Industry Associations Send Open Letter To House Speaker John
Boehner
As the deadline for raising the debt ceiling looms just after
AirVenture, the associations that represent GA have come together
to jointly send an open letter to Speaker of the House John Boehner
(R-OH) to express their collective opposition to proposed aviation
user fees. It's a battle that frankly was considered won only a few
months ago, but as the government looks for revenue enhancement
that are politically palatable to the general public, GA is once
again in the crosshairs.
Speaker John Boehner (R-OH)
The nation’s leading general aviation organizations have
sent a joint letter to all members of the U.S. House and Senate,
urging them to abandon a proposal to charge a $25 “departure
fee” on both airline and general aviation flights.
In the letter, the presidents of the EAA, GAMA, HAI, NATA, NBAA,
and AOPA tell the legislators, “Our community is deeply
concerned about reports suggesting that current negotiations to
raise the debt ceiling are giving rise to a resoundingly
discredited approach to raising revenues from our
industry—user fees.”
The entire general aviation industry believes that the current
fuel excise tax system is the most efficient and effective way for
general aviation to contribute to the aviation trust fund.
Experience elsewhere in the world, on the other hand, demonstrates
that user fees cripple general aviation, doing irreparable harm to
a vital economic driver.
“It is time for everyone to take a collective deep breath and
make certain that changes are not made on the fly that hurt general
aviation’s economic recovery,” said GAMA’s
President and CEO Pete Bunce. “User fees have crippled
general aviation in Europe and the last thing we want to see in the
U.S. is user fees growing the federal bureaucracy.”

Pete Bunce
"Bad ideas, like bad pennies, have a habit of turning up again
and again in Washington,” said AOPA President and CEO Craig
L. Fuller. “User fees are a bad idea that hurts an entire
industry, the economy, and the nation. They simply make no sense.
Time and again we've seen that they stifle aviation and compromise
safety."
“GA already pays its fair share and then some for the
small segment of the national airspace system that it uses,”
said Rod Hightower, EAA President/CEO. “A user fee system
will not only create an expensive and unnecessary federal
bureaucracy, but also instantly hinder the growth of general
aviation and drive more job losses in our country.”

“Now is not the time to revisit the bad idea of user
fees,” said Matthew S. Zucaro, president of HAI. “Such
a detrimental initiative will only result in a debilitating effect
on the helicopter community. Helicopters perform missions on a
daily basis for the greater good of society—such as emergency
medical transport, aerial firefighting, law enforcement, search and
rescue, disaster relief, national security, and counterterrorism.
Helicopter operators already pay more than their fair share when
one considers their minimal impact on the ATC infrastructure.
Enough is enough.”
“Instead of embracing the economic growth and jobs this
great industry provides to the U.S., the President continues to
vilify our community,” stated NATA President & CEO James
K. Coyne. “It’s time for this Administration to cease
any and all consideration of a user fee system for a general
aviation community that is still recovering from the
recession.”

“As policymakers have thoroughly reviewed the idea of user
fees in recent years, the general aviation community has
consistently said that we should not try to adopt foreign-style
user fees, but should instead build upon the time-tested and proven
fuel-tax system,” said NBAA President and CEO Ed Bolen.
“This pay-at-the-pump mechanism is the best – and
should remain the exclusive – means for the industry to meet
its tax obligations.”
In their letter, the leaders conclude, “We urge you not to
create an expensive new federal collection bureaucracy that will
need to be funded on the backs of general aviation operators in the
name of deficit reduction. It is a nonsensical and self-defeating
approach."
“For general aviation, fuel taxes work – user fees
do not. There has to be a way for our industry to pay at the pump
rather than creating a new federal collection bureaucracy. Please
do not destroy a great national asset and critical industry."
The full text of the letter follows:
Dear Speaker Boehner:
Our community is deeply concerned
about reports suggesting that current negotiations to raise the
debt ceiling are giving rise to a resoundingly discredited approach
to raising revenues from our industry—user fees. Over the
past 5 years, both chambers of Congress have carefully considered
new aviation user fees and overwhelmingly rejected them. We see no
reason to override the will of committee and other congressional
policymakers in the context of debt ceiling negotiations.
General Aviation is enormously
important to the United States. We employ 1.2 million workers and
generate $150 billion in economic activity. We generate economic
development in thousands of U.S. communities with little or no
airline service. We help businesses of all sizes to be more
efficient and productive. Additionally, we perform missions on a
daily basis for the greater good of society, such as emergency
medical transport, aerial firefighting, law enforcement, search
& rescue, disaster relief, national security and
counterterrorism. Currently, general aviation contributes to the
federal government through an effective system of fuel
taxes.
While no industry enjoys paying
taxes, we strongly believe that a general aviation fuel tax
represents the best way for our industry to contribute revenues to
the federal government and support its efforts to enhance our air
transportation system. The general aviation community has worked
with Congress to build on this proven and efficient approach to
revenues as part of the FAA Reauthorization debate, particularly to
enhance the acceleration of the Next Generation Air Transportation
System (NextGen). Our support for the fuel tax mechanism stands in
stark contrast to our opposition to foreign-style user fees. User
fees have absolutely devastated general aviation in other parts of
the world, and in the United States, they would only serve to
create a new federal collection bureaucracy of billing agents,
auditors and collection officials to harass small businesses and
others. In contrast, with the fuel tax, the government is prepaid
for its services, and the operators are not saddled with new and
onerous administrative burdens. Additionally, the fuel tax is far
preferable to a ?fee? because the fuel tax is set by the Congress
and is not subject to annual increases deemed desirable by a
federal bureaucracy.
We urge you not to create an
expensive new federal collection bureaucracy that will need to be
funded on the backs of general aviation operators in the name of
deficit reduction. It is a nonsensical and self-defeating approach.
For general aviation, fuel taxes work – user fees do not.
There has to be a way for our industry to pay at the pump rather
than creating a new federal collection bureaucracy. Please do not
destroy a great national asset and critical industry.