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GARA is a [[statute of repose]] generally shielding most manufacturers of aircraft (carrying fewer than 20 passengers), and aircraft parts, from liability for most accidents (including injury or fatality accidents) involving their products that are 18 years old or older (at the time of the accident), even if manufacturer negligence was a cause.
GARA is a [[statute of repose]] generally shielding most manufacturers of aircraft (carrying fewer than 20 passengers), and aircraft parts, from liability for most accidents (including injury or fatality accidents) involving their products that are 18 years old or older (at the time of the accident), even if manufacturer negligence was a cause.


While GARA is considered a landmark event in the modern history of America's general aviation industry, debate continues over the effects and ethics of GARA.<ref name="clinton_statement_1994_08_17">[[Bill Clinton|Clinton, William J., President of the United States]], "[http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=48984 Statement on Signing the General Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994, August 17, 1994]," online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The Presidency Project online archives, Univ. of California at Santa Barbara.</ref><ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far">Kovarik, Kerry V., "[http://digitalcommons.law.seattleu.edu/sulr/vol31/iss4/15 A Good Idea Stretched Too Far: Amending the General Aviation Revitalization Act to Mitigate Unintended Inequities]," ''Seattle University Law Review'', Vol. 31, No. 4 (2008), Jan.2008, p.973, Seattle Univ. School of Law, Seattle, WA, USA [http://digitalcommons.law.seattleu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1843&context=sulr PDF download].</ref><ref name="angelley_summary">Angelley, William (attorney with aviation accident liability law firm Hightower/Angelley, LLP.), [http://www.hightangel.com/aviation-accident-information/2011/10/general-aviation-revitalization-act-of-1994/ General Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994], on October 25, 2011</ref><ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1">"[http://www.citizen.org/congress/article_redirect.cfm?ID=562 The General Aviation Act: When it Comes to Product Liability, Don't Believe What They Claim]," [[Public Citizen]] (non-profit public -interest advocacy group) website.</ref><ref name="aubert_trends_abc2004">Aubert, Garth W. and Michael A. Hession, "[http://www.aircraftbuilders.com/UserFiles/File/lr2004c.pdf Trends and Developments: The General Aviation Revitalization Act]," ''[http://www.aircraftbuilders.com/lawreport2004.html 2004 Law Report],'' Aircraft Builders Council. (a legalistic dissertation on the evolving use and interpretation of the statute).</ref><ref name="truitt_tarry_rise_fall_of_gen_av">Truitt, Lawrence J. and Scott E. Tarry, "[http://www.freepatentsonline.com/article/Transportation-Journal/17572867.html The rise and fall of general aviation: product liability, market structure, and technological innovation]," in ''Transportation Journal'', June 22, 1995, American Society of Transportation and Logistics, Inc., as reproduced on the website ''FreePatentsOnline.com''</ref><ref name="legend_of_cessna">Rodengen, Jeffrey L., ed. by Elizabeth Fernandez & Alex Lieber, book: ''The Legend of Cessna'', (a detailed, documented history of Cessna Aircraft Company, supported by them), Write Stuff Enterprises, 2007, Ft.Lauderdale, Florida. Ch.15-16.</ref><ref name="brady_gara_update_sum2006">Brady, Orla M., Esq. "[https://litigation-essentials.lexisnexis.com/webcd/app?action=DocumentDisplay&crawlid=1&doctype=cite&docid=71+J.+Air+L.+%26+Com.+411&srctype=smi&srcid=3B15&key=8f13fb42cb9528e31ab4ba618904e721 The General Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994 - An Update],"* (excerpt), ''Journal of Air Law and Commerce'', (71 J. Air L. & Com. 411), Summer, 2006, Southern Methodist University School of Law, Dallas, Texas, as posted on LexisNexis.com; also listed for sale at [http://smu.edu/lra/Journals/SMULR/viewArchivedJournal.asp?ID=23 SMU Law Review Archives].</ref><ref name="bolen_to_ncarc_2004">"[http://www.library.unt.edu/gpo/NCARC/testimony/gama-te.htm Testimony of Edward M. Bolen, President, General Aviation Manufacturers Association]" before the National Civil Aviation Review Commission, (USA) , May 28, 1997.</ref>
While GARA is considered a landmark event in the modern history of America's general aviation industry, debate continues over the effects and ethics of GARA.<ref name="clinton_statement_1994_08_17">[[Bill Clinton|Clinton, William J., President of the United States]], "[http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=48984 Statement on Signing the General Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994, August 17, 1994]," online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The Presidency Project online archives, Univ. of California at Santa Barbara.</ref><ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far">Kovarik, Kerry V., "[http://digitalcommons.law.seattleu.edu/sulr/vol31/iss4/15 A Good Idea Stretched Too Far: Amending the General Aviation Revitalization Act to Mitigate Unintended Inequities]," ''Seattle University Law Review'', Vol. 31, No. 4 (2008), Jan.2008, p.973, Seattle Univ. School of Law, Seattle, WA, USA [http://digitalcommons.law.seattleu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1843&context=sulr PDF download].</ref><ref name="angelley_summary">Angelley, William (attorney with aviation accident liability law firm Hightower/Angelley, LLP.), [http://www.hightangel.com/aviation-accident-information/2011/10/general-aviation-revitalization-act-of-1994/ General Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994], on October 25, 2011</ref><ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1">"[http://www.citizen.org/congress/article_redirect.cfm?ID=562 The General Aviation Act: When it Comes to Product Liability, Don't Believe What They Claim]," [[Public Citizen]] (non-profit public -interest advocacy group) website.</ref><ref name="aubert_trends_abc2004">Aubert, Garth W. and Michael A. Hession, "[http://www.aircraftbuilders.com/UserFiles/File/lr2004c.pdf Trends and Developments: The General Aviation Revitalization Act]," ''[http://www.aircraftbuilders.com/lawreport2004.html 2004 Law Report],'' Aircraft Builders Council. (a legalistic dissertation on the evolving use and interpretation of the statute).</ref><ref name="truitt_tarry_rise_fall_of_gen_av">Truitt, Lawrence J. and Scott E. Tarry, "[http://www.freepatentsonline.com/article/Transportation-Journal/17572867.html The rise and fall of general aviation: product liability, market structure, and technological innovation]," in ''Transportation Journal'', June 22, 1995, American Society of Transportation and Logistics, Inc., as reproduced on the website ''FreePatentsOnline.com''</ref><ref name="legend_of_cessna">Rodengen, Jeffrey L., ed. by Elizabeth Fernandez & Alex Lieber, book: ''The Legend of Cessna'', (a detailed, documented history of Cessna Aircraft Company, supported by them), Write Stuff Enterprises, 2007, Ft.Lauderdale, Florida. Ch.15-16.</ref><ref name="brady_gara_update_sum2006">Brady, Orla M., Esq. "[https://litigation-essentials.lexisnexis.com/webcd/app?action=DocumentDisplay&crawlid=1&doctype=cite&docid=71+J.+Air+L.+%26+Com.+411&srctype=smi&srcid=3B15&key=8f13fb42cb9528e31ab4ba618904e721 The General Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994 - An Update],"* (excerpt), ''Journal of Air Law and Commerce'', (71 J. Air L. & Com. 411), Summer, 2006, Southern Methodist University School of Law, Dallas, Texas, as posted on LexisNexis.com; also listed for sale at [http://smu.edu/lra/Journals/SMULR/viewArchivedJournal.asp?ID=23 SMU Law Review Archives].</ref><ref name="bolen_to_ncarc_2004">"[http://www.library.unt.edu/gpo/NCARC/testimony/gama-te.htm Testimony of Edward M. Bolen, President, General Aviation Manufacturers Association]" before the National Civil Aviation Review Commission, (USA) , May 28, 1997.</ref><ref name="gara_per_gama">General Aviation Manufacturers' Assn. (the industry's primary lobbying organization), [http://www.gama.aero/advocacy/issues/product-liability/general-aviation-revitalization-act General Aviation Revitalization Act]
as downloaded 2014-02-17, Washington, D.C.</ref>



==History==
==History==
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=== General aviation industry decline in the 1980s and 1990s ===
=== General aviation industry decline in the 1980s and 1990s ===


[[General aviation]] aircraft manufacturers, in the 1980s and 1990s began to terminate or reduce production of their piston-powered, propeller aircraft, or struggled with solvency.<ref name="forbes_2012_08_29_heart">Franson, Dave, "[http://www.forbes.com/sites/businessaviation/2012/08/29/did-economics-and-politics-cut-the-heart-out-of-personal-aviation/ Did Economics And Politics Cut The Heart Out Of Personal Aviation?]," ''Forbes'' magazine blog, August 29, 2012</ref><ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09">[[John McCain|McCain, John]], U.S. Senator (R-Arizona), "[http://www.mccain.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=PressOffice.Speeches&ContentRecord_id=C553EEEA-CED4-4492-AA9C-7AB38346475F General Aviation Revitalization Legislation]", speech before the U.S. Senate, November 9, 1993, Washington, D.C.</ref><ref name="bls_1993_06_acft_mfg_productivity">Kronemer, Alexander and J. Edwin Henneberger "[http://www.bls.gov/mfp/mprkh93.pdf Productivity in aircraft manufacturing]," ''Monthly Labor Review,'' June, 1993, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Dept. of Commerce.</ref>
[[General aviation]] aircraft manufacturers, in the 1980s and 1990s began to terminate or reduce production of their piston-powered, propeller aircraft, or struggled with solvency.<ref name="forbes_2012_08_29_heart">Franson, Dave, "[http://www.forbes.com/sites/businessaviation/2012/08/29/did-economics-and-politics-cut-the-heart-out-of-personal-aviation/ Did Economics And Politics Cut The Heart Out Of Personal Aviation?]," ''Forbes'' magazine blog, August 29, 2012</ref><ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09">[[John McCain|McCain, John]], U.S. Senator (R-Arizona), "[http://www.mccain.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=PressOffice.Speeches&ContentRecord_id=C553EEEA-CED4-4492-AA9C-7AB38346475F General Aviation Revitalization Legislation]", speech before the U.S. Senate, November 9, 1993, Washington, D.C.</ref><ref name="bls_1993_06_acft_mfg_productivity">Kronemer, Alexander and J. Edwin Henneberger "[http://www.bls.gov/mfp/mprkh93.pdf Productivity in aircraft manufacturing]," ''Monthly Labor Review,'' June, 1993, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Dept. of Commerce.</ref><ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01">Kister, Thomas H., "[http://www.questia.com/library/journal/1G1-20448657/general-aviation-revitalization-act-its-effect-on General Aviation Revitalization Act: Its Effect on Manufacturers]," ''Defense Counsel Journal'', January 1998, Vol. 65, No. 1</ref>


General aviation aircraft production in the U.S. dropped from approximately 18,000 units in 1978<ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /><ref name="bls_1993_06_acft_mfg_productivity" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /> to 4,000 units in 1986.<ref name="legend_of_cessna" /> to 928 units in 1994.<ref name="clinton_statement_1994_08_17" /><ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" />
General aviation aircraft production in the U.S. dropped from approximately 18,000 units in 1978<ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /><ref name="bls_1993_06_acft_mfg_productivity" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /> to 4,000 units in 1986.<ref name="legend_of_cessna" /> to 928 units in 1994.<ref name="clinton_statement_1994_08_17" /><ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" />
(In a1993 speech, Sen. John McCain said "nearly 500 last year [1992]")<ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" />
(In a1993 speech, Sen. John McCain said "nearly 500 last year [1992]")<ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /><ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01"></ref>


At the time, industry analysts estimated that the U.S. decline in general aviation aircraft manufacturing eliminated somewhere between 28,000 and 100,000 jobs, sharply different from other segments of the global aerospace industry, where U.S. market share was still strong.<ref name="bls_1993_06_acft_mfg_productivity" /><ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" />
At the time, industry analysts estimated that the U.S. decline in general aviation aircraft manufacturing eliminated somewhere between 28,000 and 100,000 jobs -- as unit production dropped by 95% between the 1970s peak and the early 1990s -- sharply different from other segments of the global aerospace industry, where U.S. market share was still strong.
<ref name="bls_1993_06_acft_mfg_productivity" /><ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /><ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01" /><ref name="gara_per_gama" />


Those manufacturers' reported rapidly rising [[product liability]] costs, driving aircraft prices beyond the market, and they said their production cuts were in response to that growing liability.<ref name="mcnatt_symposium_gara">McNatt, Christopher C., Jr. and Steven L. England, "[https://litigation-essentials.lexisnexis.com/webcd/app?action=DocumentDisplay&crawlid=1&doctype=cite&docid=23+Transp.+L.+J.+323&srctype=smi&srcid=3B15&key=092652e42dfaf98bd53fab7ba40c4f55 SYMPOSIUM ON THE GENERAL AVIATION REVITALIZATION ACT: The Push for Statutes of Repose in General Aviation]," ''Transportation Law Journal,'' 23 Transp. L. J. 323, University of Denver, 1995, as posted on LexisNexis.com</ref><ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" /><ref name="aopa_83_07">''AOPA Pilot'' staff, "Cessna Suspends Production of All Piston Models," ''AOPA Pilot'' magazine, July 1986, pp.24-25, [[Aircraft Owners & Pilots Association]], Washington, D.C.</ref>
Those manufacturers reported rapidly rising [[product liability]] costs, driving aircraft prices beyond the market, and they said their production cuts were in response to that growing liability.<ref name="mcnatt_symposium_gara">McNatt, Christopher C., Jr. and Steven L. England, "[https://litigation-essentials.lexisnexis.com/webcd/app?action=DocumentDisplay&crawlid=1&doctype=cite&docid=23+Transp.+L.+J.+323&srctype=smi&srcid=3B15&key=092652e42dfaf98bd53fab7ba40c4f55 SYMPOSIUM ON THE GENERAL AVIATION REVITALIZATION ACT: The Push for Statutes of Repose in General Aviation]," ''Transportation Law Journal,'' 23 Transp. L. J. 323, University of Denver, 1995, as posted on LexisNexis.com</ref><ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" /><ref name="aopa_83_07">''AOPA Pilot'' staff, "Cessna Suspends Production of All Piston Models," ''AOPA Pilot'' magazine, July 1986, pp.24-25, [[Aircraft Owners & Pilots Association]], Washington, D.C.</ref><ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01"></ref>


Average cost of manufacturer's liability insurance for each airplane manufactured in the U.S. had risen from approximately $50 per plane in 1962 to $100,000 per plane in 1988, according to a report cited by the Bureau of Labor Statistics,<ref name="bls_1993_06_acft_mfg_productivity" /> a 2,000-fold increase in 24 years.
Average cost of manufacturer's liability insurance for each airplane manufactured in the U.S. had risen from approximately $50 per plane in 1962 to $100,000 per plane in 1988, according to a report cited by the Bureau of Labor Statistics,<ref name="bls_1993_06_acft_mfg_productivity" /> a 2,000-fold increase in 24 years.


Rising claims against the industry triggered a rapid increase in manufacturers' liability insurance premiums during the 1980s. Industry-wide, in just 7 years, the manufacturers' liability premiums inceased nearly nine-fold, from approximately $24 million in 1978 to $210 million in 1985.
Rising claims against the industry triggered a rapid increase in manufacturers' liability insurance premiums during the 1980s. Industry-wide, in just 7 years, the manufacturers' liability premiums inceased nearly nine-fold, from approximately $24 million in 1978 to $210 million in 1985.<ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01"></ref>


Insurance underwriters, worldwide, began to refuse to sell product liability insurance to U.S. general aviation manufacturers. By 1987, the three largest GA manufacturers claimed their annual costs for product liability ranged from $70,000 to $100,000 per airplane built and shipped that year.<ref name="truitt_tarry_rise_fall_of_gen_av" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" />
Insurance underwriters, worldwide, began to refuse to sell product liability insurance to U.S. general aviation manufacturers. By 1987, the three largest GA manufacturers claimed their annual costs for product liability ranged from $70,000 to $100,000 per airplane built and shipped that year.<ref name="truitt_tarry_rise_fall_of_gen_av" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" />
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Industry representatives and analysts variously blamed one or more of three general factors for rising product liability costs:
Industry representatives and analysts variously blamed one or more of three general factors for rising product liability costs:


# Long-lived products - General aviation aircraft manufacturers chiefly specialized in small and light aircraft which often remained in operation for several decades after their manufacture, much longer than automobiles or even most [[commercial aviation]] airliners.<ref name="metzenbaum_senate_1994_03_16" /><ref name="bls_1993_06_acft_mfg_productivity" />
# '''Long-lived products''' - General aviation aircraft manufacturers chiefly specialized in small and light aircraft which often remained in operation for several decades after their manufacture, much longer than automobiles or even most [[commercial aviation]] airliners.<ref name="metzenbaum_senate_1994_03_16" /><ref name="bls_1993_06_acft_mfg_productivity" /><ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01"></ref>
# Higher fatality rate - (per passenger, per mile traveled) for general aviation aircraft than most other forms of transportation.<ref name="harris_safe_airplane_not">Harris, Richard, "[http://harris1.net/eddy/Safe_Airplane_NOT.htm Safe Airplane -- NOT!]," from ''In Flight USA,'' July 2007, as reproduced on the ''Aviation Answer-Man'' website</ref><ref name="erau_asias1">"[http://daytonabeach.erau.edu/coa/doctoral-studies/research/aviation-safety-information-analysis-and-sharing-for-general-aviation.html Aviation Safety Information Analysis and Sharing for General Aviation]," downloaded from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University website, May 27, 2013, which notes: "In 2009, general aviation (GA) was responsible for approximately 95% of civil aviation accidents and 89% of fatalities."</ref><ref name="ntsb_ga_safety_2011_wish_list">"[http://www.ntsb.gov/safety/mwl-2.html General Aviation Safety]" from the 2011 "Wish List", National Transportation Safety Board, 2011, as viewed May 27, 2013</ref>
# '''Higher fatality rate''' - (per passenger, per mile traveled) for general aviation aircraft than most other forms of transportation.<ref name="harris_safe_airplane_not">Harris, Richard, "[http://harris1.net/eddy/Safe_Airplane_NOT.htm Safe Airplane -- NOT!]," from ''In Flight USA,'' July 2007, as reproduced on the ''Aviation Answer-Man'' website</ref><ref name="erau_asias1">"[http://daytonabeach.erau.edu/coa/doctoral-studies/research/aviation-safety-information-analysis-and-sharing-for-general-aviation.html Aviation Safety Information Analysis and Sharing for General Aviation]," downloaded from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University website, May 27, 2013, which notes: "In 2009, general aviation (GA) was responsible for approximately 95% of civil aviation accidents and 89% of fatalities."</ref><ref name="ntsb_ga_safety_2011_wish_list">"[http://www.ntsb.gov/safety/mwl-2.html General Aviation Safety]" from the 2011 "Wish List", National Transportation Safety Board, 2011, as viewed May 27, 2013</ref>
# Changes in the legal system including the rise of the rule of [[strict liability]], increasingly applied by courts nationwide during the 1960s and 1970s, so that aircraft [[product liability]] lawsuits became a rapidly rising area of specialty for the legal profession in the 1980s, with some attorneys successfully specializing in targeting general aviation aircraft manufacturers and insurers.<ref name="truitt_tarry_rise_fall_of_gen_av" />
# '''Changes in the legal system''' including the rise of the rule of [[strict liability]], increasingly applied by courts nationwide during the 1960s and 1970s, so that aircraft [[product liability]] lawsuits became a rapidly rising area of specialty for the legal profession in the 1980s, with some attorneys successfully specializing in targeting general aviation aircraft manufacturers and insurers.<ref name="truitt_tarry_rise_fall_of_gen_av" />


However, other economics of general aviation had also begun to erode the market for light aircraft, including:<ref name="wensven_air_trans_mgmt_perspective">Wensveen,
However, other economics of general aviation had also begun to erode the market for light aircraft, including:<ref name="wensven_air_trans_mgmt_perspective">Wensveen,
J.G., "[http://books.google.com/books/about/Air_transportation.html?id=Ej8Qslt1nfsC Air transportation:a management perspective]," (Google eBook), Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2007</ref> rising insurance rates and restrictions for aircraft manufacturers, owners, operators, and maintenance providers, largely in response to the accident-liability issues,<ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" /> inflation and recession, and rising interest rates - in the general economy.<ref name="legend_of_cessna" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" /> aircraft market saturation, (due partly to accumulated numbers of old, but still flyable, light aircraft built in abundance during the industry's economically favorable "boom" years),<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" /> foreign competition and inadequate response by US manufacturers<ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /><ref name="nasa_sbir_1999_solicitation">''[http://sbir.gsfc.nasa.gov/SBIR/sbir99/phase1/solicitation/topic04.html TOPIC 04 General Aviation Revitalization],'' in ''[http://sbir.gsfc.nasa.gov/SBIR/sbir99/phase1/solicitation/index.html Small Business Innovation Research 1999 Program Solicitation]'', National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)</ref><ref name="usitc_1817">Ladomirak, Deborah C., William L. Greene and Diane Manifold, ''[http://books.google.com/books?id=C8s3WY-zCBMC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false Competitive assessment of the U.S. commuter and business aircraft industries],'' Report on Investigation No. 332-204, Under Section 332 of the Tariff Act of 1930, USITC Publication 1817, [[United States International Trade Commission]], March 1986, as reproducd by GoogleBooks.com </ref><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /> the changing demographics of income and wealth distribution, reducing the number of potential buyers,<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /> sharply increased fuel costs,<ref name="forbes_2012_08_29_heart" /><ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /> urban sprawl competing with airport space,<ref name="essentials_of_av_mgmt">Rodwell, J.F., ''[http://books.google.com/books?id=jjfUv6s8LdsC&pg=PA6&lpg=PA6&dq=general+aviation+revitalization+act+of+1994&source=bl&ots=t6jcjqE_bY&sig=DQaTIgYFjii0U1_VvDsQ2201PBE&hl=en&sa=X&ei=7bueUee_K8nHqAGoloC4Aw&ved=0CFUQ6AEwCDgU#v=onepage&q=general%20aviation%20revitalization%20act%20of%201994&f=true Essentials of Aviation Management: A Guide for Aviation Service Businesses],'' Kendall Hunt, 2003, on ''Google Books''</ref> and regulatory restrictions.<ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" />
J.G., "[http://books.google.com/books/about/Air_transportation.html?id=Ej8Qslt1nfsC Air transportation:a management perspective]," (Google eBook), Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2007</ref> rising insurance rates and restrictions for aircraft manufacturers, owners, operators, and maintenance providers, largely in response to the accident-liability issues,<ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" /> inflation and recession, and rising interest rates - in the general economy.<ref name="legend_of_cessna" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" /> aircraft market saturation, (due partly to accumulated numbers of old, but still flyable, light aircraft built in abundance during the industry's economically favorable "boom" years),<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" /> foreign competition and inadequate response by US manufacturers<ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /><ref name="nasa_sbir_1999_solicitation">''[http://sbir.gsfc.nasa.gov/SBIR/sbir99/phase1/solicitation/topic04.html TOPIC 04 General Aviation Revitalization],'' in ''[http://sbir.gsfc.nasa.gov/SBIR/sbir99/phase1/solicitation/index.html Small Business Innovation Research 1999 Program Solicitation]'', National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)</ref><ref name="usitc_1817">Ladomirak, Deborah C., William L. Greene and Diane Manifold, ''[http://books.google.com/books?id=C8s3WY-zCBMC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false Competitive assessment of the U.S. commuter and business aircraft industries],'' Report on Investigation No. 332-204, Under Section 332 of the Tariff Act of 1930, USITC Publication 1817, [[United States International Trade Commission]], March 1986, as reproducd by GoogleBooks.com </ref><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /> the changing demographics of income and wealth distribution, reducing the number of potential buyers,<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /> sharply increased fuel costs,<ref name="forbes_2012_08_29_heart" /><ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /> urban sprawl competing with airport space,<ref name="essentials_of_av_mgmt">Rodwell, J.F., ''[http://books.google.com/books?id=jjfUv6s8LdsC&pg=PA6&lpg=PA6&dq=general+aviation+revitalization+act+of+1994&source=bl&ots=t6jcjqE_bY&sig=DQaTIgYFjii0U1_VvDsQ2201PBE&hl=en&sa=X&ei=7bueUee_K8nHqAGoloC4Aw&ved=0CFUQ6AEwCDgU#v=onepage&q=general%20aviation%20revitalization%20act%20of%201994&f=true Essentials of Aviation Management: A Guide for Aviation Service Businesses],'' Kendall Hunt, 2003, on ''Google Books''</ref> and regulatory restrictions.<ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" />


As a consequence of these factors, apparently, general aviation aircraft manufacturers began to experience sharply declining revenues and rising costs, in the 1980s, with resulting declines in income and rising [[contingent liabilities]].<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" />
As a consequence of these factors, apparently, general aviation aircraft manufacturers began to experience sharply declining revenues and rising costs, in the 1980s, with resulting declines in income and rising [[contingent liabilities]].<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /><ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01"></ref><ref name="gara_per_gama" />


The three leading general aviation aircraft manufacturers (accounting for over half of U.S. general aviation aircraft production) underwent major negative changes, which each blamed at least partially on rising product liability costs.


[[Cessna]] Aircraft Co. - long the world's highest-volume aircraft producer, and largest general aviation aircraft manufacturer, posted its first-ever annual loss, in 1983.<ref name="legend_of_cessna" /> Following acquisition by [[General Dynamics]] Corp. in Sept., 1985, Cessna suspended all propeller aircraft production in 1986. (except the [[Cessna 208 Caravan]] commercial/utility turboprop). Cessna Chairman [[Russell W. Meyer, Jr.]] said it was in response to rising product liability costs, and Meyer promised to return Cessna to propeller aircraft production if (and when) the Congress passed satisfactory changes in product liability law.<ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" /><ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /><ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /> In the meantime, Cessna shifted its focus to business jets and commercial/utility turboprop aircraft.<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /><ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" />
The three leading general aviation aircraft manufacturers (accounting for over half of U.S. general aviation aircraft production) underwent major negative changes, which each blamed at least partially on rising product liability costs.<ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01"></ref>
[[Cessna]] Aircraft Co. - long the world's highest-volume aircraft producer, and largest general aviation aircraft manufacturer, posted its first-ever annual loss, in 1983.<ref name="legend_of_cessna" /> Following acquisition by [[General Dynamics]] Corp. in Sept., 1985, Cessna suspended all propeller aircraft production in 1986. (except the [[Cessna 208 Caravan]] commercial/utility turboprop). Cessna Chairman [[Russell W. Meyer, Jr.]] said it was in response to rising product liability costs, and Meyer promised to return Cessna to propeller aircraft production if (and when) the Congress passed satisfactory changes in product liability law.<ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" /><ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /><ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /> In the meantime, Cessna shifted its focus to business jets and commercial/utility turboprop aircraft.<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" /><ref name="aopa_83_07" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /><ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /><ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01"></ref>


[[Piper Aircraft]] went in and out of bankruptcy, under various names, suspending or eliminating some long-popular models from its product line,<ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /> such as the 2-seat [[Piper Super Cub]] (one of the longest-built airplanes in the world),<ref name="piper_flyer_supercub">"[http://blog.aopa.org/blog/?p=2598 Piper Super Cub]" on website of Piper Owners' Organization, viewed May 27, 2013</ref><ref name="piperflyer_supercub">"[http://www.piperflyer.org/catagories/item/157-piper-pa-18-super-cub.html Piper PA-18 Super Cub]", Piper Flyer Assn., Jan4,2013 (viewed May 27, 2013)</ref> and 6-seat [[Piper PA-32]] "Cherokee Six"/"Saratoga".
[[Piper Aircraft]] went in and out of bankruptcy, under various names, suspending or eliminating some long-popular models from its product line,<ref name="mccain_speech_1993_11_09" /><ref name="legend_of_cessna" /> such as the 2-seat [[Piper Super Cub]] (one of the longest-built airplanes in the world),<ref name="piper_flyer_supercub">"[http://blog.aopa.org/blog/?p=2598 Piper Super Cub]" on website of Piper Owners' Organization, viewed May 27, 2013</ref><ref name="piperflyer_supercub">"[http://www.piperflyer.org/catagories/item/157-piper-pa-18-super-cub.html Piper PA-18 Super Cub]", Piper Flyer Assn., Jan4,2013 (viewed May 27, 2013)</ref> and 6-seat [[Piper PA-32]] "Cherokee Six"/"Saratoga".
<ref name="attys_lawsuits_threaten_piper_again_2000-10-22"> D. Lee Johnson & Associates, Attorneys, "[http://www.leejohnsonlegal.com/ohcontent/articles/plane_oct22_article.php Lawsuits Again Threaten Piper Aircraft]," October 22, 2000, Toledo, OH; (also online at: [http://www.romclawyers.com/txcontent/articles/plane_oct22_article.php Rochelle McCullough, L.L.P., Attorneys at Law, Dallas TX],</ref><ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01"></ref>


[[Beech Aircraft]] was acquired by [[Raytheon Corporation]] (and renamed [[Raytheon Aircraft]]), and shifted its emphasis away from general aviation propeller aircraft, like the [[Beech Bonanza]] and [[Beech Baron]], and discontinuing all other piston-propeller aircraft models (from 2-seat, single-engine Model 77 [[Beech Skipper]] trainer to 7-seat, twin-engine, pressurized Model 60 [[Beech Duke]]), shifting company emphasis towards professionally operated corporate turboprops and business jets, and small military and commercial aircraft.
[[Beech Aircraft]] was acquired by [[Raytheon Corporation]] (and renamed [[Raytheon Aircraft]]), and shifted its emphasis away from general aviation propeller aircraft, like the [[Beech Bonanza]] and [[Beech Baron]], and discontinuing all other piston-propeller aircraft models (from 2-seat, single-engine Model 77 [[Beech Skipper]] trainer to 7-seat, twin-engine, pressurized Model 60 [[Beech Duke]]), shifting company emphasis towards professionally operated corporate turboprops and business jets, and small military and commercial aircraft.
Line 177: Line 182:


===Manufacturing Outcomes===
===Manufacturing Outcomes===
Following passage of the GARA, the "big three" reacted in differing ways:
Following passage of the GARA, the "big three" reacted in differing ways. In 1994 Cessna resumed very limited propeller aircraft production of its three most popular (and statistically safest) models that had been suspended in 1986; the [[Cessna 172|172]], [[Cessna 182|182]] and [[Cessna 206|206]]. Cessna Chairman and CEO Russell W. Meyer said it was in response to passage of GARA, and in keeping with his "promise". However, Cessna did not resume production of most of its propeller aircraft line; including its most efficient and high-performance piston-propeller aircraft, or any of its twin-engined propeller aircraft. Cessna continued to focus chiefly on business jets and commercial/utility turboprop aircraft.<ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" />

'''Cessna''', in 1994, resumed very limited propeller aircraft production of its three most popular (and statistically safest) models that had been suspended in 1986; the [[Cessna 172|172]], [[Cessna 182|182]] and [[Cessna 206|206]]. Cessna Chairman and CEO Russell W. Meyer said it was in response to passage of GARA, and in keeping with his "promise". However, Cessna did not resume production of most of its propeller aircraft line; including its most efficient and high-performance piston-propeller aircraft, or any of its twin-engined propeller aircraft. Cessna continued to focus chiefly on business jets and commercial/utility turboprop aircraft.<ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" />

'''Piper Aircraft''' (alias "'''New Piper Aircraft'''") continued in and out of troubles, but continued producing the types that had survived during the 1980s; and restored some that it had cut from its product line, such as the single-engine [[Piper PA-32|PA-32]], reintroduced in 1995, the year after GARA was enacted; and twin-engine [[Piper PA-34 Seneca|Seneca]] and [[Piper PA-44 Seminole|Seminole]]. Some credit GARA with helping New Piper to emerge from bankruptcy and survive.<ref name="industryweek_2004_12_21">Miller, William H., "[http://www.industryweek.com/companies-amp-executives/brighter-skies-general-aviation Brighter Skies For General Aviation: Fractional ownership and other trends help the industry climb out of a 15-year nosedive]," ''IndustryWeek'' magazine, Dec. 21, 2004</ref><ref name="gara_effect_on_mfrs_1998-01"></ref><ref name="gara_per_gama" />


Piper Aircraft continued in and out of troubles, but continued producing the types that had survived during the 1980s; and restored some that it had cut from its product line, such as the single-engine [[Piper PA-32|PA-32]], reintroduced in 1995, the year after GARA was enacted; and twin-engine [[Piper PA-34 Seneca|Seneca]] and [[Piper PA-44 Seminole|Seminole]]. Beechcraft, by then renamed Raytheon Aircraft, continued production of the two piston-engine aircraft models that had survived the pre-GARA shakeout, the [[Beechcraft Bonanza|Bonanza]] and [[Beechcraft Baron|Baron]], but never resumed production of any of the types that it had cut during the GARA debate.
'''Beechcraft''' (by then renamed '''Raytheon Aircraft''') continued production of the two piston-engine aircraft models that had survived the pre-GARA shakeout, the [[Beechcraft Bonanza|Bonanza]] and [[Beechcraft Baron|Baron]], but never resumed production of any of the types that it had cut during the GARA debate.


The [[General Accounting Office]] of the U.S. Congress estimated, after GARA's passage, that 25,000 new jobs had been created, exactly the quantity predicted at the hearings.<ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" /> However, the public-interest advocacy group [[Public Citizen]] has cited testimony March 1997 by Cessna senior vice president John E. Moore, before the Senate Commerce Committee, March 6, 1997, acknowledging that Cessna's product liability costs had not been reduced after the passage of the GARA.<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /> In fact, purchase prices of various types of light aircraft (including some Piper, Beech and reintroduced Cessna models) went up sharply during the early years of GARA, leaving doubt about industry representatives' claims that GARA would cut airplane prices.<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /><ref name="forbes_2012_08_29_heart" />
The [[General Accounting Office]] of the U.S. Congress estimated, after GARA's passage, that 25,000 new jobs had been created, exactly the quantity predicted at the hearings.<ref name="kovarik_gara_stretched_too_far" /> However, the public-interest advocacy group [[Public Citizen]] has cited testimony March 1997 by Cessna senior vice president John E. Moore, before the Senate Commerce Committee, March 6, 1997, acknowledging that Cessna's product liability costs had not been reduced after the passage of the GARA.<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /> In fact, purchase prices of various types of light aircraft (including some Piper, Beech and reintroduced Cessna models) went up sharply during the early years of GARA, leaving doubt about industry representatives' claims that GARA would cut airplane prices.<ref name="public_citizen_gara_critique1" /><ref name="forbes_2012_08_29_heart" />
Line 202: Line 211:
<ref name="helland_tobarrok_gara_safety">Helland, Eric A. and Alexander Tabarrok, "[http://econpapers.repec.org/article/ucpjlawec/doi_3a10.1086_2f666363.htm Product Liability and Moral Hazard: Evidence from General Aviation]," ''Journal of Law and Economics,'' 2012, vol. 55, issue 3, pages 593 - 630, available [http://econpapers.repec.org/article/ucpjlawec/doi_3a10.1086_2f666363.htm on EconPapers.com], or [http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.1086/666363 on JSTOR.org]</ref><ref name="tabarrok_blog1">Tabarrok, Alex (blog) "[http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2013/02/aviation-liability-law-and-moral-hazard.html Aviation, Liability Law, and Moral Hazard]," February 19, 2013.</ref>
<ref name="helland_tobarrok_gara_safety">Helland, Eric A. and Alexander Tabarrok, "[http://econpapers.repec.org/article/ucpjlawec/doi_3a10.1086_2f666363.htm Product Liability and Moral Hazard: Evidence from General Aviation]," ''Journal of Law and Economics,'' 2012, vol. 55, issue 3, pages 593 - 630, available [http://econpapers.repec.org/article/ucpjlawec/doi_3a10.1086_2f666363.htm on EconPapers.com], or [http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.1086/666363 on JSTOR.org]</ref><ref name="tabarrok_blog1">Tabarrok, Alex (blog) "[http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2013/02/aviation-liability-law-and-moral-hazard.html Aviation, Liability Law, and Moral Hazard]," February 19, 2013.</ref>


However, others have argued that safety improvement in general aviation has been chiefly the result of a market shift away from owner-flown aircraft, towards professionally operated aircraft, and due to other changes, such as improving technology, advances in pilot education and training, and better operating methods and practices."<ref name="gao_report_13_36">[http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-13-36 General Aviation Safety: Additional FAA Efforts Could Help Identify and Mitigate Safety Risks]", GAO-13-36 [[General Accounting Office]] of the U.S. Congress, Oct 4, 2012, Washington, D.C.</ref><ref name="aopa_ga_safety">"[http://www.aopa.org/letsgoflying/ready/safety/stats.html "General Aviation Safety Record]", "Let's Go Flying" section of [[Aircraft Owners & Pilots Association]] website, viewed May 27, 2013</ref> A reduction in flight hours, owing to economic factors, is also suspected to contribute to a decline in accidents.<ref name="faa_factsheet_ga_safety">"[http://www.faa.gov/news/fact_sheets/news_story.cfm?newsId=13672 Fact Sheet – General Aviation Safety]," on the website of the [[Federal Aviation Administration]], as viewed May 27, 2013</ref>
However, others have argued that safety improvement in general aviation have been chiefly the result of a market shift away from owner-flown aircraft, towards professionally operated aircraft, and due to other changes, such as improving technology, advances in pilot education and training, and better operating methods and practices."<ref name="gao_report_13_36">[http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-13-36 General Aviation Safety: Additional FAA Efforts Could Help Identify and Mitigate Safety Risks]", GAO-13-36 [[General Accounting Office]] of the U.S. Congress, Oct 4, 2012, Washington, D.C.</ref><ref name="aopa_ga_safety">"[http://www.aopa.org/letsgoflying/ready/safety/stats.html "General Aviation Safety Record]", "Let's Go Flying" section of [[Aircraft Owners & Pilots Association]] website, viewed May 27, 2013</ref> A reduction in flight hours, owing to economic factors, is also suspected to contribute to a decline in accidents.<ref name="faa_factsheet_ga_safety">"[http://www.faa.gov/news/fact_sheets/news_story.cfm?newsId=13672 Fact Sheet – General Aviation Safety]," on the website of the [[Federal Aviation Administration]], as viewed May 27, 2013</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 13:30, 18 February 2014

General Aviation Revitalization Act[1]
Great Seal of the United States
Long titleSenate Bill: S. 1458 (103rd) General Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994
Acronyms (colloquial)GARA
NicknamesGARA
Legislative history
  • Introduced in the Senate by Sen. Nancy Kassebaum [R-KS] on Sep 14, 1993 (103rd Congress, 1993–1994)
  • Passed the Senate Aug. 1, 1994 on  
  • Signed into law by President President Bill Clinton on Aug 17, 1994.

The General Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994, also known by its initials GARA, is Public Law 103-298, an Act of Congress on Senate Bill S. 1458 (103rd Congress), amending the Federal Aviation Act of 1958.

It was intended to counteract the effects of prolonged product liability on general aviation aircraft manufacturers, by limiting the duration of their liability for the aircraft they produce.

GARA is a statute of repose generally shielding most manufacturers of aircraft (carrying fewer than 20 passengers), and aircraft parts, from liability for most accidents (including injury or fatality accidents) involving their products that are 18 years old or older (at the time of the accident), even if manufacturer negligence was a cause.

While GARA is considered a landmark event in the modern history of America's general aviation industry, debate continues over the effects and ethics of GARA.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11]


History

General aviation industry decline in the 1980s and 1990s

General aviation aircraft manufacturers, in the 1980s and 1990s began to terminate or reduce production of their piston-powered, propeller aircraft, or struggled with solvency.[12][13][14][15]

General aviation aircraft production in the U.S. dropped from approximately 18,000 units in 1978[13][14][8] to 4,000 units in 1986.[8] to 928 units in 1994.[2][3] (In a1993 speech, Sen. John McCain said "nearly 500 last year [1992]")[13][15]

At the time, industry analysts estimated that the U.S. decline in general aviation aircraft manufacturing eliminated somewhere between 28,000 and 100,000 jobs -- as unit production dropped by 95% between the 1970s peak and the early 1990s -- sharply different from other segments of the global aerospace industry, where U.S. market share was still strong. [14][3][8][15][11]

Those manufacturers reported rapidly rising product liability costs, driving aircraft prices beyond the market, and they said their production cuts were in response to that growing liability.[16][3][17][15]

Average cost of manufacturer's liability insurance for each airplane manufactured in the U.S. had risen from approximately $50 per plane in 1962 to $100,000 per plane in 1988, according to a report cited by the Bureau of Labor Statistics,[14] a 2,000-fold increase in 24 years.

Rising claims against the industry triggered a rapid increase in manufacturers' liability insurance premiums during the 1980s. Industry-wide, in just 7 years, the manufacturers' liability premiums inceased nearly nine-fold, from approximately $24 million in 1978 to $210 million in 1985.[15]

Insurance underwriters, worldwide, began to refuse to sell product liability insurance to U.S. general aviation manufacturers. By 1987, the three largest GA manufacturers claimed their annual costs for product liability ranged from $70,000 to $100,000 per airplane built and shipped that year.[7][17]

Industry representatives and analysts variously blamed one or more of three general factors for rising product liability costs:

  1. Long-lived products - General aviation aircraft manufacturers chiefly specialized in small and light aircraft which often remained in operation for several decades after their manufacture, much longer than automobiles or even most commercial aviation airliners.[18][14][15]
  2. Higher fatality rate - (per passenger, per mile traveled) for general aviation aircraft than most other forms of transportation.[19][20][21]
  3. Changes in the legal system including the rise of the rule of strict liability, increasingly applied by courts nationwide during the 1960s and 1970s, so that aircraft product liability lawsuits became a rapidly rising area of specialty for the legal profession in the 1980s, with some attorneys successfully specializing in targeting general aviation aircraft manufacturers and insurers.[7]

However, other economics of general aviation had also begun to erode the market for light aircraft, including:[22] rising insurance rates and restrictions for aircraft manufacturers, owners, operators, and maintenance providers, largely in response to the accident-liability issues,[3] inflation and recession, and rising interest rates - in the general economy.[8][17] aircraft market saturation, (due partly to accumulated numbers of old, but still flyable, light aircraft built in abundance during the industry's economically favorable "boom" years),[5][17] foreign competition and inadequate response by US manufacturers[13][23][24][8] the changing demographics of income and wealth distribution, reducing the number of potential buyers,[5] sharply increased fuel costs,[12][13] urban sprawl competing with airport space,[25] and regulatory restrictions.[13]

As a consequence of these factors, apparently, general aviation aircraft manufacturers began to experience sharply declining revenues and rising costs, in the 1980s, with resulting declines in income and rising contingent liabilities.[5][15][11]


The three leading general aviation aircraft manufacturers (accounting for over half of U.S. general aviation aircraft production) underwent major negative changes, which each blamed at least partially on rising product liability costs.[15]

Cessna Aircraft Co. - long the world's highest-volume aircraft producer, and largest general aviation aircraft manufacturer, posted its first-ever annual loss, in 1983.[8] Following acquisition by General Dynamics Corp. in Sept., 1985, Cessna suspended all propeller aircraft production in 1986. (except the Cessna 208 Caravan commercial/utility turboprop). Cessna Chairman Russell W. Meyer, Jr. said it was in response to rising product liability costs, and Meyer promised to return Cessna to propeller aircraft production if (and when) the Congress passed satisfactory changes in product liability law.[3][13][17][8][13] In the meantime, Cessna shifted its focus to business jets and commercial/utility turboprop aircraft.[5][8][17][17][8][13][15]

Piper Aircraft went in and out of bankruptcy, under various names, suspending or eliminating some long-popular models from its product line,[13][8] such as the 2-seat Piper Super Cub (one of the longest-built airplanes in the world),[26][27] and 6-seat Piper PA-32 "Cherokee Six"/"Saratoga". [28][15]

Beech Aircraft was acquired by Raytheon Corporation (and renamed Raytheon Aircraft), and shifted its emphasis away from general aviation propeller aircraft, like the Beech Bonanza and Beech Baron, and discontinuing all other piston-propeller aircraft models (from 2-seat, single-engine Model 77 Beech Skipper trainer to 7-seat, twin-engine, pressurized Model 60 Beech Duke), shifting company emphasis towards professionally operated corporate turboprops and business jets, and small military and commercial aircraft.

As a consequence of these changes, and others, the general aviation industry began to suffer from a shortage of new aircraft, particularly for training, rental and charter use. (The three main training planes of the industry in the 1980s, the two-seat Cessna 152, Piper Tomahawk, and Beech Skipper, were all removed from the market in the mid-1980s, and none of them ever returned.)[8]

GARA Promoted & Opposed

Opponents included (chiefly):

  • Public-interest / consumer advocacy groups, including Public Citizen.[5] However, Rodengen quotes GAMA President Ed Stimpson as claiming that simplification of the bill, eliminating all aspects but the statute of repose, won "additional support" of "consumer organizations".[8]

Proponents (supporters) included:

  • Kansas politicians, led by Senator Nancy Kassebaum[3][8][13] (Kansas is the nation's leading producer of general aviation aircraft);[29]
  • the General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA), particularly represented by Russ Meyer, Cessna's Chairman & CEO;[3][30][31][8]

During the 1980s and 1990s, under the leadership of Cessna Chairman Russ Meyer and GAMA President Ed Stimpson, the industry pressured Congress, for several years, to enact limits on aircraft manufacturers' product liability.[3][30][31][8]

Promoters included Members of Congress. Some, with connections to general aviation were among the forces mobilized to pass the legislation, including:

  • U.S. Representative Dan Glickman, (D-Kansas) from Wichita, "the Air Capital City" the hometown of Cessna, Beech Aircraft/Raytheon Aircraft, and the Learjet div. of Bombardier Aerospace, and many other aviation enterprises. Glickman co-sponsored the legislation with Sen. Kassebaum (above),[3][8] and aided by Rep. James V. Hansen (below) gathered more than 300 "co-sponsors" for the bill[8] in the Democrat-dominated, 435-seat House of Representatives.[32]
  • U.S. Representative James V. Hansen, (R-Utah), who successfully persuaded GARA backers (particularly GAMA) to support a simpler bill, and then helped Rep. Glickman acquire more than 300 "co-sponsors" for the bill in the House of Representatives.[8]

Congressional support included:

  • U.S. Senator John McCain, (R-Arizona), who gave a sponsoring speech in favor of the GARA, Nov.11, 1993 on the floor of the U.S. Senate.[34]
  • U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, (R-Texas), who offered a defense to Sen. Metzenbaum's critique, remarks, March 16, 1994 on the floor of the U.S. Senate.[18]

Congressional opposition included:

  • U.S. Representative Jack Brooks, (D-Texas), Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, who had a reputation for blocking liability reform. Brooks' committee sat on the bill, initially, but when it appeared his committee might be bypassed by a discharge petition, Brooks scheduled hearings on the bill in his committee, which eventually passed the GARA with amendments.[8]
  • U.S. Senator Howard Metzenbaum, (D-Ohio), who gave a detailed speech, March 16, 1994 on the floor of the U.S. Senate, critiquing the proposed provisions of the GARA.[18]
  • U.S. Senator Fritz Hollings, (D-South Carolina), who objected to Sen. Kassebaum's attempt to attach the GARA as an amendment to his regular Fiscal 1994 FAA Reauthorization Bill. Hollings finally agreed to support a version of GARA, as a separate bill, that delayed protection from the original 15 years to the finally-successful 18 years.[8]

The bill's language was reportedly drafted by Sen. Kassebaum (R-Kansas), Rep. Glickman (D-Kansas) and GAMA/Cessna Chairman Russ Meyer, with Meyer pushing for simplification to a bill focused only on a statute of repose, and no other purpose. Meyer also promoted the bill as a "jobs" bill, to win the support of aircraft industry unions and other organized labor, traditionally popular with Democrats (who, at the time, controlled both houses of Congress).[8][32]

However, in a Jan.2008 article in the Seattle Univ. Law Review, Kerry Kovarik argues that the exact language of the final draft of the Act exceeded the intent of Congress, as indicated by the generating committees and the Congressional debate record, creating "inequities" and poor judicial interpretations, with unintended negative consequences for crash victims, far beyond what Congress intended, to include any aircraft with less than 20 passenger seats, operated in any activity other than scheduled commercial service, including helicopters and business jets, despite a lack of Congressional discussion of those exemptions.[3]

GARA Passed

The General Aviation Revitalization Act was passed by the Congress in 1994, and signed by President Bill Clinton in a White House ceremony August 17, 1994.[2]

The final law exempted manufacturers of general aviation aircraft (aircraft with less than 20 passenger seats, not operated in scheduled commercial service), and their component parts, from liability for any of their products that were 18 years old or older at the time of the accident. [4]

Certain exceptions apply:[6][16]

  • If the manufacturer withheld or concealed information from the FAA, or misrepresented information, that is directly related to the accident's cause;
  • If the accident victim is a passenger on an air ambulance flight, or otherwise in flight, to get medical treatment;
  • If an otherwise-exempt aircraft killed or injured someone not aboard the aircraft (e.g.: a person on the ground, struck by the aircraft); or
  • In suits over a written warranty involving an otherwise-exempt aircraft.

Further, the statute is a "rolling" statute: The "clock" resets when modified or replacement parts are installed, so that an 20-year-old aircraft may still be the object of a successful suit against a manufacturer if it contains manufacturer modifications or parts installed within the last 18 years.[6][16]

Outcomes

There is debate about the results of the GARA. Some believe it has revitalized the industry, and some believe it has made little difference, even encouraging continued or resumed production of high-risk vehicles.

Manufacturing Outcomes

Following passage of the GARA, the "big three" reacted in differing ways:

Cessna, in 1994, resumed very limited propeller aircraft production of its three most popular (and statistically safest) models that had been suspended in 1986; the 172, 182 and 206. Cessna Chairman and CEO Russell W. Meyer said it was in response to passage of GARA, and in keeping with his "promise". However, Cessna did not resume production of most of its propeller aircraft line; including its most efficient and high-performance piston-propeller aircraft, or any of its twin-engined propeller aircraft. Cessna continued to focus chiefly on business jets and commercial/utility turboprop aircraft.[3]

Piper Aircraft (alias "New Piper Aircraft") continued in and out of troubles, but continued producing the types that had survived during the 1980s; and restored some that it had cut from its product line, such as the single-engine PA-32, reintroduced in 1995, the year after GARA was enacted; and twin-engine Seneca and Seminole. Some credit GARA with helping New Piper to emerge from bankruptcy and survive.[35][15][11]

Beechcraft (by then renamed Raytheon Aircraft) continued production of the two piston-engine aircraft models that had survived the pre-GARA shakeout, the Bonanza and Baron, but never resumed production of any of the types that it had cut during the GARA debate.

The General Accounting Office of the U.S. Congress estimated, after GARA's passage, that 25,000 new jobs had been created, exactly the quantity predicted at the hearings.[3] However, the public-interest advocacy group Public Citizen has cited testimony March 1997 by Cessna senior vice president John E. Moore, before the Senate Commerce Committee, March 6, 1997, acknowledging that Cessna's product liability costs had not been reduced after the passage of the GARA.[5] In fact, purchase prices of various types of light aircraft (including some Piper, Beech and reintroduced Cessna models) went up sharply during the early years of GARA, leaving doubt about industry representatives' claims that GARA would cut airplane prices.[5][12]

Liability Diffusion

Since GARA, attorneys have begun pressing other segments of the general aviation industry and community as alternative defendants to the manufacturers, including:

  • parts manufacturers
  • maintenance organizations
  • flight instructors and utility/charter pilots
  • flight schools
  • aircraft owners' insurance and personal assets.

(This list includes "FBOs" (fixed-base operators) typically airport-based aviation service businesses providing flight training, charter flying, rental aircraft, aircraft storage, fueling and/or maintenance.)[3]

The result of shifted liability focus has been an increase in costs elsewhere in the industry, and directly to aircraft owners and pilots, and their estates.[3]

Safety Outcomes

Economists Eric Helland (Claremont McKenna College) and Alexander Tabarrok, (George Mason University) have argued that the outcomes of GARA demonstrate that product liability limits motivate safer behavior by consumers. [36][37]

However, others have argued that safety improvement in general aviation have been chiefly the result of a market shift away from owner-flown aircraft, towards professionally operated aircraft, and due to other changes, such as improving technology, advances in pilot education and training, and better operating methods and practices."[38][39] A reduction in flight hours, owing to economic factors, is also suspected to contribute to a decline in accidents.[40]

References

  1. ^ "General Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994", (1994; 103rd Congress S_ 1458), on GovTrack_us
  2. ^ a b c Clinton, William J., President of the United States, "Statement on Signing the General Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994, August 17, 1994," online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The Presidency Project online archives, Univ. of California at Santa Barbara.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Kovarik, Kerry V., "A Good Idea Stretched Too Far: Amending the General Aviation Revitalization Act to Mitigate Unintended Inequities," Seattle University Law Review, Vol. 31, No. 4 (2008), Jan.2008, p.973, Seattle Univ. School of Law, Seattle, WA, USA PDF download.
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  18. ^ Harris, Richard, "Safe Airplane -- NOT!," from In Flight USA, July 2007, as reproduced on the Aviation Answer-Man website
  19. ^ "Aviation Safety Information Analysis and Sharing for General Aviation," downloaded from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University website, May 27, 2013, which notes: "In 2009, general aviation (GA) was responsible for approximately 95% of civil aviation accidents and 89% of fatalities."
  20. ^ "General Aviation Safety" from the 2011 "Wish List", National Transportation Safety Board, 2011, as viewed May 27, 2013
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  23. ^ Ladomirak, Deborah C., William L. Greene and Diane Manifold, Competitive assessment of the U.S. commuter and business aircraft industries, Report on Investigation No. 332-204, Under Section 332 of the Tariff Act of 1930, USITC Publication 1817, United States International Trade Commission, March 1986, as reproducd by GoogleBooks.com
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  28. ^ Harris, Richard, "Kansas Aviation History: The Long Story", Kansas Aviation Centennial Committee website, as posted ca.Sept.2011.
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  32. ^ The Aircraft Owners & Pilots Association, says this about Inhofe[dead link]: a "major force behind [Congressional] passage" of the GARA.
  33. ^ ": United States Senator John McCain :: Press Office :". Mccain.senate.gov. 1993-11-09. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  34. ^ Miller, William H., "Brighter Skies For General Aviation: Fractional ownership and other trends help the industry climb out of a 15-year nosedive," IndustryWeek magazine, Dec. 21, 2004
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