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GA's "fair share"



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 8th 05, 06:41 PM
Skylune
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Default GA's

by RK Henry Nov 8, 2005 at 06:31 PM


On Fri, 04 Nov 2005 15:37:56 -0700, Newps wrote:

You're making it a thousand times harder than it needs to be. User fees


will not be on a per use basis, you will pay a yearly fee most probably
based on the weight of your plane. Canada has user fees. Your typical
single engine spamcan pays less than $50 per year for his user fees.
That's Canadian money of course. So even if the average US owner got a
bill each year for $50 it is trivial to the cost of flying.


I used to pay $25/year to the IRS for the aircraft use tax. That tax
was dropped in the early 1980s because, as was reported at the time,
it cost the IRS more to collect than it brought in. Except for the
inconvenience of filling out an IRS form, I wouldn't mind paying
$50/year.

But that's not the proposal that has had me lying awake at night. I
remember reading a proposal from the Reason Foundation, which has been
a major advocate for user fees, in the Wall Street Journal. As I
recall, that proposal included fees of $50 per touch and go and
$100/hour for IFR operations. That's an unbearable expense, making ATC
cost more far more than gas, depreciation, or insurance.

I think the push for user fees is thinly-veiled attempt at wealth
redistribution. They consider private pilots to be idle rich playboys.
Certain politicians have referred to them as such. The idea of user
fees is to strip them of their ill-gotten riches, acquired only by
stealing from the hard-working poor. These proposals are intended
serve as an interim measure to deal with idle rich playboy pilots, who
do no work and contribute nothing to society, until the worker revolt
finally comes and provides a permanent solution to inequality.

That's why President Clinton proposed FAA user fees with the money
being earmarked for social programs. If the FAA actually needs money
to operate, then why did he even mention social programs? This
proposal completely exposed the purpose of user fees. It's obvious
that the FAA has nothing to do with it.

RK Henry"

The Reason Foundation is a influential Washington think tank that is
dedicated to free markets. It generally opposes pork spending, including
bridges to nowhere in alaska, subsidies to mass transit, subsidies to GA,
etc. It eschews redistribution of wealth. Politically, it is usually
slotted as "conservative." Here is their web site:




http://www.reason.org/

  #2  
Old November 8th 05, 07:55 PM
TaxSrv
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Default GA's

The Reason Foundation is a influential Washington think tank that
is
dedicated to free markets...opposes...subsidies to GA,


Is there a credible study somewhere as to how much is this subsidy
really is? If you start with FAA's waste of billions to get their
systems to work (documented by GAO), then you may indeed get IFR
flights at a $100 each. But ban GA completely, and how much does
ATC staffing go down, if at all? Go to fligthaware.com, pick
random airports of all sizes, and see whose doing the GA IFR. It's
mostly jets and turboprops, and the hefty fuel taxes they pay are
lost, for perhaps a net loss to gov't if ATC costs are reduced only
somewhat.

The avg recreational flyer does 30+ hours a year, perhaps $50 in
fed fuel taxes. Many of these guys avoid ATC and even FSS, by using
the Weather Channel on a nice day and a local flight. Ban them,
and gov't loses $50 a pop profit per year. So, how much is the
subsidy -- on a proper, marginal cost computation?

Fred F.

  #3  
Old November 8th 05, 08:19 PM
Skylune
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Posts: n/a
Default GA's

GA's
by "TaxSrv" Nov 8, 2005 at 02:55 PM


The Reason Foundation is a influential Washington think tank that

is
dedicated to free markets...opposes...subsidies to GA,


Is there a credible study somewhere as to how much is this subsidy
really is? If you start with FAA's waste of billions to get their
systems to work (documented by GAO), then you may indeed get IFR
flights at a $100 each. But ban GA completely, and how much does
ATC staffing go down, if at all? Go to fligthaware.com, pick
random airports of all sizes, and see whose doing the GA IFR. It's
mostly jets and turboprops, and the hefty fuel taxes they pay are
lost, for perhaps a net loss to gov't if ATC costs are reduced only
somewhat.

The avg recreational flyer does 30+ hours a year, perhaps $50 in
fed fuel taxes. Many of these guys avoid ATC and even FSS, by using
the Weather Channel on a nice day and a local flight. Ban them,
and gov't loses $50 a pop profit per year. So, how much is the
subsidy -- on a proper, marginal cost computation?

Fred F."

The opening post on this thread has the Federal DOT site, which has the
data the Reason Foundation uses. They use the operating subsidy per
passenger mile statistic, so I think it is somewhat biased in favor of
long-range (airplane) transportation. Nonetheless, their data and
methodology are transparent, so it can be used for a serious debate.

The AOPA stuff is just nonsense on a stick. No data, no statistics, no
anything. Just "don't raise our taxes, cut the FAA budget." SOP, a
boring, and ultimately losing argument...



  #4  
Old November 8th 05, 08:47 PM
Jose
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Posts: n/a
Default GA's

Just a request to Skylune - since your quoting doesn't quite work, at
least manually put two arrows before and after what you are quoting.


for example, this would be quoted


Even if it isn't internet style, it sets a quote apart from the rest,
and is fairly easy to do even in plain text.

Jose
--
He who laughs, lasts.
for Email, make the obvious change in the address.
  #5  
Old November 8th 05, 09:05 PM
Skylune
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default GA's

"by Jose Nov 8, 2005 at 08:47 PM


Just a request to Skylune - since your quoting doesn't quite work, at
least manually put two arrows before and after what you are quoting.


for example, this would be quoted


Even if it isn't internet style, it sets a quote apart from the rest,
and is fairly easy to do even in plain text.

Jose
--
He who laughs, lasts.
for Email, make the obvious change in the address."

Sorry 'bout that, Jose. The "newsreaders" (I think they are called that)
seem to do that automatically, whereas my talkaboutaviation.com site
doesn't automatically put stuff in context when I hit "Post a Reply." I
tried cutting and pasting and putting quotes before the post I'm
responding to (like this). I know that's not protocol, but its a real
pain to put arrows and double arrows, etc. in manually.


  #6  
Old November 8th 05, 10:20 PM
Jose
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default posting style (was GA's)

I tried cutting and pasting and
putting quotes before the post I'm
responding to (like this).


Well, that didn't quite work, and you ran into another internet standard.

You did start with "by Jose..., but there wasn't any place where you
said "end quote" or something like that. It is this that is the problem
reading some of your posts - knowing when the quoted stuff ENDS.

That's why I suggested the ending arrows too.

Now, there is another internet standard - that is that of a signature
line. Any lines which follow a line which consists of just two dashes
and a space will be considered a signature, and many newsreaders will
format it differently. Some newsreaders can be set to hide signatures.
Your post quoted mine in its entirety (including the signature) and
your new text followed mine, after my signature line separator, and was
thus considered a "signature" by my newsreader (and most other
newsreaders I'm sure). You probably want to avoid that. So, be aware
(or make your website aware) of signature line separators when you post,
and more of your posts will be readable.

Yes, manually inserting arrows on each line is a pain, which is why I
suggested a simple "quote" and "end quote" method for you. I do it
myself when necessary.

Jose
--
He who laughs, lasts.
for Email, make the obvious change in the address.
  #7  
Old November 9th 05, 12:22 AM
Morgans
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default posting style (was GA's)


"Jose" wrote

Yes, manually inserting arrows on each line is a pain, which is why I
suggested a simple "quote" and "end quote" method for you. I do it
myself when necessary.


It is interesting that Skylooser alone, can't even make posting work quite
right.
--
Jim in NC

  #8  
Old November 8th 05, 10:48 PM
Tom Conner
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Posts: n/a
Default GA's


"Skylune" wrote in message
lkaboutaviation.com...
"by Jose Nov 8, 2005 at 08:47 PM


Just a request to Skylune - since your quoting doesn't quite work, at
least manually put two arrows before and after what you are quoting.


for example, this would be quoted


Even if it isn't internet style, it sets a quote apart from the rest,
and is fairly easy to do even in plain text.

Jose
--
He who laughs, lasts.
for Email, make the obvious change in the address."

Sorry 'bout that, Jose. The "newsreaders" (I think they are called that)
seem to do that automatically, whereas my talkaboutaviation.com site
doesn't automatically put stuff in context when I hit "Post a Reply." I
tried cutting and pasting and putting quotes before the post I'm
responding to (like this). I know that's not protocol, but its a real
pain to put arrows and double arrows, etc. in manually.



The solution is to stop using talkaboutaviation.com, and use a news reader
against the appropriate USENET news group. You do have home Internet access
don't you? If so then your ISP should provide the address for the news
server. If you are doing all your posting from work then shame on you for
goofing off instead of working.

Like it or not, you do have some valid points, but they are getting lost in
your out-of-control, unintelligible posts.


  #9  
Old November 8th 05, 10:52 PM
Jose
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default GA's

The solution is to stop using talkaboutaviation.com, and use a news reader
against the appropriate USENET news group.


That is the best solution, but using start arrows and end arrows (each
on a separate line for clarity) is sufficient, I believe, for
legibility, and requires the least of the poster who for whatever reason
chooses to post through an "unapproved source".

Jose
--
He who laughs, lasts.
for Email, make the obvious change in the address.
  #10  
Old November 9th 05, 12:22 AM
Montblack
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default GA's

("Tom Conner" wrote)
[snip]
Like it or not, you do have some valid points, but they are getting lost
in your out-of-control, unintelligible posts.



S-loon,
Like a pilot following your local airport's noise abatement procedures, try
[snipping] your post quotes down, too... after you start quoting the
previous posts that is. :-)

Thanks.


Montblack

 




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