There's no need to take it up with anyone...the matter is clearly established presently with the FAA Chief Legal Counsel and by prescedent by the National Transportation Safety Board, and Administrative Law Judges.
Again, weather the FSDO has any issues with it isn't really relevant, as the FSDO has no authority to interpret regulation...and the FAA Chief Legal Counsel has already provided the interpretation that disagrees with the actions of both the FSDO and the DZ. That no enforcement action took place is of no significance...one might as well put a gun to someone's temple and press the trigger, and when it fails to go off, say, "no harm, no foul. Good day." The act itself is not legal, and is not appropriate, and to hold it up on a public forum as a justifiable example is wrong.
Again,you're giving bad advice. The topic here is private pilots receiving compensation, and a private pilot flying for a paying enterprise, weather the private pilot gets paid or not, is not legal. The FAA Chief Legal Counsel stated that the position of the FAA (and by default, the FAA Adminstrator) is not to determine who is logging time and who is not, for compensation. If the jumpers paid for the training (and the ride to altitude...it's not a freebee, and it's not taking place if the jumpers don't jump), then the flight is being made for compensation or hire. Period. End of story.
That the private pilot makes no money on the affair is not relevant. That the private pilot doesn't get compensated, is not relevant. Even if the private pilot doesn't log the time, the flight still isn't legal.
(a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) through (g) of this section, no person who holds a private pilot certificate may act as pilot in command of an aircraft that is carrying passengers or property for compensation or hire; nor may that person, for compensation or hire, act as pilot in command of an aircraft.
A private pilot may not act as PIC of an aircraft that is carrying passengers (or property) for compensation or hire. Paying passengers who have purchased jump instruction and arranged for instructors to jump with them, instructors who are being paid and by default who are paying (or whose ride is paid) for the airplane ride to altitude, need not compensate the pilot to violate 14 CFR 61.113(a). Further, the parachute equipment, containers, reserves, mains, harnesses...are rented gear, being flown to altitude for use, and in addition to the carriage of persons for hire, one is carrying property for hire...property which has no common purpose with the pilot's being there.
It's for this very purpose that the case citation in Administrator v. Rawlins, which I've provided you and referenced twice previously now, was decided. You needn't concern yourself with what the locals at the FSDO think or thought. The matter has been decided and settled, under almost identical circumstances to what you describe, at much higher levels within the Adminsitration. Further, the matter is fairly cut and dried, as well as decided.
Attempting to promote that idea here could cause someone foolish enough to believe you, or believe the idiot who posted that ad on ebay, to do something that might cause him or her to lose their pilot certificate. For the Sunday flyer, not big deal...a few days reprieve from the expense of flying. But for someone who intends to go on to build a career, a monumental damage to their future employability, all because you intend to defend a dead and foolish point based on the illegal actions of a rural skydiving club. Not a good stand to take.
If the flight time is considered compensation, that is due to articulation.
No, it's due to legal interpretation at the highest levels within the FAA, as well as case law. That aside, the matter still violates regulation, regardless of weather the private pilot is compensated, as we have already seen...if the flight is for compensation or hire, or if the aircraft carries passengers or property for compensation or hire, without any regard to the time the pilot logs or pay, renumeration, compensation, or even a warm feeling in his belly...the flight violates the tenets of 61.113. Period.
One, I didn't hire the private pilots who acted as pilots for the club.
What has that to do with the price of tea in China? Someone hired them, and you appear to be holding up their hiring and employment as pilots to be a legitimate act blessed by the FAA, when in fact it is not.
Two, the ones we had while I was there, didn't stay long.
Aah, so it was wrong, but it's made less wrong because they didn't do it for very long. Quite logical. Good grief.
Why would a "club member" need to "log time"?
Why would a burmese python need to knit burlap? Why would a housebrick need to eat Thai? Why would a donkey wear a kilt? What does being a "club member" have to do with "logging time?"
Pilots log time. Private pilots log time. Private pilots "build time" toward higher certification and ratings. The logging of that time has been held repeatedly to represent compensation in light of 61.113, and has been used repeatedly in enforcement action against private pilots. Club member or not. Being a member of the "club" doesn't alleviate the private pilot from the limitations of his certificate, or the need, desire, or value of logging flight time, and we have already seen that the FAA does not feel it incumbent to determine who does and who does not gain value from logging time...the application is a blanket one...the time is seen as having value, weather the individual sees it that way or not, and it's applied that way in enforcement action, by legal interpretation, and in case law.
However, weather the private pilot logs the time or not isn't necessary to indict...if the passengers on the flight have paid for themselves to be instructed and to receive a parachute jump, if they've rented the equipment, if they're employing the jumpmasters and instructors and photographers riding to altitude with them, "club" or not, then they are being carried for compensation or hire, and a private pilot may not be pilot in command of that flight, in accordance with 61.113. While the logging of flight time may certainly be used to convict, it isn't necessary. The flight is illegal from the outset. With respect to sealing fate during enforcement proceedings and the appeal process, adding the logging of flight time to the matter is only icing on the administrative cake.
I think the "logging time" thing is the issue here.
It's certainly *part* of the issue, isn't it?
It is, but only part. Now, getting back to your original comments, seeing as you want this to be an issue...
Also, they made it clear that as long as the private pilot was a memeber of the club, they could receive club credits for performing a club function. Just like the tandem jump master, the rigger, the parachute packer and the manifest lady.
There's a word for this. It's called COMPENSATION!!!
You don't always have to be a commercial pilot...to do things that "look" commercial in nature.
Yes, you really do.
I questioned them on the practice and the board of directors let me know that they had been in touch with FSDO on this.
So this is second hand information. Sort of like asking someone else if they preflighted your aircraft, or being asked to do something illegal and then being told "it's okay, I got permission for you." We call that an assumption, and it's not a healthy thing in aviation. You're passing on advice based on what you were told, second hand. Why?
Here's the rub...even though we did students that paid for skydiving instruction, the plane ride was viewed as incidental to making a skydive. The jumpers weren't paying for a plane ride.
I think we've fairly well established that as a falsehood...your board of directors might think otherwise, but the FAA Administrator and the NTSB disagree. Go figure.