FDK Commission Considering Its Position On Issue
One of aviation's most vocal -- and
effective -- voices against FAA user fees has been the Aircraft
Owners and Pilots Association. Now, just as it looked as if
Congress might be leaning towards denying the FAA an entirely
fee-based funding scheme, AOPA faces a new user fee threat in its
own backyard.
Maryland's Frederick Municipal Airport (FDK) may soon see not
only rate hikes, but landing fees as part of the city's next
budget. Airport Manager Charles Abell sees an opportunity to
extract revenue from pilots of transient aircraft, which make up 18
percent of Frederick's traffic. This would presumably include
pilots flying in to visit AOPA Headquarters, located on the
field.
The Airport Commission hasn't had a chance yet to take a
position on the issues, but was scheduled to discuss them and
decide whether or not to back them during a special meeting Tuesday
night. Abell presented the proposals to the commission after the
mayor presented his budget to the Board of Aldermen, Jonathan J.
Greenway, the commission's vice chairman, told the Frederick
News-Post.
"It was not something that was brought up before the commission
in a timely manner," Greenway said. "This was just foisted on us as
if there was some agenda that they were going to do this come hell
or high water."
According to commission minutes, Frederick Mayor William J.
Holtzinger released his proposed budget on March 21... and it
included both the fee increase, and the new landing fee. But, the
airport commission wasn't briefed on the fee hike until the next
day, and it wasn't until its April meeting that Abell briefed the
commission on the landing fees.

In defense of the proposals, Abell said he is obliged to keep
the airport on a sound fiscal footing, but airport commission
members tend to be pilots who "generally dislike" fee
increases.
"If I waited for (the commission) to approve it, it might not
ever get approved," he said. "The budget can't wait for you --
you've got to get money there."
FDK is expected to lose
nearly $250,000 a year in revenues it had received as rent, from
properties it purchased as part of a recently completed long-term
obstruction removal project, and then leased back to the former
owners, Abell said.
But, raising hangar and tie-down fees by about 15 percent and
adding a landing fee on aircraft not based at FDK would help to
address that, he said. Renegotiating airport leases as they expire
will help also, he said.
Abell said Monday he projects the new landing fee would bring in
$118,000 a year, down somewhat from the $200,000 a year included in
the proposed budget released in March by the mayor. The exact
amount of the fee has not been set.
Of that $118,000, roughly $35,000 would be used to pay
contractor to operate an automated system to collect the new fees,
Abell said.
FDK performed a survey of five nearby airports listed as having
similar fees to FDK in July 2006. Four of those fields -- Martin
State Airport in Baltimore, Montgomery County Airpark, and airports
in Leesburg and Manassas, VA -- have no landing fees, according to
airport staff and flight service providers.
Landing fees have not been the norm at noncommercial airports,
but Abell says he fully expects that to change as federal aviation
funds decrease.
The Board of Aldermen is scheduled to vote on the budget
May 17.