Pamela Mae Lacy - Airline Transport Pilot, Dispatcher, Flight Engineer

Pilot + Non-Pilot

MORRISTOWN, NJ • Eastern Region

Airman Information

Pamela Lacy is an FAA-certified pilot, flight engineer, and aviation professional based in Morristown, NJ. Pamela Mae Lacy holds a Airline Transport Pilot certificate with Airplane Multi-Engine Land (AMEL), Airplane Single-Engine Land (ASEL), and Airplane Single-Engine Sea (ASES) ratings. This certificate includes type rating for the Boeing 777 (B-777), authorizing the holder to serve as pilot in command of this aircraft type. The Airline Transport Pilot certificate is the highest level of pilot certification issued by the FAA, authorizing the holder to act as pilot in command of scheduled airline operations and any aircraft for which they hold a type rating. ATP certification requires a minimum of 1,500 hours of total flight time and passing rigorous written and practical examinations. Pamela holds a Flight Engineer certificate with Turbojet rating. This certificate authorizes the holder to serve as a flight engineer on aircraft that require a flight engineer as part of the flight crew. Pamela holds a certificate of type D. Their most recent FAA medical certificate is a First Class medical, valid through June 2025. The FAA airman records for Pamela Lacy are tracked and verified by AviatorDB.

Location

Address
16 Brookfield Way
City, State
Morristown, NJ 07960-5149
Country
USA
FAA Region
Eastern

Medical Certificate

Medical Class
First Class Medical
Medical Date
December 2024
Medical Expires
June 2025

Airline Transport Pilot

Certificate
Airline Transport Pilot
Expiration
None
Ratings
  • Airplane Multiengine Land
  • Airplane Single Engine Land
  • Airplane Single Engine Sea
Type Ratings

Dispatcher

Certificate
Dispatcher
Expiration
None

Flight Engineer

Certificate
Flight Engineer
Expiration
None
Ratings
  • Turbojet Powered

Data Source

Data provided by the FAA Airmen Certification Database. AviatorDB provides a searchable interface to FAA airman certification records, making public data accessible and easy to explore.