FAA Plan Includes Airline Giveaways; GA, Congress Pays
It didn't take long for the National
Business Aviation Association (NBAA) to denounce the new funding
plan unveiled by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
Wednesday. NBAA President and CEO Ed Bolen slammed the agency for
providing a huge tax break and other giveaways to the large
airlines, while punishing the mostly small and mid-size businesses
in general aviation, and stripping Congress of most of its role in
aviation system funding decisions.
"It's fitting that the FAA's plan has been introduced on
Valentine's Day, because it's a sweetheart deal between the Agency
and the commercial airlines," Bolen told ANN. "Going into the FAA
reauthorization process, the airlines wanted three things. They
wanted user fees - they got them. They wanted to shift their costs
to general aviation -- they got that. And they wanted to reduce
congressional oversight of the aviation system decision-making --
they got that, too.
"As a result of airline lobbying, this proposal gives the giant
airlines a major tax break by imposing massive tax hikes and
onerous new user fees on the businesses that rely on general
aviation. It also essentially removes Congress from its traditional
role in overseeing funding decisions for the FAA."

To underscore his point, Bolen pointed to the following elements
in the FAA's plan:
- A more-than tripling of the fuel taxes paid by general
aviation aircraft operators. Under the FAA's proposal, the
taxes would increase more than 300 percent, from 21.8
cents-per-gallon, to 70 cents-per gallon.
- New user fees for general aviation flights
that pass through the airspace within several miles of large
airports.
- A litany of other new, transactional user fees
for pilot licensing, aircraft certifications and other
services.
- The creation of a new control board that is
expected to be dominated by the airlines and largely influence
decisions about aviation system priorities.
"Perhaps the most egregious of
these ideas are the new user fees, which necessitate large,
administrative bureaucracies," Bolen said. "We think the Agency
should be focused on safety rather than revenue collection. We
don't want to see the FAA Administrator adding 'tax czar' to his or
her list of duties, and we don't need to create an IRS branch at
the Agency."
Bolen added the changes proposed by the FAA "would overthrow a
funding structure that has proven to be stable, reliable and
efficient for several decades."
"Revenues going into the Airport and Airways Trust Fund are at
record levels, and no less an authority than the Congressional
Budget Office has said that the FAA will continue to have
sufficient funds to fully support the transition to the Next
Generation Air Traffic System," Bolen noted. "The fact is, the
FAA's scheme promotes radical changes in order to provide a
giveaway to the big airlines."
"The general aviation community has long led the way in working
to strengthen the nation's aviation system, and we will continue to
do so,"Bolen said. "It's unfortunate that the FAA has ignored the
tens of thousands of small and mid-size businesses, and towns
across the country, that rely on general aviation because they have
little or no airline service."
"Hopefully, we'll get a better hearing from those in Congress
who traditionally oppose big new government bureaucracies and care
about the nation's small and rural communities," Bolen
concluded.