jliltd wrote:I downloaded the forms and filled them out and sent them in per the instructions. 5 months later contacted by an engineer at Fort Worth ADO via email. Never talked on the phone once. Showed up on Sectional 6 months later.
Naturally once I got my identifier ATC kept saying it wasn't any good as it was in their system as a hospital heliport in Houston (800 miles away). Apparently the FAA recycles airport identifiers. Months after ForeFlight, Garmin, iFly and the rest had the identifier correct on the chart my local approach controllers still showed it in Houston. Go figure the FAA itself would have data more obsolete than the private sector. I even talked to ATC when I was over top of my strip so they could mark it on their chart.
Something similar exists with the La Garita Ranch airstrip. It is a recycled identifier from a couple of years ago or so, so older charts will show 5CO6 somewhere else, but current FAA sectionals show it where it is. When I flew there 2 weeks ago, I was using flight following and miraculously stayed on Denver Center's radar well into the San Luis Valley. To make it simple, when I first asked for flight following right after taking off from KGXY, I just said I was flying to Alamosa via Pueblo and GOSIP, then over La Veta Pass to Alamosa. So when ATC said that there was no traffic visible between where I was and Alamosa and to squawk VFR, I told her that I was actually going to 5CO6, roughly 30 miles northwest of Alamosa. She couldn't find it on their charts at Center at all. I stayed with her, and about 12 miles from 5CO6, a male voice came on and said that there was no traffic between me and La Garita and to squawk VFR, so I gathered that in the interim, they'd found it.
In any event, it's apparent that ATC doesn't always have all of the lesser known airports on their charts--maybe we should have a GPS approach created for La Garita to guarantee it would be on their charts!

Cary