Over Billing

Pitch Link

Member
Sep 22, 2003
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Good Day,
I have a quick question for all of you experienced hands out there. I have recently made a move to a new company and am enjoying it very much. However I have been advised that it is an un written policy to overbill clients at least 10% of the daily totals. At my former company we were told that flight time and air time should be the same. This was my first flying position and from what I was told it was the honest way to operate. Now I have an ops manager who insists I "add a little extra for operational expenses". Am I breaking the law? Could I get in trouble? What if the customer finds out? I dont want to be frowned on by the company,but I have only ever written the same times in the log book. Is it standard practice for this business? A little help from the wise would be appreciated. Thanks.
 
we bill what we fly based on the point system. However our minimum of .2 per start regardless of the flight time is the only time we "overbill" You could build up some extra time on the bill doing lots of 3 minute hops, and only the actual flt time goes in the AC logbook. Other than that its fair billing as far as I'm concerned. Why bite the hand that feeds?
 
"add a little extra for operational expenses"

Never do that, it will catch up to you/your company eventually and rest assured if the company is challenged about it, you will likely get the blame, not them.

Some customers are billed strictly on air time - Hobbs Meter - collective up, normally heli-skiing is one like that.

Other customers are billed on the time the machine is running, including short stops - flight time, but that is known by the customer and agreed upon in the contract.

If you are using the clock, punch it when you are about to lift off, then punch it after you land and begin your timed shutdown. That is what you bill, NOT 10% more.

Either way, other than possibly a .2 for a start like rainman said, no billing should exceed flight time and in my experience is generally the air time. This is dependant on the customer, type of flying and company you work for.

Hope that's not more confusing, be honest with the billing and be able to justify whats on the bill with whats in your flight notebook. Customers & Mother Of Terror have been known to audit company's Journey Logs, flight tickets etc when they think a fraud is occurring.
 
Pitch Link,

If it's not in writing somewhere, ie Ops Manual or in the contract, you will be the one to hang for any "irregularities" (sp?).
 
In most companies I've been in, Flight time is the time at the controls, which is what the client is billed and what goes in your log book, and air time is skids off, which is what goes in the tech log, thus giving the company a fair enough edge - anything else is cheating, IMHO. I've never been asked to do anything unwritten, such as this, though.

Phil
 
Just goes to show you, the customer might think he's getting a hell of a deal when an operator gives him a really cheap rate but he ends up paying the same anyways cause the only way for that operator to make ends meet is to overbill!!!!
Overbilling sucks and it's no different from outright lying or defrauding the customer.
Tell your ops manager if he needs to overbill to cover "operational expenses", he should charge a decent tariff for his helicopter in the first place instead of putting you in a difficult position!
:down:
 
if you're turnin' and burnin'..............

you're earning............. :up:


i saw a conair birddog and 4 firecats launch from cyxx yesterday but don't know where to......

anyone?
 
I don't have an AIP infront of me, but the last time I looked "Flight Time" is what goes in the Pilots Log Book.

"Air Time" is defined as the cost to operate the "aircraft" and is charged to the customer and is put against the aircraft engine(s) and airframe time in the log book.

THIS METHOD OF BILLING AND RECORDING ONLY APPLIES TO AIRCRAFT FLYING AT AN "HOURLY RATE".

Fixed wing using a fixed mileage charge are converted to "mph" and hourly rate of "fixed Air Time" for log book entries.

i.e. Chicago "O'Hare" B747 waits 30min for take-off to New York.
Cost per hour of the B747 is $7000/per hr.

Distance is 2000 miles @ 650 mph = 3.08hrs.

New York, taxi and docking time add 15min.

Total ground time is (45 min) which is called "Flight Time" goes in the pilots log book, plus "Air Time"

Total "Air Time" 3.08hrs goes against aircraft airframe and engines.

Rates based on mileage are fixed, whereas hourly rates are from skids/wheels up to skids/wheels down.

Short hops in helicopters with stops of less than twenty minutes should be considered continuious flights until the final stop.

If you are operating fixed wing ground time "i.e." taxi waiting for take-off clearance etc., is not chargeable nor is it entered in the aircraft log book. Chargeable time is wheels up to wheels down, even if charges are on an hourly rate.

Clear as mudd, eh?
 
Another operater in my area was caught over billing.It only took about three years before some smart bean counter for the customer figured out that there bills for going to the same place were much higher than ours.The customer went back three years to compare all the bills with ours.The shady operater was forced to pay back thousands to the customer.Now they fly only with us...What goes around comes around..I loath shady operaters.Hope your not with one.If I was on a job with onother operater and knew they were overbilling Id tell the customer in a heartbeat.
Cheers Mini.......
 
Wasn't over billing main reason that SEBJ put tachographs in all the helicopters which recorded aircraft flight time ( monitored N1 ) ?

:elvis: :elvis: :shock: :shock: :elvis:
 
did anyone hear of a certain operator from the high level area, who was caught (while on lunch) during a fire a few years ago, with the battery switch on, and the collective half way up...sitting so nicely at the helipad generating him some well earned revenue??? :shock:
 
Magseal, I work in High Level but I haven't heard of anything like that!! Very curious to see who it (allegedly) was though.
PM me with the company name and I'll poke around and see what kind of dirt I can find!
What's also interesting is that eventhough forestry demands all operators have a collective activated Hobbs meter, they never look at them.
I don't remember the last time any customer (including forestry) checked the hobbs.
I think if you do a good honest job and don't try to screw anybody (figuratively speaking), the customers will generally accept the time given as correct.
It's too bad a few bad apples have to ruin it for the rest of us!!
 
Helidude, what if the company is the one you're working for?

If you're at one of the bigger ones, you need not worry.

It was at least 3-4 years ago if I remember right.
 
I can assure you it wasn't us, I 've worked here since 2000 and I would've heard about something like that since we are a small operator.
If you did hear something like that about us, I would want to know even more so I can get to the bottom of it! (assuming it's not just another "my sister's cousin's brother's boyfriend said...." kind of rumor!!)
 
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