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CIVIL AIR SEARCH AND RESCUE ASSOCIATION

CIVIL AIR SEARCH AND RESCUE ASSOCIATION. PILOT TRAINING COURSE Phase 1 The CASARA Pilot. THE CASARA PILOT. Summary of Topics. Introduction to CASARA Experience Requirements Training Requirements Duties and Responsibilities. Background Info REF: National SAR Manual Chap 1.

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CIVIL AIR SEARCH AND RESCUE ASSOCIATION

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  1. CIVIL AIR SEARCH AND RESCUE ASSOCIATION PILOT TRAINING COURSE Phase 1 The CASARA Pilot

  2. THE CASARA PILOT Summary of Topics • Introduction to CASARA • Experience Requirements • Training Requirements • Duties and Responsibilities

  3. Background InfoREF: National SAR Manual Chap 1 • In 1976 the Gov’t. of Canada made the Minister of Defence the ‘Lead Minister for Search and Rescue’ (LM-SAR). (Confirmed by Cabinet again in 1982 and 1986) • The Department of National Defence (DND) became the legally responsible agency to handle Air SAR incidents • Has operational command of allDND SAR assets • Staffs all JRCC with assistance of Cdn Coast Guard • Staffs and controls the SARSAT CMCC • Is the interface between CASARA and DND at the Operational level • Provides ground search parties for Air and Marine incidents

  4. Background Info (con’t.) • Once the Military became legally responsible, others were not permitted to do certain SAR missions unless they followed proper and legally acceptable procedures • Gov’t of Canada directed National SAR Program (NSP) be established in 1986 • National SAR Secretariat (NSS) was established to provide one umbrella for SAR coordination and to facilitate efficient use of SAR resources • Interdepartmental Committee on Search And Rescue (ICSAR) also established

  5. CASARA • In 1986 CASARA was established • It is a National Non-Profit Corporation • Initially DND and Transport Canada each funded CASARA with $400,000 • It was deemed a requirement that they have a Standard of Operations and that they follow the protocols set out in appropriate publications • The Air Force trained the CASARA members for a couple years

  6. CASARA • With training complete, CASARA was to maintain their Operational status, and the Air Force assumed the role of Evaluating every 18 months (not more than 24months) • DND is no longer responsible for hands on training • Casara Liaison Officerpositions were established at most SAR Squadrons

  7. CASARA EXECUTIVE President Vp Trng/Ops VP Fin/Admin VP Plans/Equip Elected from within the Board of Directors National Administrator NATIONAL BOARD OF DIRECTORS Contracted by the Board of Directors One Director Elected/Appointed from Each Member Organization Member Organization Executive Member Organization Director Deputy Director Secretary Treasurer Elected / Appointed from Member Organization Executives Zone Executive Commander, Deputy Commander Secretary Treasurer Training, Safety Elected/Appointed from the Zone Membership Zone General Membership

  8. CASARA • CASARA MISSION STATEMENT The mission of the Civil Air Search and Rescue Association (CASARA) is to support Canada’s Search and Rescue (SAR) program and to promote aviation safety.

  9. CASARA • CASARA VISION STATEMENT The Civil Air Search And Rescue Association (CASARA) will continue to evolve and support the Canadian Search and Rescue (SAR) and aviation safety program through leadership, continuous training of its volunteers and education of the general aviation community.

  10. CASARA • Over time, CASARA has developed to become a very important and integral part of the National SAR Program • Funding is now in the vicinity of $2.5 million per year. Transport Canada funding has remained at $400,000 per year level. DND provides the remaining portion • Contribution Agreements (funding) are generally for five years at a time

  11. CASARA • Most use privately owned aircraft and most are four place aircraft on wheels • Some Zones do have twin engine a/c • Some Zones have IFR capable pilots • Some Zones have access to a/c on floats and skis • CASARA is not permitted to use helicopters • CASARA uses only aircraft with a Normal Certificate of Airworthiness

  12. CASARA • There are four ‘certified’ positions within CASARA. These are: • Search Coordinator • Pilot • Navigator • Spotter • A typical flight crew consists of: • One Pilot • One Navigator • Two Spotters • Flight crew members have a minimum mandatory currency requirement each year

  13. SAR Regions

  14. Pilot Qualification Standards • Age 18 years • A private pilot's license with not less than 150 hours pilot‑in‑command time and not less than 50 hours on single‑pilot non‑high performance single‑engine land airplanes • A current Medical Certificate and Radio License • Pilot's capability must be well known by authorized representatives of the Member Organization • A new prospective CASARA pilot must meet CASARA standards of an assessment / evaluation flight with a CASARA designated pilot within the previous 3 months prior to making application to CASARA as a CASARA pilot

  15. Pilot Qualification Standards (cont’d) • Pilots flying light piston multi-engine aircraft, in addition to the single engine requirements, must have a minimum 100 hours of multi-engine time, with not less than 10 hours on make and model and 1000 hours total time • For every additional 100 hours of multi-engine time, total time can be reduced by 100 hours • Pilots flying retractable gear aircraft must have all single engine aircraft requirements including a minimum of 250 hours total time, with not less than 25 hours on retractable gear aircraft • Pilots flying float equipped aircraft must have all single engine aircraft requirements including 100 hours total time on floats with 5 hours on floats within the last 90 days

  16. Pilot Qualification Standards (cont’d) • Pilots flying amphibious aircraft must have all single engine aircraft requirements including 200 hours total time – 100 hours float time of which 50 hours must be on amphibious aircraft with 5 hours on amphibious aircraft within the last 90 days • Pilots flying ski-equipped aircraft must have all single engine aircraft requirements including 50 hours total time on ski-equipped aircraft

  17. Pilot Annual Currency Standards 1. 3 hours of academic training 2. a minimum of 24 hours flying as PIC, made up of - 6 flights of not less than 1 hour each that must be CASARA SAR flying, (training or actual), and  - the remainder can be actual SAR operations, CASARA SAR training, or “other” flying 3. 3 ELT homings, at least one must be an aural null 4. 4 search patterns appropriate to your area of operation Note: These are minimum requirements.

  18. Duties and Responsibilities The CASARA Pilot must: 1. attend all pre flight and post flight briefings • confirm weather is suitable for safe operations • preflight the aircraft, confirm fuel status, documentation correct, cargo secure, ELT homer attached and operating correctly 4. complete a crew safety briefing 5. be responsible for the safe operation of the aircraft

  19. Duties and Responsibilities (cont’d) The CASARA Pilot must: 6. have an understanding of the navigator’s planning • confirm Bingo Time with the navigator 8. complete a Weight and Balance 9. complete a Nav Canada Flight Plan/Flight Itinerary based on the navigator’s information 10. fly the aircraft accurately based on the directions of the navigator 11. keep a good lookout for other aircraft and obstacles

  20. Duties and Responsibilities (cont’d) The CASARA Pilot must: 12. identify the scanning range to the spotters 13. will do all or most of the aircraft radio communications 14. assist the navigator in preparing the NOCL message

  21. The CASARA Pilot End of Phase 1

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