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British Gliding Association

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The British Gliding Association (BGA) is the governing body for gliding in the United Kingdom. Gliding in the United Kingdom operates through 85 gliding clubs (both civilian and service) which have 2,641 gliders and 8,242 full flying members, though a further 26,000 people have gliding air-experience flights each year.

History

A gliding event first occurred in the UK on a hill at Itford in East Sussex in 1922. The meeting was largely a publicity stunt by the Daily Mail newspaper which had offered a prize of one thousand pounds for the longest flight. However little gliding happened in the UK for several years after until reports of long flights in thunderstorms in Germany appeared in The Aeroplane magazine. Douglas Culver suggested a lunch meeting at the Comedy Restaurant in London on 4 December 1929 for anybody who was interested. Fifty-six people attended and a committee was formed. Shortly after the BGA was founded to start the sport of gliding in the UK. Clubs were soon established throughout the country, many of which disappeared just as quickly, though some still remain today. Initially the BGA had individual members and funded some clubs, but it soon changed to being an association of the clubs with no individual members. Today the clubs pay an annual subscription to the BGA on behalf of their members.

Role

The BGA has the authority to manage gliding in the UK with little involvement by central government. Consequently British glider pilots do not have a licence awarded by the Civil Aviation Authority, the BGA registers gliders, annual inspections of gliders are done by engineers authorised by the BGA, and minor accidents are investigated by the BGA alone.

An elected Executive Committee of twelve are responsible for running the BGA. There are nine sub- committees covering the BGA's functions:

It also publishes a bi-monthly magazine, Sailplane & Gliding.

The seven Scottish gliding clubs whilst remaining under the aegis of the BGA have also formed the Scottish Gliding Association to liaise with the local and national authorities in Scotland.

Staff

The BGA employs a Chief Executive (Peter Stratten) who is based at the Leicester headquarters with five administrative staff. The Association also employs two National Coaches, a Development Officer, a Chief Technical Officer, the editor of the magazine, and a part-time officer who awards the gliding badges of the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale.

Contact

British Gliding Association
Kimberley House
Vaughan Way
Leicester
LE1 4SE

Telephone: +44 (0) 116 253 1051
Fax: +44 (0) 116 251 5939

Email: bga@gliding.co.uk

Major UK gliding clubs

External links

 


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All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

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