AOPA Language Again Included
The House Appropriations Committee last night approved an
appropriations bill that includes more money for the FAA and
specifically directs the agency to spend more on improving local
airports and adding WAAS instrument approaches to GA airports that
don't have an ILS.
"And once again, the committee put in AOPA-supported language
that prohibits the administration from using any of the FAA's funds
to develop or implement user fees," said AOPA President Phil Boyer.
"AOPA's legislative affairs staff worked hard to make sure the
committee had all of the information it needed to make the right
decisions for general aviation."
The committee provided $14.427 billion for the FAA, more than
$1.7 billion more than President Bush requested. And the committee
directed that some 22 percent of the funds should come from the
general fund. (We'll explain why that's important in just a
moment.)
Important for AOPA members is the $110 million — $10
million more than requested — for new GPS-WAAS approaches. A
good chunk of that money is intended for non-air carrier airports,
particularly GA airports that don't have an ILS. That's been an
AOPA goal, and it will greatly increase the utility of many GA
airports, making them more accessible to instrument-rated pilots
during inclement weather.
Airports are a top priority for members, and this bill includes
$3.6 billion in Airport Improvement Program (AIP) funds —
again, more than the Bush administration requested. AIP grants help
maintain and improve airports, and the acceptance of a grant
obligates the airport to stay open for 20 years.
The bill also provides more money for Safeflight 21 and ADS-B,
the program that will bring traffic and weather information into
every equipped GA cockpit.
Now to those general funds. If
you've been following along on the "FAA funding crisis" issue,
you'll remember that AOPA contends there's only a crisis if the
general fund contribution is reduced. The committee didn't.
"AOPA maintains that it is fair and reasonable to pay for some
of FAA's operations from the general fund, because having a
national air transportation system benefits the general public,"
said Andy Cebula, AOPA senior vice president of government and
technical affairs. "We think that 25 percent is a fair
contribution."
And if Congress keeps the contribution above 20 percent, there
is little risk of running the aviation trust fund dry.
The FAA funding bill, which was included in the
Transportation-Treasury-Housing Appropriations bill, must now be
approved by the full House, then the Senate, before it is sent to
the president for his signature.
"The House committee action was a great first step, but the
legislation still has a ways to go. We will continue working to
have these provisions approved by Congress and signed into law,"
said Cebula.