Mon, Apr 08, 2013
Letter To DHS Says Flawed Proposal Helps Foreign Airlines Compete While Harming U.S. Carriers
In a letter to Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Napolitano, Capt. Lee Moak, president of the Air Line Pilots Association, Int’l (ALPA) said an Obama administration proposal that would establish a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) facility at Abu Dhabi International Airport must be immediately dropped. Moak said the proposal will inevitably do two things: hand a state-backed foreign airline a competitive edge over U.S. airlines and reallocate CBP resources at a time of across-the-board budget cuts and long delays for U.S. airlines’ passengers.
Moak (pictured) described the proposal as "egregious."
"This misguided administration proposal adds insult to injury by using U.S. taxpayers’ money to give foreign airlines a competitive advantage over U.S. airlines while at the same time making it more difficult for U.S. airlines’ passengers to clear customs,” wrote Capt. Moak. “The Administration needs to get behind U.S. airlines and U.S. workers by immediately dropping this flawed proposal.”
The administration’s proposal to establish a CBP preclearance facility in the UAE would exclusively benefit state-backed Etihad Airways, the UAE’s national airline, because no U.S. airlines currently serve Abu Dhabi International Airport. By allowing its customers to clear customs while still in the UAE, the proposed facility would give Etihad Airways a significant convenience to offer as it competes against U.S. airlines for passengers flying to the United States from Asia or the Middle East.
The U.S. Congress recently passed language in the FY 2013 Continuing Resolution that prohibits the use of third-party reimbursement for preclearance facilities such as the one the Administration is proposing in Abu Dhabi, which means that funding for an Abu Dhabi facility would have to come out of monies that are or could be used to operate and staff existing facilities.
“DHS resources and CBP facilities and services should first and foremost benefit U.S. travelers, U.S. airlines and their employees, U.S. taxpayers, and the U.S. economy,” said Capt. Moak in the letter sent today. “A preclearance facility in Abu Dhabi benefiting only Etihad Airways fails this test.”
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