Search Results for keywords:"Abbotsford Airport"

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Search Results: keywords:"Abbotsford Airport"

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:89 FR 99700
    Reading Time:about 6 minutes

    The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has issued a final rule amending the legal descriptions for the Class D and E airspace areas near Abbotsford Airport in British Columbia. This modification updates the administrative details without altering the airspace boundaries or operating requirements. The changes involve correcting the geographic location references and aligning them with FAA records. As these adjustments are administrative and routine, the rule doesn't have significant economic or environmental impacts.

    Simple Explanation

    The FAA made some changes to the paperwork about the airspace around Abbotsford Airport in Canada, but nothing big is changing in the sky. They just fixed some address details in their files.

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:90 FR 9386
    Reading Time:about 2 minutes

    The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has made corrections to a rule initially published on December 11, 2024, regarding airspace at Abbotsford Airport in British Columbia. The correction involves changing the legal description of Class D airspace by correcting an error related to the geographic location for air navigation, which has been updated from Vancouver VORTAC to "Point in Space B." These changes will become effective on February 20, 2025.

    Simple Explanation

    The airplane bosses changed some words to fix a mistake about where planes can fly around Abbotsford Airport, so pilots get the right directions and don't get confused. They made this fix because they noticed a little mix-up in the original flying maps.