Permit First Issue
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Permit First Issue
Is it normal for the paperwork for a permit to fly to lie with the LAA for over a month with no feedback?
- Gerry Holland
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 11:00 am
- Location: White Ox Mead, Bath, Somerset
Thanks Gerry,
Being new to the LAA and finding my feet with aircraft permitting and inspection I have been a bit worried about the time being taken to process.
All the paperwork and requests made have been fully completed, seeing other people get ( admittedly renewals) permits returned within 2-5 days does make the nerves jangle.
If there was or is a problem for such an extensive delay I would have thought getting in touch with the customer to explain the whys and wherefores etc would be done as a matter of course.
Not getting a warm and fuzzy feeling at the moment. I have limited time at home due to work commitments and hope to make best use of it enjoying my new hobby. Now looks like I will be on a paperchase.
Being new to the LAA and finding my feet with aircraft permitting and inspection I have been a bit worried about the time being taken to process.
All the paperwork and requests made have been fully completed, seeing other people get ( admittedly renewals) permits returned within 2-5 days does make the nerves jangle.
If there was or is a problem for such an extensive delay I would have thought getting in touch with the customer to explain the whys and wherefores etc would be done as a matter of course.
Not getting a warm and fuzzy feeling at the moment. I have limited time at home due to work commitments and hope to make best use of it enjoying my new hobby. Now looks like I will be on a paperchase.
037948
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- Joined: Mon Jan 07, 2008 4:06 pm
- Location: Caithness
- Gerry Holland
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 11:00 am
- Location: White Ox Mead, Bath, Somerset
Make that call. Unless you are in dialogue already with some communication rules in place you will wait a long time before contact to you is made. The LAA are busy but the speed of Renewals which is excellent cannot be matched or indicative of the speed of initial Permit. The CAA are in this loop too so paperwork trail is extended. Call this afternoon with Registration Details and Membership No. and I'm sure you will be heartened by response and things will move forward.
Regards
Gerry
Regards
Gerry
028138
Morning,
Bill yes as a group we know the paperwork was with LAA ( registered delivery) but inspector was about to go on a short holiday but that was over a month ago now 19th April.
I was expecting a turnaround of 14 days as opposed to a renewal of 2-5 days, so add a week in for the holiday and I thought I would hear something by week 3.
Is it that this could be the busy period a greater amount of new builds completed through the winter? Which is a good thing.
I'll give a call this afternoon if comms are working. I'll let you know the outcome.
Bill yes as a group we know the paperwork was with LAA ( registered delivery) but inspector was about to go on a short holiday but that was over a month ago now 19th April.
I was expecting a turnaround of 14 days as opposed to a renewal of 2-5 days, so add a week in for the holiday and I thought I would hear something by week 3.
Is it that this could be the busy period a greater amount of new builds completed through the winter? Which is a good thing.
I'll give a call this afternoon if comms are working. I'll let you know the outcome.
037948
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- Posts: 63
- Joined: Fri Jul 17, 2009 3:39 pm
the CAA loop is usually a few days. You can see when they have done their bit as the permit validity dates will appear on G-INFO. Last time I was in that situation it still took 12 days to go back through the LAA and on to me. That included two weekends and a bank holiday.
There may be a backlog at the CAA at the moment. They recently asked for insurance verification which I promptly email them 11 days before it expired. By the time they came to review it it had expired and they then chased my broker to get a copy of the renewed policy.
Don't know if permit issue is in the same queue as insurance but........
I too am waiting on another first permit but I am not holding my breath.
Rans6....
There may be a backlog at the CAA at the moment. They recently asked for insurance verification which I promptly email them 11 days before it expired. By the time they came to review it it had expired and they then chased my broker to get a copy of the renewed policy.
Don't know if permit issue is in the same queue as insurance but........
I too am waiting on another first permit but I am not holding my breath.
Rans6....
Andrew Cattell
Rans S6 Microlight.
Rans S6 Microlight.
- mikehallam
- Posts: 576
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- Location: West Sussex
- Contact:
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- Posts: 203
- Joined: Thu Jun 19, 2008 8:35 pm
Have you checked G-INFO? I can see my papers arrived there on the 19th and are expected to be dealt with tomorrow.rans6andrew wrote:
I too am waiting on another first permit but I am not holding my breath.
I'm quite pleased, as the results of the test flying were received by LAA Engineering on the 10th, and there was a slight delay due to a non-compliant transponder test.
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- Posts: 63
- Joined: Fri Jul 17, 2009 3:39 pm
I think the process at the LAA involves more than one person but they don't work on each application "together". My application was "being looked at" last Monday, I was informed by email from FD. When I phoned yesterday one of the engineering admin staff told me it was with JV, at the top of his pile and would be looked at next. The info today, by email, is that it is all signed up and will go to the CAA in electronic form this afternoon.
After they took 27 days to verify my insurance I emailed the CAA registrations department to ask if the permit turnaround was in the same queue as the insurance verifications......
Their answer was evasive to the point that I have no idea how long it might take them to deal with my permit......
And then it has to go back to the LAA and work it's way back to the top of someones in-tray......
I might have it in time for Spamfield.......
I am keeping my old Rans ready to stand in, I really don't want to be going to the IOW by ferry.
Rans6...
After they took 27 days to verify my insurance I emailed the CAA registrations department to ask if the permit turnaround was in the same queue as the insurance verifications......
Their answer was evasive to the point that I have no idea how long it might take them to deal with my permit......
And then it has to go back to the LAA and work it's way back to the top of someones in-tray......
I might have it in time for Spamfield.......
I am keeping my old Rans ready to stand in, I really don't want to be going to the IOW by ferry.
Rans6...
Andrew Cattell
Rans S6 Microlight.
Rans S6 Microlight.
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- Posts: 1271
- Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2008 8:28 pm
- Location: Sheerness Kent
I think Ron that this thread has principally been about first issue Permits. By their very nature they demand a deal more work than a typical renewal, which 99% of our members will agree they get a very fast turnaround of, usually a couple of days provided there are no anomolies with either the aircraft or the paperwork.
I can honestly say that over the years I have followed up a good many complaints over delays, and invariably I find that I only ever get half the story. The delays are generally (but I agree not always) caused because people do not fill out the paperwork correctly, or fail to provide all the required information, and then when they are asked for it it is they who drag their heels in providing it. Ergo the permit takes a couple of months and it is, of course, nobody's fault but the LAA's.
There's always a fine balance between service levels and cost, I believe we have a reasonable balance but accept there will always be the odd glitch in the system, we are all human after all. We could of course hike the permit fees by £30 and employ another engineer, but I'm not so sure that would be universally popular. Worth considering when you talk about costs and service levels is that a CAA Permit for a two seat gyro cost £400, so our two day turnaround for less than half that for a two seat aeroplane doesn't look too sad at all.
I hope our IT and web upgrades will enable on-line status tracking of a number of Engineering functions before too long, I would be the first to agree we are well behind the drag curve in getting such systems in place, but as has been said here before, we are on the case and will be making radical changes and improvements in due course.
I can honestly say that over the years I have followed up a good many complaints over delays, and invariably I find that I only ever get half the story. The delays are generally (but I agree not always) caused because people do not fill out the paperwork correctly, or fail to provide all the required information, and then when they are asked for it it is they who drag their heels in providing it. Ergo the permit takes a couple of months and it is, of course, nobody's fault but the LAA's.
There's always a fine balance between service levels and cost, I believe we have a reasonable balance but accept there will always be the odd glitch in the system, we are all human after all. We could of course hike the permit fees by £30 and employ another engineer, but I'm not so sure that would be universally popular. Worth considering when you talk about costs and service levels is that a CAA Permit for a two seat gyro cost £400, so our two day turnaround for less than half that for a two seat aeroplane doesn't look too sad at all.
I hope our IT and web upgrades will enable on-line status tracking of a number of Engineering functions before too long, I would be the first to agree we are well behind the drag curve in getting such systems in place, but as has been said here before, we are on the case and will be making radical changes and improvements in due course.