UPDATED
Los Angeles speedflyer Dave Pearson was killed in a spiral dive on Tuesday.
http://www.pe.com/articles/jacinto-7529 ... crash.html
Another confirmed kill for US paragliding.
What's the 2014 count, now?
Free flight PG
1) Dave Pearson (CA) spiral dive
2) Roland Carter (UT) collapse
3) Paul Macdonald (HI) powerlines
4) David Norwood, USHPA PG Safety Co-Chairman (OR) collapse
5) Bud Wruck of TX (Slovenia) collapse
6) Kevin Smith (CO) collapse
7) Eric Hill (UT) collapse
[Hang gliders can fly into powerlines, too. But if any of the other guys had been flying hang gliders, they'd still be alive.]
Power PG
8) Jeffrey Carpenter, USHPA Observer (IL)
9) Allen Spear (UT)
10) Aldaro Etcheverry (MA)
11) Eric Giles (OH)
12) Jeff Toll (VI)
This is sick.
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It was a tremendous learning experience for me to mount gliders on vehicles and try to break them at various angles of attack - and backwards! This mandate for empirical testing is what made the USHGA a responsible and noteworthy organization that placed the safety of its members ahead of product sales. The USHGA demonstrated admirable integrity in refusing to endorse gliders that did not pass USHGMA certification. The USHGA lost potential income but placed itself squarely before its membership as an organization that cared about safety and recognized that the commercial future of the sport depended on manufacturers being required to supply only structurally and aerodynamically competent aircraft to the general public. This was the USHGA's finest hour.
Unfortunately, a new breed of USHGA directors, led by Russ Locke, forgot all about aerodynamic integrity when paragliders arrived on the scene. After their success with hang gliding, followed by guiding the ultralight movement toward self-regulation and airframe safety, the USHGA somehow thought it could do the same thing with paragliders. This did not turn out to be the case because it required the vital function of the airframe to be relegated to the level of meaninglessness. Lured by a lucrative growth and income opportunity, the organization irresponsibly mutated into a free flight advocacy organization that suddenly accepted a newly spiraling accident rate over which it had no control. Using rationalizations such as insurance, site preservation, lobbying and, most notably, "It wasn't me!,” the new USHGPA began raking in membership dough from the ranks of paraglider pilots to justify its existence. The old USHGA was dead.