Civil Aviation Safety Authority

Civil Aviation Safety Authority

Aviation House, headquarters of CASA
Agency overview
Formed 6 July 1995
Preceding Agency

Civil Aviation Authority

Department of Aviation
Jurisdiction Australian Civil Aviation
Headquarters Woden, Australian Capital Territory
Agency executive Mark Skidmore, Director of Aviation Safety
Parent agency Department of Infrastructure and Transport
Website Official website


The Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) is the Australian national aviation authority (NAA), the government statutory authority responsible for the regulation of civil aviation.

History

Established on 6 July 1995 when the air safety functions of the former Civil Aviation Authority of Australia were separated from its other regulatory function of air traffic control (which went to Airservices Australia).

In March 2015, the Australian Labor Party voted in the Senate to disallow a regulation introduced by the CASA to improve safety arrangements in aviation maintenance. [1]

Role

The Civil Aviation Safety Authority uses the Australian Civil Aviation Ensign

CASA licences pilots, ground crew, aircraft and airfield operators; and is responsible for enforcing safety requirements under the Commonwealth Civil Aviation Act 1988 and the Air Navigation Act 1920. Although a corporate body distinct from the Australian Government, CASA is responsible to the Federal Minister for Infrastructure and Transport.[2]

CASA was established,[3] and its functions are defined, by the Civil Aviation Act 1988. Those functions include conducting the safety regulation of:[4]

CASA must regard the safety of air navigation as the most important consideration.[5]

References

  1. "Labor shoots down aviation safety regulation".
  2. CASA - About Us
  3. Civil Aviation Act 1988 (Cth) s 8
  4. Civil Aviation Act 1988 (Cth) s 9
  5. Civil Aviation Act 1988 (Cth) s 9a

External links