Special-use airspace is military or government-controlled airspace adjacent to or near your show site that operates under different rules than standard ATC. The main types an Air Boss needs to recognize: Restricted Areas, Military Operations Areas, Prohibited Areas, and Controlled Firing Areas.
What’s the practical difference for a BAB?
Each type has different access rules and activation schedules. A Restricted Area limits or prohibits flight without coordination with the using agency. An MOA indicates military training may be in progress — it can be active during your show without a NOTAM. Prohibited Areas are absolute: no flight, no exceptions. ControlledFiring Areas are activated by the using agency and don’t require a published NOTAM, so you won’t necessarily see them in your pre-flight planning unless you call and ask.
Why does this matter for performer routing?
Performers flying in from a distance may need to route around active special-use airspace to reach your site. If they file a route that takes them through an active MOA or into a Restricted Area, that’s a problem you want to catch in the briefing, not in the air. You coordinate with military authorities or ATC before you brief performers on their arrival routing.
Is detailed special-use airspace management a BAB requirement?
The full management piece is an SAB-level competency. The BAB requirement is narrower: identify anyspecial-use airspace adjacent to the ASDA, brief performers on it, and consult with your FSDO or ATC if an unresolved conflict exists. You don’t need to manage the MOA — you need to know it’s there and tell your performers.