Pubdate: Wed, 02 Aug 2000 Source: Chapel Hill News (NC) Copyright: 2000 Chapel Hill News Contact: (919) 968-4953 Address: P.O. Box 870, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Website: http://www.chapelhillnews.com/ Flying High At Horace Williams If we didn't have cause enough to be concerned about the safety of Horace Williams Airport, the prospect of stoned student pilots flying overhead gives more than pause. UNC Police last week charged Roderick Morris Farb with operating an aircraft while impaired, in connection with a plane crash June 5, 1999, at the airport. Farb at the time was a student pilot soloing in an aircraft owned by the Chapel Hill Flying Club, based at Horace Williams. The charge stemmed from a report by the Federal Aviation Administration, which concluded that "the pilot's impairment by marijuana" contributed to the accident. It's hard to argue with the assertion of Flying Club officers that the apparent drug-related accident was "an unusual circumstance." We certainly hope so. But the charge simply underscores the folly of allowing the airport to be used by student pilots -- stoned or not. Horace Williams is surrounded by five public schools -- with real students -- as well as an expanding complex of neighborhoods, churches and day care centers. The airport has suffered four crashes in the last two years, and the most recent, in May, also involved a Flying Club aircraft. Flying Club officers insist that the club places a premium on safety and, indeed, makes the skies safer by teaching safety. But logic tells us that, whatever the precautions, the presence of the flying club raises the risk of accidents associated with the airport. It places more student pilots in the air over Horace Williams, and they by definition are less safe than experienced pilots. And having the Flying Club located at the airport increases the number of pilots - -- there are 285 club members -- and flights into and out of the airport, which necessarily raises the risk of mishap. We hope James Moeser, when he reports for duty as UNC's new chancellor on Aug. 15, will put a review of the airport operation at the top of his town-gown agenda. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake