HelloNewman
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 7, 2004
- Posts
- 459
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so mr wrx why should the general tax payers pay for you to dink around in your cessna? Don't worry though I see you are a commercial student. In no time you will have your CFI and can kick back and let your students pay the user fees.
You make good points, you do not have children and still pay for school. My point is not that it is unfair for taxpayers to pay for our ATC system(I think that it is more then fair), the only advantage I see to a user based system is that it is going to create more job opportunities for guys like us, not saying that it is a morally good position to take, just stating the obvious.Why should the public continuously bail out the major airlines? Why should I have to pay county taxes for children to go to school when I don't plan on ever having kids? Why should I pay for the fire dept when I haven't had a fire?
The public does not pay the majority of the taxes either... GA pays fuel taxes and uses but a fraction of the ATC system. The US taxpayer benefits from ATC services in numerous indirect ways, including mail, freight, scheduled airline service, air ambulance service, etc.
I'll be a CFI way before the user fees could potentially take place. Doesn't matter - I don't want to see future GA pilots get reemed and I will not standby and watch General Aviation be destroyed. Unlike you and your selfish friend "sicuvaflight", I do what I can to pull my weight with GA (which isn't much, but at least I try).
Get it through your head - Joe Sixpack and myself are not putting a burden on ATC services. What puts a strain on ATC services are the busy "pushes" that are a result of airline hub style service.
it is going to create more job opportunities for guys like us, not saying that it is a morally good position to take, just stating the obvious.
I read in Aviation Week that the airlines pay something like 95% (or thereabouts; I don't have it in front of me) of the monies collected in fuel taxes, and that this new plan would bring their contribution down to 72% (again, or something), which is more in line with their usage.
It occurred to me that the airlines need a sophisticated ATC system more than the GA and business planes do. That's not to say the smaller operators don't need it; certainly, they do. But they have more options as to when, where, how, and if they fly. They have a smaller and more understanding clientele. They don't have to convince the little old lady from Ipanema that they are as safe as Amtrak or Greyhound. Their need for full ATC services is somewhat less than that of the airlines.
If ATC were a private business-- were it my private business-- I'd find an excuse to charge the airlines a little more. Maybe around 20% more. Why? Because you make your money where you can. The airlines themselves understand this; it is why First Class is priced THREE TIMES as much as Economy Class.
So, I'm unswayed by the argument that FAA user fees are more "fair". A product or service is worth what you can get people to pay for it, not what it costs you to provide. What it costs you to provide is completely irrelevant. If we want a robust, healthy system, we will continue to fund it in a way that factors in people's need for it. Fuel taxes are simple, practical way of approximating that.
I may be wrong but my understanding is that airlines do NOT pay a fuel tax like general avaition does. Are you sure you read the article right? Second point..how do you figure that our passengers are more understanding. You must not have ever flown in the corporate world. If anything, I think sometimes they are just the opposite.
User fees and revamped fuel taxes would reduce the airlines' share of ATC operating expenses from the roughly 95% they currently pay to the 73% the FAA calculates as their actual share... In October 2008, the FAA would drop the current taxes and fees that provide revenue to the trust fund. In 2005, two-thirds of these revenues came from a 7.5% excise tax on airplane tickets, and 18% from international arrival and departure taxes. Other sources include a cargo waybill tax, and commercial and noncommercial fuel taxes.
so mr wrx why should the general tax payers pay for you to dink around in your cessna? Don't worry though I see you are a commercial student. In no time you will have your CFI and can kick back and let your students pay the user fees.
HelloNewman said:Yes GA is where most of us started that fact can not be denied. For those of us at the airlines though we no longer need GA. I have not stepped foot in a GA aircraft for quite a while.