aterpster
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aterpster
They never give up, do they.
This ought to give pause to people who think that electing members of a certain political party will solve all their problems.
It's hard to dispute that users of a product should be the ones to pay for the product. I think most of us believe that for most things in life. I'm not sure how user fees might be structured but in principal I can't say they're a bad idea. The problem is it'll become an added tax and won't be offset by any reduction of tax elsewhere to reflect the change in funding.
They don't need anymore money. The amount of money needed for ATC and the FAA is such small potatoes compared to our national budget, it's funny.
Also per your logic, I don't need or will ever use food stamps, Medicare, etc, I don't feel threatened by "terrorists" so I don't need people waging war in my name in the Middle East, I don't feel safer by having TSA, or huge militarized police, I don't need CPS, don't have any kids in school so I don't need to pay for that, I don't bank with any of the banks that were bailed out, I could go on.
I would LOVE to only pay for the govt "services" I use.
According to your logic I should receive a MASSIVE tax cut.
We already have user fees: they're collected at the gas pump.
It's hard to dispute that users of a product should be the ones to pay for the product. I think most of us believe that for most things in life. I'm not sure how user fees might be structured but in principal I can't say they're a bad idea. The problem is it'll become an added tax and won't be offset by any reduction of tax elsewhere to reflect the change in funding.
They don't need anymore money. The amount of money needed for ATC and the FAA is such small potatoes compared to our national budget, it's funny.
Also per your logic, I don't need or will ever use food stamps, Medicare, etc, I don't feel threatened by "terrorists" so I don't need people waging war in my name in the Middle East, I don't feel safer by having TSA, or huge militarized police, I don't need CPS, don't have any kids in school so I don't need to pay for that, I don't bank with any of the banks that were bailed out, I could go on.
I would LOVE to only pay for the govt "services" I use.
According to your logic I should receive a MASSIVE tax cut.
We already have user fees: they're collected at the gas pump.
The tax on fuel is a simple and efficient way to collect tax and provides a tax proportional to your use of the system. A user fee system is inherently less efficient because a structure has to be created and maintained (and paid for) to identify each use and bill you for it. If more money is actually needed, then the way to get it is by raising the fuel tax. It is currently about 25 cents per gallon on jet and 18 cents per gallon on avgas. The FBO pays it when they pay for a load of fuel into their storage tank and collect it back from you in the price of every gallon of avgas that you buy.
We already have user fees: they're collected at the gas pump.
We already have user fees: they're collected at the gas pump.
Those taxes go into the federal general fund, not to aviation. Congress has been under no obligation to spend that money on aviation. And GA has traditionally gotten a sweet deal from the current funding setup. All us recreational GA flyers are basically getting subsidized airport and ATC services, so it doesn't surprise me that so many here are opposed to having to actually pay for things they currently get at a substantial discount.
Those taxes go into the federal general fund, not to aviation. Congress has been under no obligation to spend that money on aviation. And GA has traditionally gotten a sweet deal from the current funding setup. All us recreational GA flyers are basically getting subsidized airport and ATC services, so it doesn't surprise me that so many here are opposed to having to actually pay for things they currently get at a substantial discount.
The single biggest downside to any tax is that congress stands between the collection and final disbursement. If congress had been out of the funding loop a decade or two ago, user fee funding would have prevented (or at least greatly ameliorated) the ADS-B boon-doggle. That is because an ATC entity void of regulatory authority could not have mandated any such beast. Witness what happened with ADS-B in Canada, which has no plans to mandate ADS-B for GA aircraft. That is because Nav Canada was constrained by it not having authority to mandate such a thing and because the capital cost couldn't be justified by the user base (and Nav Canada is governed by its users: http://www.navcanada.ca/EN/about-us/Pages/governance.aspx)
...move their planes to I towered airports..
I normally agree with your logic. In this case however I don't. The general public benefits from the aviation infrastructure that exists in this country even if they never directly use the infrastructure. The funds for maintaining and operating our airspace/airports should come from the general fund. Not user fees.
It's hard to dispute that users of a product should be the ones to pay for the product. I think most of us believe that for most things in life.
Perhaps, but my question is always, what do I get for the first $24K that I sent the Fed?
The NAS system and ATC network exist to service the needs of commercial freight and airline carriers. It's not as if any of that goes away when GenAv dies. The incremental cost for us FLIBs is a pittance, and out share of fuel excise taxes more than covers our end. No one in GenAv is getting a "sweet deal," especially considering how we're getting gored by FAA regulatory BS, we're only paying our share and no one else's. An appalling thought to ever-expanding government types.
The NAS system and ATC network exist to service the needs of commercial freight and airline carriers. It's not as if any of that goes away when GenAv dies. The incremental cost for us FLIBs is a pittance, and out share of fuel excise taxes more than covers our end. No one in GenAv is getting a "sweet deal," especially considering how we're getting gored by FAA regulatory BS, we're only paying our share and no one else's. An appalling thought to ever-expanding government types.
Turning Air traffic over to a corp. (profit or not) would be the same as turning the interstate highway system over to a corp and charging cars for the use of the road. The airspace system is for the good and use of the public, including businesses and it benefits the entire economy. Turn it over to any form of a corporate entity and the costs to users (and by extension, the customers of users) will increase, steadily, every year. The only winners will be the ones holding the contract and the politicians whose palms get greased.
The FAA isn't perfect, but they have been doing a good job for decades. Sure, improvements could be made...and are being made, but the system isn't broken and there is no reason why the federal government should turn this over to a corporation that will only raise the costs to users, just so they can skim more money.
On the FAA side, I also note that the ATC union is favoring privatization....
PalmPilot said it best. The debate is not about whether we should pay user fees. We do, right now. The question is how user fees should be assessed and collected. Right now, we pay them through fuel taxes. The proposal is that we pay them per flight or per interaction with ATC. The debate should be about which of these is more efficient. If per-flight or per-ATC interaction replaces fuel taxes, some of us will pay more, but some of us will pay less. VFR-only fliers who use uncontrolled airports would pay less, while those who fly IFR will pay more. This means that an organization like AOPA has a conflict of interest on this issue. Of course, if per-flight or per ATC-interaction fees were in addition to current fuel taxes, the objection is to a hike in user fees. That turns the debate into one about the amount of the fee rather than to the way it's assessed. As I recall, the NBAA said it was willing to discuss the amount but wants the amount, whatever it is, to be collected through fuel taxes rather than on a per-use basis, because it considers that to be the more efficient method. The question of whether controllers should be government employees or corporation employees is entirely different from how the tax should be collected, and it should be discussed and decided separately.
It's hard to dispute that users of a product should be the ones to pay for the product.
The "surprise!" Is who will most likely own the "ATC Corporation." You guessed it: the airlines.
PalmPilot said it best. The debate is not about whether we should pay user fees. We do, right now. The question is how user fees should be assessed and collected. Right now, we pay them through fuel taxes. The proposal is that we pay them per flight or per interaction with ATC. The debate should be about which of these is more efficient.
Why do you say it'll be owned by the airlines? I thought the proposal was for a federally-chartered corporation, like the U.S. Postal Service, that isn't really "owned" by anyone, but does have to cover its own expenses because those would no longer be a federal budget item.
I'm not challenging your statement. I'm sincerely asking what makes you think it'll be airlines.
The tax on fuel is a simple and efficient way to collect tax and provides a tax proportional to your use of the system. A user fee system is inherently less efficient because a structure has to be created and maintained (and paid for) to identify each use and bill you for it.
Why do you say it'll be owned by the airlines? I thought the proposal was for a federally-chartered corporation, like the U.S. Postal Service, that isn't really "owned" by anyone, but does have to cover its own expenses because those would no longer be a federal budget item.
I'm not challenging your statement. I'm sincerely asking what makes you think it'll be airlines.