gismo
Touchdown! Greaser!
This comment from someone (hopefully not a pilot) appeared on AvWeb today:
Now I can't say for certain, but I suspect that most if not all of the jet's Gary is referring to (at Tampa and the Ski resort airports) were flown on someone's personal nickel, not corporate funds. I suppose there might be some companies using their flight departments for junkets disguised as promotional ventures but I thought most of that kind of thing has become tough to sell to the IRS.
For those of you with corporate jet piloting experience, what is the likelihood that many of the jets flown into Tampa for the game were operated with corparate funds vs personal ones?
Bizjet Excesses
Your picture in the Jan. 29 issue of hundreds of bizjets at the last Super Bowl site demonstrates why the public and many GA pilots object to them. All too often they are used for non-business uses and, I suspect, written off as a business expense to avoid taxes.
Just check the Aspen and Eagle, Colorado airports. That's not business going on there — it's skiing. With teleconferencing now an easy way to communicate these days, business travel is becoming less and less necessary for the corporate biggies. Their excesses have gotten the USA into this economic mess, and now we who actually work hard for a dollar are saying, "Enough is enough!"
Gary Justus
Now I can't say for certain, but I suspect that most if not all of the jet's Gary is referring to (at Tampa and the Ski resort airports) were flown on someone's personal nickel, not corporate funds. I suppose there might be some companies using their flight departments for junkets disguised as promotional ventures but I thought most of that kind of thing has become tough to sell to the IRS.
For those of you with corporate jet piloting experience, what is the likelihood that many of the jets flown into Tampa for the game were operated with corparate funds vs personal ones?