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Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers
Air Carriers and Biz-jets Target GA Recreational Fliers The airline industry is terrified. They've got more aircraft than they know what to do with, and even more on order. Passengers are unhappy with the airline travel experience, and their numbers threaten to dwindle as a result. High revenue travelers are increasingly turning to part 135 biz-jet transport to escape the moronic security measures imposed on airline travelers. Competition among air carriers is fierce as market consolidation threatens to swallow them whole. Air Traffic Control contractors are lobbying franticly to wrest FAA fiscal oversight from Congress, so thy can sell their marginally engineered products to our government. And anyone naive enough to believes light GA won't be affected by the clash of these titanic combatants is not paying attention. Here's the latest news: AIRLINES CONTINUE ANTI-GA LOBBYING (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#197924) When the Air Transport Association, the lobbying group for the airlines, sent out an e-mail (http://web.nbaa.org/public/news/ata.php) this week griping about all the private jets that cluttered up the airways during Kentucky Derby weekend, Here's an excerpt from the Air Transport Association e-mail: How much are you paying to subsidize these luxury liners? Airlines and their passengers paid more than 90 percent of the costs of running the air traffic control system but accounted for only 66 percent of system operations. Business jets, however, underpaid for the air traffic control services they used by nearly $1 billion. Does that sound fair to you? What if you were told that during Derby weekend, the overwhelming majority of the jets in the skies over Kentucky were private jets? This means that while these private jets clogged the airways, they paid barely anything to use or modernize our nation’s air traffic control system. This unfair practice is not just limited to the Kentucky Derby –private luxury planes account for nearly two-thirds of all jet aircraft in the United States. And it is not as though these jet-setters cannot afford to pay their fair share. Private jet operators do not seem to be affected by the tight economy like the rest of us – orders for new private jets are up 41 percent from early 2007 to early 2008. Over the next ten years, more than 10,000 additional private jets are expected to enter service. Needless to say, this will overwhelm the current system and cost airline passengers billions of dollars a year in delays. Notice how the airline industry conveniently overlooks their predatory scheduling practices as the prime cause of air carrier flight delays. The airline strategy of over-scheduling flights is two fold: It freezes out competitors, and it creates a false impression that the National Airspace System is inadequate, overburdened, and needs to be replaced with the products of airliner manufacturers, so that the airline industry will be placed in control of our nation's skies. Bush has already nominated a former airline employee, Bobby Sturgell, to become FAA Administrator, so part of their plan is already slated to become fact. Don't take your eye off of the shell with the pea under it. the National Business Aviation Association was quick to respond (http://web.nbaa.org/public/news/pr/2...80521-032.php). Here's an excerpt: “The ATA’s suggestion that GA air traffic at a well-planned weekend event in a single location was somehow problematic is simply laughable,” Bolen said. “The fact is, delays are caused by the airlines over-scheduling flights 365 days a year at big city airports all across the country. An official with the Department of Transportation recently provided a clear example of the airlines’ over-scheduling practices to Congress by pointing to one airline that scheduled ‘56 departures in a 15-minute window at the Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport, about three times the number of planes that the airport has the capacity to handle.’ ... What isn't be mentioned here is the fact that Bush got Congress to removed flight scheduling authority (slots) from FAA regulation at all US airports (except the one used by Washington), thus enabling the airline over-scheduling debacle. “It’s unfortunate that the nation’s big airlines have chosen to focus efforts on attacking general aviation, rather than working toward solutions for modernizing our air transportation system, so that it remains the world’s largest, safest and most efficient.” The Air Transport Association also took a shot at the rest of us, who aren't flying in private jets but in our own piston airplanes. "The recreational piston-engine (or 'general aviation') community has been ginned up by the jet-setters to oppose the small fees proposed, even though these fees would not be imposed on piston aircraft under any proposal Congress is considering," ATA President James May wrote. What isn't mentioned by the airline lobbying association is the fact that their divide-and-conquer strategy calls "recreational piston-engine" stakeholders as allies in the airlines' bid to introduce user fees as a funding source for NextGen ATC. They figure, that if "recreational piston-engine" stakeholders see themselves as being exempt from the initial imposition of user fees, our large numbers will not pose an obstacle to the airline agenda. Then once user fees are implemented, you can bet that the "recreational piston-engine" segment will become the future target of the airlines' campaign to reduce user fee prices. What is ironic is the fact that the vast majority of ATC services are only in existence because of the needs of the airline industry. This is the way I see it. Opposing views are welcome. |
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