January 1, 1991, Phil Boyer took the controls of AOPA US and IAOPA.
December 31, 2008, some days after his 68th birthday, he leaves the left
seat of the organisation and takes off for his retirement. The 18 years
of Phil's presidency bear many milestones of successful membership
development and solutions for hard challenges threatening the General
Aviation community like product liability, airport closures,
restrictions after 9/11, avgas availability, new technologies and
regulations.
One of the hallmarks of Phil's tenure is to listen to the pilot members
and above all else to serve their needs. "All I did was to translate as
well as I could their concerns into actionable items for the
organisation. This pervades anything we do," he described his credo. And
it worked perfectly: membership in the USA went up from 300'000 to
415'000 and gathers 70 percent of the US pilots, the Airport Support
Network, created 12 years ago, has volunteers at nearly 2000 airports,
the AOPA Pilot magazine is now the largest aviation magazine in the
world, The Be-A-Pilot programme increased the number of student starts
in the USA remarkably, the next promising initiative Let's Go Flying was
started a month ago and - not to forget - the number of IAOPA affiliates
worldwide doubled to 66 actually.
1988 Phil and his wife Lois crossed the Atlantic for the first time in
their own pressurised Cessna 340 and flew across Europe. This experience
turned out to be the key for Phil to understand the specific problems
and challenges GA in Europe occurs since the EU and its regulatory
bodies try to harmonise the rules for civil aviation. Three years later,
when he took the controls of IAOPA, he had his first official contacts
with high level EU representatives of aviation. Since then IAOPA (EUR),
the common board of 33 affiliated organisations on the old continent and
around the Mediterranean, sharpened its profile and increased its
efforts to maintain GA's freedom of flight in the unnecessarily
complicated and partly saturated airspace structure in the skies of
Europe. Phil and the HQ quickly recognised: if Europe sneezes, the world
will catch a cold. They supported and realised many actions that led to
better understanding and withdrawal of disproportionate and
discriminatory requirements. Also the Agenda for a sustainable future of
General Aviation and Business Aviation in Europe, published by the EU
Commission in January 2008, respected and implemented many inputs from
IAOPA.
Nine IAOPA World Assemblies (WA) he chaired around the globe since 1992
passed more than one hundred resolutions to pave the way for IAOPA
proposals on future aviation technology, regulations and SARPS in the
palm of ICAO, EASA, ECAC, Eurocontrol and FAA. With his competence and
leadership Phil Boyer won the admiration of all who attended WA and the
respect of the administration and industry on both sides of the Atlantic
for our projects. His service and unwavering determination to improve
General Aviation worldwide merit our highest gratitude.
Phil Boyer, the leader, pilot in command and friend climbs out for his
retirement. Wherever he lands he will find other passionate causes and
friends who know what they owe him: gratitude for a big peace of freedom
of flight. Thank you Phil and many happy landings wherever you touch the
ground.
Ruedi Gerber IAOPA Senior Vice President for the European Region
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