Apr. 5, 2000, 114 Stat. 161; Pub. L. 115–254, div. B, title II, § 242, Oct. 5, 2018, 132 Stat. 3258; Pub. L. 118–63, title III, § 392, title VIII, § 822, May 16, 2024, 138 Stat. 1143, 1331.)
In this section, the word “Administrator” in sections 601(a)–(c) and 604 of the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 (Public Law 85–726, 72 Stat. 775, 778) is retained on authority of 49:106(g).
In subsection (a), before clause (1), the words “is empowered and it . . . be his duty to” and “and revising from time to time” are omitted as surplus. In clause (1), the words “as may be” are omitted as surplus. In clauses (2)–(5), the words “Reasonable” and “reasonable” are omitted as surplus and the word “rules” is omitted as being synonymous with “regulations”. In clause (5), the words “to provide adequately” are omitted as surplus.
In subsection (b)(1), the words “the operation of” are omitted as surplus. The words “under section 44705 of this title” are added for clarity.
In subsection (b)(2), the words “scheduled or unscheduled” are omitted as surplus.
In subsection (c), the words “carry out” are substituted for “exercise and perform his powers and duties under”, and the words “in carrying out” are substituted for “in the administration and enforcement of”, for consistency and to eliminate unnecessary words.
In subsection (d), before clause (1), the word “rules” is omitted as being synonymous with “regulations”. In clause (1), before subclause (A), the word “full” is omitted as surplus. In clause (1)(A), the word “provide” is substituted for “perform” for consistency in the revised title.
In subsection (e), the words “from time to time” are omitted as surplus. The word “rule” is omitted as being synonymous with “regulation”.
Pub. L. 103–429
This amends 49:44701(d) and
(e)to correct erroneous cross-references.
Connections1,062 cite this · traces to 26
Cited by 1,062 sections · top 60
public-private-law
U.S. Code
- § 40101Policy
- § 44701General requirements
- § 44703Airman certificates
- § 44704Type certificates, production certificates, airworthiness certificates, and design and production organization certificates
- § 40104Promotion of civil aeronautics and safety of air commerce
- § 44736Organization designation authorizations
- § 44735Limitation on disclosure of safety information
- § 44741Approval of organization designation authorization unit members
register
- Proposed RulesFinal rule
- Presidential DocumentsIntroduction to the Regulatory Plan and the Unified Agenda of Federal Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions
- Rules and RegulationsFinal rule
- UnknownFinal rule
- Rules and RegulationsFinal rule
- UnknownDirect final rule; request for comments
- Proposed RulesFinal rule
- NoticesFinal rule
- Proposed RulesAdvance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM)
- Proposed RulesNotice and request for comments
- Rules and RegulationsNotice of policy; request for comments
- NoticesFinal rule
- Rules and RegulationsInterim final rule
- NoticesAdvance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM)
- Proposed RulesNotice of proposed airworthiness criteria
- NoticesNotice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)
- UnknownFinal rule
- NoticesNotice and request for comments
- NoticesFinal rule
- Proposed RulesNotice of proposed airworthiness criteria
- NoticesNotice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)
- Rules and RegulationsNotice and request for comments
- NoticesFinal rule
- Rules and RegulationsNotification of Emergency Order of Prohibition
- UnknownFinal rule
- Presidential DocumentsFinal rule
- Rules and RegulationsNotice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) SUMMARY: This action proposes performance-based regulations to enable the design and operation of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) at low altitudes beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) and for third-party services, including UAS Traffic Management (UTM), that support these operations
- Proposed RulesNotice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)
- NoticesFinal rule
- NoticesFinal rule
- Proposed RulesNotice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)
- NoticesFinal rule
- NoticesNotice of a modified system of records
- Proposed RulesNotice of public meeting
- NoticesFinal rule
- NoticesFinal rule
- Rules and RegulationsFinal rule
- NoticesFinal rule
- NoticesFinal rule
statute-compilations
- Sec. 36625-HOUR COCKPIT VOICE RECORDER
- Sec. 212ORGANIZATION DESIGNATION AUTHORIZATIONS
- Sec. 809ENSURING SAFE LANDINGS DURING OFF-AIRPORT OPERATIONS
- Sec. 5604LETTER OF DEVIATION AUTHORITY
- Sec. 372ENHANCED QUALIFICATION PROGRAM FOR RESTRICTED AIRLINE TRANSPORT PILOT CERTIFICATE
- Sec. 823EXPANSION OF THE REGULATORY CONSISTENCY COMMUNICATIONS BOARD
- Sec. 243FAA LEADERSHIP ABROAD
statutes-at-large
- Public Law 114–190To amend title 49, United States Code, to extend authorizations for the airport improvement program, to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to extend the funding and expenditure authority of the Airport and Airway Trust Fund, and for other purposes
- Public Law 108–176To amend title 49, United States Code, to reauthorize programs for the Federal Aviation Administration, and for other purposes
Traces to 26 documents
U.S. Code
- Air carrier operating certificates§ 44705
- Federal Aviation Administration§ 106
- Definitions§ 321
- Limitation on disclosure of safety information§ 44735
- Type certificates, production certificates, airworthiness certificates, and design and production organization certificates§ 44704
- Penalties§ 1155
- Destruction of aircraft or aircraft facilities§ 32
- Disclosure, availability, and use of information§ 1114
- General requirements§ 44701
- Exclusive recognition of labor organizations§ 7111
- Definitions§ 40102
- Congressional declaration of purpose§ 4321
- Policy§ 40101
- Federal Aviation Administration personnel management system§ 40122
- Organization designation authorizations§ 44736
- Findings§ 1601
- Definitions§ 1001
- Protection of voluntarily submitted information§ 40123
- General, temporary, and charter air transportation certificates of air carriers§ 41102
public-private-law
- FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018Public Law 115-254
- FAA Reauthorization Act of 2024Public Law 118-63
- James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023Public Law 117-263
- Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021Public Law 116-260
- FAA Extension, Safety, and Security Act of 2016Public Law 114-190
- NOTAM Improvement Act of 2023Public Law 118-4
- To make revisions in title 5, United States Code, as necessary to keep the title current, and to make technical amendments to improve the United States Code.DecPublic Law 117-286
88 references not yet in our index
- Pub. L. 103–272, § 1(e)
- 108 Stat. 1185
- Pub. L. 103–429, § 6(55)
- 108 Stat. 4385
- Pub. L. 106–181, title VII, § 714
- 114 Stat. 161
- 132 Stat. 3258
- 138 Stat. 1143
- Public Law 85–726
- 72 Stat. 775
- Pub. L. 106–181
- Pub. L. 103–429
- section 3 of Pub. L. 106–181
- section 9 of Pub. L. 103–429
- 138 Stat. 1072
- 138 Stat. 1085
- 138 Stat. 1086
- 138 Stat. 1093
- 138 Stat. 1107
- 138 Stat. 1111
- 138 Stat. 1112
- 138 Stat. 1132
- 138 Stat. 1135
- 138 Stat. 1172
- 138 Stat. 1173
- 138 Stat. 1199
- 138 Stat. 1229
- 138 Stat. 1325
- 138 Stat. 1327
- 138 Stat. 1330
- 138 Stat. 1340
- 138 Stat. 1389
- 136 Stat. 3406
- 138 Stat. 1073
- 134 Stat. 2309
- 61 Stat. 1180
- 134 Stat. 2316
- 134 Stat. 2332
- 132 Stat. 3242
- 134 Stat. 2349
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§ 44701
General requirements
Fed. Reg.×641
Bills×178
Pub. L.×77
Stat. Comp.×76
Stat.×71
U.S.C.×18
C.F.R.×1
Pub. L.Pub. L. 103–272, § 1(e)
Stat.108 Stat. 1185
Pub. L.Pub. L. 103–429, § 6(55)
Cites 114 · showing 12Cited by 1,062 across 7 sources