A Move to Price Bizjets Out of Business There?
The National Business
Aviation Association has filed a formal FAR Part 16 complaint with
the FAA asking the Agency to investigate the new landing fee
structure at Santa Monica (CA) Municipal Airport (SMO). The fees
were adopted by the Santa Monica City Council on June 10, 2003,
over the objections of NBAA and other user groups, and they are
scheduled to go into effect on August 1, 2003.
"NBAA filed the complaint because we see a disturbing trend of
access being compromised at Federally funded airports," said NBAA
President Shelley A. Longmuir.
Presently, there are no
landing fees for general aviation operations at SMO. Effective
August 1, landing fees will be imposed on aircraft with a maximum
certificated gross landing weight of 10,000 pounds or more on a
sliding scale ranging from $0.29 per thousand pounds for the
smallest aircraft to $5.81 per thousand pounds for the largest
aircraft. As noted in the complaint, this requirement would result
in a fee of $343 per landing for Gulfstream II and Gulfstream III
aircraft, and it clearly is intended to force larger business jets
off the airport.
Under the FAA’s Part 16 procedures, the City of Santa
Monica has approximately three weeks to answer the complaint.
Further pleadings will be exchanged over a 20-day period, after
which the FAA will decide whether to institute a formal
investigation.
Santa Monica engaged in a similar exercise last year when it
proposed to ban any aircraft larger or faster than those meeting
the FAA’s Airport Reference Code B-II standard, which is
roughly 50 percent of jet operations at SMO. After NBAA and other
user representatives protested, the FAA instituted a formal
investigation. That proposal remains pending by the Santa Monica
City Council.
We asked a Board member...
David Kaplan, a Board member, told ANN, "The fees come out of a
maintenance assessment; I believe this is common practice,
determined by the types of airplanes -- to cover the costs of
maintaining the runway -- it's not an 'anti-jet' ordinance. It's a
matter of weight and [pavement] maintenance." As to which other
airports may have similar fee structures, or just how the numbers
were arrived at, Mr. Kaplan didn't have those answers at his
fingertips. "It was discussed about a year ago," he told us. "It's
just now been written into law, and it's just now going to start."
All he could remember, additionally, was that, "This was based on a
study by an aviation-paving consulting group." He again assured us
it was designed to cover maintenance, not to redirect traffic.