[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 14, Volume 4]

[Revised as of January 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 14CFR234.4]



[Page 97-98]

 

                     TITLE 14--AERONAUTICS AND SPACE

 

   CHAPTER II--OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION 

                         (AVIATION PROCEEDINGS)

 

PART 234_AIRLINE SERVICE QUALITY PERFORMANCE REPORTS--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 234.4  Reporting of on-time performance.



    (a) Each reporting carrier shall file BTS Form 234 ``On-Time Flight 

Performance Report'' with the Office of Airline Information on a monthly 

basis, setting forth the information for each of its reportable flights 

held out in the Official Airline Guide (OAG), in the computer 

reservations systems (CRS), or in other schedule publications. The 

reportable flights include, but are not limited to, cancelled flights, 

mechanically cancelled flights, diverted flights, new flights and wet-

leased flights. The report shall be made in the form and manner set 

forth in accounting and reporting directives issued by the Director, 

Office of Airline Statistics, and shall contain the following 

information:

    (1) Carrier and flight number.

    (2) Aircraft tail number.

    (3) Origin and Destination airport codes.

    (4) Published OAG departure and arrival times for each scheduled 

operation of the flight.

    (5) CRS scheduled arrival and departure time for each scheduled 

operation of the flight.

    (6) Actual departure and arrival time for each operation of the 

flight.

    (7) Difference in minutes between OAG and CRS scheduled arrival 

times.

    (8) Difference in minutes between OAG and CRS scheduled departure 

times.

    (9) Actual wheels-off and wheels-on times for each operation of the 

flight.

    (10) Date and day of week of scheduled flight operation.

    (11) Scheduled elapsed time, according to CRS schedule.

    (12) Actual elapsed time.

    (13) Amount of departure delay, if any.

    (14) Amount of arrival delay, if any.

    (15) Amount of elapsed time difference, if any.

    (16) Causal code for cancellation, if any.

    (17) Minutes of delay attributed to the air carrier, if any.

    (18) Minutes of delay attributed to extreme weather, if any.

    (19) Minutes of delay attributed to the national aviation system, if 

any.

    (20) Minutes of delay attributed to security, if any.

    (21) Minutes of delay attributed to a previous late arriving 

aircraft, if any.

    (b) When reporting the information specified in paragraph (a) of 

this section for a diverted flight, a reporting carrier shall use the 

original scheduled flight number and the original scheduled origin and 

destination airport codes. Carriers are not required to report causal 

information for diverted flights.

    (c) A reporting carrier shall report the information specified in 

paragraph (a) of this section for a new flight beginning with the first 

day of the new scheduled operation.

    (d) A reporting carrier shall not report the information specified 

in paragraph (a) of this section for any discontinued or extra-section 

flight.

    (e) Actual arrival, departure and elapsed times shall be measured by 

the times at which the aircraft arrived at and departed from the gate or 

passenger loading area.

    (f) The published arrival time and departure time of a flight shall 

be, respectively, the scheduled arrival and departure times in effect on 

the date of the scheduled operation of the flight, as shown in the most 

recent Official Airline Guide, and in computer reservations systems. 

Each carrier shall designate a single computer reservations system in 

addition to the Official Airline Guide as the sources of scheduled 

arrival time and departure time data in its reports to the Department 

and shall report the scheduled arrival times and departure times listed 

in those sources for each flight. Scheduled elapsed



[[Page 98]]



times, amount of departure and/or arrival delay, and elapsed time 

difference shall be calculated using the scheduled times shown in the 

designated CRS source.

    (g) Reporting carriers should use the following codes to identify 

causes for cancelled flights:



Code

A--Air Carrier

B--Extreme Weather

C--National Aviation System (NAS).

D-Security



    (1) Air Carrier cancellations are due to circumstances that were 

within the control of the air carrier (e.g., lack of flight crew, 

maintenance, etc.).

    (2) Extreme weather cancellations are caused by weather conditions 

(e.g., significant meteorological conditions), actual or forecasted at 

the point of departure, en route, or point of arrival that, in 

accordance with applicable regulatory standards and/or in the judgment 

of the air carrier, prevents operation of that flight and/or prevents 

operations of subsequent flights due to the intended aircraft being out 

of position as a result of a prior cancellation or delay attributable to 

weather.

    (3) NAS cancellations are caused by circumstances within the 

National Aviation System. This term is used to refer to a broad set of 

conditions: weather-non-extreme, airport operations, heavy traffic 

volume, air traffic control, etc.

    (4) Security cancellations may be the result of malfunctioning 

screening or other security equipment or a breech of security that 

causes the evacuation of the airport or individual concourses, or the 

need to re-screen passengers.

    (h) Reporting carriers should use the following causes to identify 

the reasons for delayed flights:



CAUSE

Air Carrier

Extreme weather

NAS

Security

Late arriving aircraft



    (1) Air carrier delays are due to circumstances within the control 

of the air carrier.

    (2) Extreme weather delays are caused by weather conditions (e.g., 

significant meteorological conditions, actual or forecasted at the point 

of departure, en route, or point of arrival that, in accordance with 

applicable regulatory standards and/or in the judgment of the air 

carrier, prevents operation of that flight and/or prevents operations of 

subsequent flights due to the intended aircraft being out of position as 

a result of a prior cancellation or delay attributable to weather.

    (3) NAS delays are caused by circumstances within the National 

Aviation System. This term is used to refer to a broad set of 

conditions: weather-non-extreme, airport operations, heavy traffic 

volume, air traffic control, etc.

    (4) Security delays may be the result of malfunctioning screening or 

other security equipment or a breech of security that causes the 

evacuation of the airport or individual concourses or the need to re-

screen passengers.

    (5) Late arriving aircraft delays are the result of a late incoming 

aircraft from the previous flight.

    (i) When reporting causal codes in paragraph (a) of this section, 

reporting carriers are required to code delays only when the arrival 

delay is 15 minutes or greater; and reporting carriers must report each 

causal component of the reportable delay when the causal component is 5 

minutes or greater.



[Amdt. 234-1, 52 FR 34071, Sept. 9, 1987, as amended by Docket No. 

48524, 59 FR 49797, Sept. 30, 1994; 60 FR 66722, Dec. 26, 1995; 67 FR 

70544, Nov. 25, 2002]