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Most opponents of the proposed changes to flights over Western Maine ignore the effects of the changes. These changes will raise the minimum altitude of military flights, and reduce the frequency of military flights.
Why? There are two low-level military training routes in this area, which are one-way corridors where pilots must stay within five miles of the center; some aircraft are permitted to fly as low as 200 feet above ground level along these routes. The proposed change would eliminate these two low-level routes, because certain aircraft are being transferred elsewhere under the Base Re-alignment and Closure Commission (BRAC).
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... Assessment System for Aircraft Noise for military training routes and military operating areas. Guid...
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The Federal Aviation Administration didn't know that Carilion Clinic's new Rockbridge County helipad existed.
It's unlikely that the military knew about the site tucked behind a shopping center on U.S. 11, although pilots from several bases routinely fly training missions nearby.
...Three military training routes have long crisscrossed the skies above Lexington....
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- Custer County Action Association; National Airspace Coalition; Open Space Alliance; the Wilderness Society; Board of Directors of Moffat Consolidated School District No. 2; Custer County Airport Authority; Fremont County Airport; the Board of the Town of Crestone; the Board of County Commissioners of Custer County; the Board of County Commissioners of Fremont County, Colorado; the Board of County Commissioners of Saguache County, Colorado; the Spiritual Life Institute; La Veta Peace of Air Alliance; Crestone Moffat Business Association; Huerfano Valley Citizens Alliance; Rural Alliance for Military Accountability; Wolf Springs Ranches, Inc.; the Historic Pines Ranch; Custer County Bison; Karen G. Woronoff; David S. Woronoff, Petitioners, v. Jane F. Garvey, as Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration; and United States Air Force Major General Paul A. Weaver, Jr., as Director of the Air National Guard, Respondents., 256 F.3d 1024 (10th Cir. 2001)
...The ANG's need for frequent, realistic training exercises using these systems is obvious. ANG pilo... training exercises: Military Training Routes (MTRs), 2 Military Operations Areas (MOAs), 3 an...
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...(4) Minor modifications to Military Operating Areas (MOAs), air-to-ground weapons rangges, and military training routes. (l) The Air Force will involve other feder...
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This study examines the determinants of African military intervention in internal conflicts in sub-Saharan Africa for the period from 1989 to 2001. The unit of analysis is internal conflict. To provide empirical analyses of African military intervention in such conflicts, this study tests five propositions concerning ethnic affinity, internal conflict in the intervening state, expected economic gains, security concern, and common borders. Results show that expected economic gains and common borders are important variables. To explain how the variables of its large-N analyses collectively or separately trigger an intervention, this study includes the Liberian intervention in the Sierra Leonean civil war as a case study.
..., providing bases and supply channels, training insurgents, and deployment of troops to support or... insurgents, and providing bases and supply routes. Direct military intervention includes deployments...
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... Corps programs, Economic assistance, Military assistance, Military education and training, and M..., and extends to the challenging ground routes used to sustain forces in Afghanistan, to the rail...
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... and decisions including those involving military and civilian personnel (for example, recruiting, p... not cover regular activity on established routes or within special use airspace. A2.3.34. Supersoni..., military operating areas) and military training routes for subsonic operations that have a base al...
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... radar performance, can obstruct military training routes, and can interfere with military systems de...
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We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), announce a 12-month finding on a petition to list the Sonoran Desert Area population of bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act). After review of the best available scientific and commercial information, we find that listing the Sonoran Desert Area population of bald eagle does not qualify as a distinct population segment (DPS) and listing the Sonoran Desert Area population of bald eagle is not warranted at this time.
... Area breeding areas are located near military training routes used by the Department of Defense....