Definition
A radio station at a nontowered airport, operated by a private party rather than the FAA or another government agency, that transmits airport advisory information to arriving and departing aircraft on a published common frequency. The operator is not an air traffic controller and does not issue clearances or control instructions; the station provides advisories such as known traffic, wind, favored runway, and field conditions to assist pilots in making their own decisions.
Plain English
A radio service at an airport without a control tower, run by a private operator (often the fixed base operator), that gives pilots helpful information like wind, runway in use, and known traffic. They share what they know — they do not control the traffic.
Context Anchor
Seen in nontowered airport operations, where pilots may call a local radio station for airport information before landing or while moving on the ground.
Derivation
‘Nongovernment’ simply means not run by a government agency. The phrase exists to make clear that although someone is on the radio giving airport information, they are not FAA personnel and have no controlling authority.
Why Pilots Care
Pilots rely on these stations for airport advisories, traffic information, and to announce their position and intentions when no control tower exists.
Intuition Check
Do not assume “station” means a control tower or an FAA service. In this term, it means a local radio communication point that provides information, not control.
Example Sentence 1
On approach to the nontowered airport, the pilot called the nongovernment air/ground radio communication station and received a wind and runway advisory before joining the pattern.
Example Sentence 2
Before taxiing, the student announced intentions over the nongovernment air/ground radio communication station frequency.