[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 32, Volume 6]
[Revised as of July 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 32CFR861.3]

[Page 159-161]
 
                        TITLE 32-NATIONAL DEFENSE
 
                CHAPTER VII--DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE
 
PART 861_DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COMMERCIAL AIR TRANSPORTATION QUALITY AND 
SAFETY REVIEW PROGRAM--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 861.3  Definitions.

    (a) Air carrier. Individuals or entities that operate commercial 
fixed and rotary wing aircraft in accordance with the Federal Aviation 
Regulations (14 CFR Chapter I) or equivalent regulations issued by a 
country's Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) and which provide air 
transportation or operational support services. Commercial air carriers 
under contract with, or operating on behalf of the DOD shall have a FAA 
or CAA certificate.
    (b) Air transportation services. The transport of DOD personnel or 
cargo by fixed or rotary wing commercial aircraft, where such services 
are acquired primarily for the transportation of DOD personnel and 
cargo, through donation or any form of contract, tender, blanket 
ordering agreement, Government charge card, Government or commercial 
transportation request (TR), bill of lading, or similar instruments. Air 
transportation services also include medical evacuation services, 
paratrooper drops, and charter airlift and group travel arranged by the 
Military Service Academies, foreign military sales, nonappropriated fund 
instrumentalities by other DOD and non-DOD activities for DOD personnel. 
All air carriers providing air transportation services to DOD must have 
a FAA or CAA certificate. The policy contained in this Directive shall 
not apply to individually procured, discretionary air travel, such as 
that associated with military leave or pass.
    (c) Civil Aviation Authority (CAA). The CAA refers to the 
organization within a country that has the authority and responsibility 
to regulate civil aviation. The term CAA is used throughout this part 
since these requirements are applicable to both U.S. and foreign 
carriers doing business with DOD. The term CAA thus includes the U.S. 
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).
    (d) Code sharing. Code sharing is a marketing arrangement in which 
an air carrier places its designator code on a flight operated by 
another air carrier and sells tickets for that flight.
    (e) DOD approval. DOD approval in the context of this part refers to 
the process by which air carriers seeking to provide passenger or cargo 
airlift services (hereinafter referred to as air transportation 
services) to the DOD must be screened and evaluated by the DOD Air 
Carrier Survey and Analysis Office or other entity authorized by the 
CARB, and approved for DOD use by the CARB. Once initial approval is 
obtained, a DOD approved air carrier must remain in an approved status 
to be eligible for DOD business. Although not generally required, the 
CARB or higher authority may, on a case-by-case basis, require DOD 
approval of air carriers providing operational support services to DOD.
    (f) DOD air carrier safety and quality review process. Includes four 
possible levels of review with increasing authority. The 
responsibilities of each are described in more detail in the reference 
in Sec. 861.1 (b). These levels consist of the:
    (1) DOD Air Carrier Survey and Analysis Office;
    (2) DOD Commercial Airlift Review Board (CARB);
    (3) Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Transportation Command, or USCINCTRANS; 
and
    (4) Secretary of Defense. (Note: A DOD-level body, the Commercial 
Airlift Review Authority, or CARA, provides advice and recommendations 
to the Secretary of Defense.)
    (g) Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) International Safety 
Assessment (IASA) program and categories. The FAA IASA program assesses 
the ability of a foreign country's CAA to adhere to international 
standards established by the United Nation's technical agency for 
aviation, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). The FAA 
has established ratings for the status of countries as follows:
    (1) Category 1--Does comply with ICAO standards. A country's CAA has 
been found to license and oversee air carriers in accordance with ICAO 
aviation safety standards.
    (2) Category 2--Does not comply with ICAO standards. A country's CAA 
does not meet ICAO standards for aviation oversight. Operations to the 
U.S. by a carrier from a Category 2 country are limited to those in 
effect at the time a country is classified as Category 2 and

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are subjected to heightened FAA surveillance. Expansion or changes in 
services to the U.S. are not permitted while a country is in Category 2 
status unless the carrier arranges to have new services conducted by an 
air carrier from a Category 1 country. Category 2 countries that do not 
have operations to the U.S. at the time of the FAA assessment are not 
permitted to commence such operations unless it arranges to have its 
flights conducted by an air carrier from a Category 1 country.
    (3) Non-rated. A country's CAA is labeled ``non-rated'' if it has 
not been assessed by the FAA.
    (h) GSA City Pair Program. A program managed by the General Services 
Administration in which U.S. air carriers compete for annual contracts 
awarding U.S. Government business for specific domestic and 
international scheduled service city pair routes.
    (i) Group travel. Twenty-one or more passengers on orders from the 
same organization traveling on the same date to the same destination to 
attend the same function.
    (j) Letter of Warning. A notice to a DOD approved air carrier of a 
failure to satisfy safety or airworthiness requirements which, if not 
remedied, may result in temporary nonuse or suspension of the air 
carrier by the DOD. Issuance of a Letter of Warning is not a 
prerequisite to a suspension or other action by the CARB or higher DOD 
authority.
    (k) On-site Capability Survey. The most comprehensive evaluation 
performed by DOD's Air Carrier Survey and Analysis Office. Successful 
completion of this evaluation is required of most air carriers before 
they may be approved to provide air transportation services to DOD. Once 
approved, air carriers are subject to periodic On-site Capability 
Surveys, as specified at Enclosure 3 in the reference in Sec. 861.1(b).
    (l) Operational support services. Missions performed by air carriers 
that use fixed or rotary-winged aircraft to provide services other than 
air transportation services as defined in paragraph (b) of this section. 
Examples include, but are not limited to, range instrumentation and 
services, target-towing, sling loads, and electronic countermeasures 
target flights. Air carriers providing only operational support services 
do not require advance DOD approval and are not subject to the initial 
or periodic on-site survey requirements under this part, unless directed 
by the CARB or higher authority. All air carriers providing operational 
support services to DOD must have a FAA or CAA certificate and are 
required to maintain applicable FAA or CAA standards absent deviation 
authority obtained pursuant to 14 CFR 119.55 or similar CAA rules.
    (m) Performance assessments. Reviews conducted by U.S. air carriers 
when evaluating foreign air carriers with which they have code share 
arrangements, using performance-based factors. Such assessments include 
reviewing a variety of air carrier data including history, safety, 
scope/size, financial condition, equipment, flight operations and 
airworthiness issues.
    (n) Performance evaluations. Reviews conducted by DOD as directed in 
the references in Sec. 861.1(a) and (b). These evaluations include a 
review of air carrier flight operations, maintenance departments, safety 
programs and other air carrier areas as necessary. Performance 
evaluations are not conducted on-site, but rely on information collected 
primarily from the FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board 
(NTSB).
    (o) Preflight safety inspection. A visual safety inspection of the 
interior and exterior of an air carrier's aircraft performed by DOD 
personnel in accordance with the references in Sec. 861.1(a) and (b).
    (p) Suspension. The exclusion of an air carrier from providing 
services to the DOD. The period of suspension will normally:
    (1) Remain in effect until the air carrier furnishes satisfactory 
evidence that the conditions causing the suspension have been remedied 
and has been reinstated by the CARB, or;
    (2) Be for a fixed period of time as determined at the discretion of 
the CARB.
    (q) Temporary nonuse. The immediate exclusion of a DOD approved air 
carrier from providing services to the DOD pending a decision on 
suspension. Normally, temporary nonuse will be for a

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period of 30 days or less. However, by mutual agreement of the CARB and 
the air carrier involved, a suspension hearing or decision may be 
delayed and the air carrier continued in a temporary nonuse status for 
an extended period of time.
    (r) Voluntarily provided safety-related information. Information 
which consists of nonfactual safety-related data, reports, statements, 
and other information provided to DOD by an air carrier at any point in 
the evaluation process described in this Part. It does not include 
factual safety-related information, such as statistics, maintenance 
reports, training records, flight planning information, and the like.