Very Sad, but Probably a correct rumor. The leading cause of fatalities in Alaska is controlled flight into terrain. Mainly part 135 carriers scud running because the FAA doesn't allow them to fly IFR in single piston planes. I know a couple years ago the Alaskan Airmans Association was lobbying for an alaskan exemption to that rule.
Phil
There are Alaskan exemptions to so many rules. Honestly, most of these 135 carriers would still go VFR unless the regulations *required* them to go IFR. There are many airports still that don't have instrument approaches anyway, and even these airports that do, the 135 guys get in and out at weather at or below what you could get in with IFR anyway many times (not always, but many times). I've been stuck on the ground in Nome before due to weather that wouldn't have let us back into Nome if we'd left... and the 135 guys were going in and out as if nothing was different. Granted, the ILS was OTS, but the GPS approaches don't keep you *that* high.
Not all 135 aircraft are single engine pistons either. You'll see twins doing the same thing. They are allowed to go IFR, but while they have a choice, they usually don't do it. IFR takes longer and means only one aircraft can leave at a time, they prefer to be able to have everyone coming in and out at the same time VFR. That doesn't mean that no one does it, but even among those that are allowed to, many choose to remain VFR and scud run.
That change in the regulations isn't going to change much even if it does happen IMO. When it comes down to it, there are many airports in Alaska that really need control towers, especially if 135 operators are going to start going IFR, but I don't see them getting them anytime real soon. 135 guys are implicitly allowed to do stuff up here that'd have you violated in a second even part 91 in the lower 48. I'd be surprised to see much change in accident rates by allowing 135 VFR ops with single engine aircraft.