A self-supporting government corporation may have worked in Europe, it's been a crashing failure in the US. Partially because Congress can't manage to let them be independent and partially because it really is a lousy model for the US.
Funding reform is needed not just to provide a more reliable basis for the ATO's capital and operating costs. If this is done by switching from aviation taxes to ATC fees paid directly to a self-supporting ATO, that changes the funds from taxpayers' money to the ATO customers' money. And that means the oversight of how those funds are spent can shift from myriad governmental entities to a governing board made up of stakeholders. This kind of funding reform directly enables governance reform.
Post #10 was mine so I will reply by saying that airlines are bound by many government regulations but that is much different than having a taxpayer-funded airline where decisions need to go through the government maze. Of course large companies also have their bureaucracies and internal politics but maybe not quite as much as the federal government.The part in post #10 about oversight of fund expenditures is very pollyannaish. If this were to happen (I don't think it will) the compliance with federal regulations for operations by this new entity would still exist, which would drive where funding would have to be spent.
The other way to look at it is that expenditure decisions would become easier to make since compliance comes first or get shut down.
NAV CANADA represents a unique consensus among the Company’s four founding groups: commercial air carriers, the Government of Canada, business and general aviation, and our employees, represented by their unions.
True that the political system is different but that is not a reason to dismiss this model offhand IMHO.Canada ain't the US. There hasn't been an attempt to form a quasi-government or privatized non-profit that has survived well in the US. Congress can't keep their everloving fingers out of the pie any more than they can with the FAA trust fund or the affairs of the District of Columbia.
Canada ain't the US. There hasn't been an attempt to form a quasi-government or privatized non-profit that has survived well in the US. Congress can't keep their everloving fingers out of the pie any more than they can with the FAA trust fund or the affairs of the District of Columbia.
But Amtrak was formed to prop up the passenger rail industry and to keep it from disappearing. That is not the case with ATC.Look at the mess they call Amtrak.
Direct routing is nice, though there is nothing preventing them from doing that as it is. Find me an airliner that doesn't have GPS. Next Gen solves nothing. The problem it is purported to solve, delays, is caused by a combination of too many airplanes sharing too few runways and the chaotic nature of weather. Really its just a case of switching to new technology because its there.
It's much more than the ability to punch in Direct-To, which most airplanes obviously have. Not saying that I have much feeling about the whole program one way or another but that way of looking at it is much too simplistic.Direct routing is nice, though there is nothing preventing them from doing that as it is. Find me an airliner that doesn't have GPS. Next Gen solves nothing. The problem it is purported to solve, delays, is caused by a combination of too many airplanes sharing too few runways and the chaotic nature of weather. Really its just a case of switching to new technology because its there.
It's much more than the ability to punch in Direct-To, which most airplanes obviously have. Not saying that I have much feeling about the whole program one way or another but that way of looking at it is much too simplistic.
I don't think so. Airline delays are for the most part not caused in cruise, they're caused by having to hold and wait to get into busy airports. Airliners aren't diverted for hours because they're near other airliners, they're held for wx delays and stuff like that. The delays faced in commercial aviation are almost entirely due to how the business is set up where numerous airliners have to land in a limited space.
At least, those are the conclusions I've reached from reading numerous sources (this site included) over the last few years. Hey, I'm all in favor of new technology. But new technology that accomplishes nothing and costs and arm and a leg is another story.
Post #10 was mine so...snip... The article I posted refers to the Nav Canada model where the corporation is governed by the various stakeholders.
http://www.navcanada.ca/EN/about-us/Pages/governance.aspx
Dunno, I've spent 7 years flying the for US half of a Canadian fleet so I've spent a lot of time there talking to their pilots and others. I wouldn't say their system of ATC (or anything else) is better or worse, just a little different. But I'm not going to dismiss privatized ATC offhand. The success or failure would depend on the details of the execution.E-;
I'm familiar wit how NavCanada is structured. I spent about six years working directly with Canadian military controllers and we discussed ours vs theirs quite a bit.
The model works for them. So does a tax rate that is well north of what I pay at the same income level, and other things that lend themselves to how Canada developed as a nation and what their citizens want/expect from their government.
TC
Much of the FAA's problems is Congressional pressure. Does anyone really think the Congress Critters are going to relinquish the power to affect what the ATC system does in their district or states?