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Join Us At 0900ET, Friday, 4/10, for the LIVE Morning Brief.
Watch It LIVE at
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Fri, Apr 08, 2005

Manufactured Crisis In Aviation Trust Fund?

NATCA Study Says Argument For User Fees Based On Misleading Information

By ANN Senior Editor Pete Combs

If NATCA Executive Vice President Ruth Marlin is right, then your government may be setting you up to pay for aviation services that are, for now, free.

Marlin has just released an in-depth study of the FAA's Aviation Trust Fund -- the same fund FAA Administrator Marion Blake and others told us just last week is big trouble.

The FAA says, faced with increasing expenditures and declining revenue, it's now worried about the continued viability of the FAA's Aviation Trust, which has traditionally funded infrastructure and operational improvements.

We pick up the story from last November, when the FAA started publicly floating the idea of charging user fees to general and business aviators. At the time, the news was foreboding for GA -- if the downward trend in the Trust continued as it has over the past four years, then general aviation airports could be neglected almost entirely.

AOPA chimed in last month, warning that the Bush administration's budget could leave each general aviation airport $150,000 short in FY 2006.  That word came from the FAA's 30th Annual Forecast Conference in Washington.

ANN Editor-in-Chief Jim Campbell reported from the same conference that FAA Administrator Marion Blakey hinted again at the possibility GA and BizAv operators might soon face user fees. Again, Blakey cited an aging ATC workforce and trailing-edge infrastructure.

Is The Trust Funding Crisis Being Manufactured?

NATCA's study says, however, there is no funding crisis -- outside what the Bush administration is manufacturing.

"What has changed is that the amount of demand from operations that is placed on the trust fund instead of the general fund is shifting," Marlin told ANN. "If you look over the history of the fund, about 46-percent of operations has been funded from the general fund. In the current projections, which is the basis for the rhetoric that [the trust] can't meet the needs, it's capped at 13-percent.

"So basically," she continued, "if you use your money for something you didn't used to use it for, yeah, you'll spend more."

The NATCA report examines the increasing role of cost-shifting operational expenses to the trust, saying this isn't a new phenomenon.

From 1973 to 1976 the Trust Fund was prohibited from financing FAA operations and maintenance. In 1976, Congress capped the amount of Trust Fund revenue available for operations and maintenance and included a penalty clause, which remained in place until 1990. In 1984, the annual appropriations bill specified that only general treasury funds would be used for FAA operations.

"They are manufacturing a revenue crisis for the purpose of switching to a user-fee based system," Marlin said. Why? "A user-fee based system is more quickly privatized than an excise-tax based system." Privatization of the air transport system, according to Marlin, is a Bush administration goal.

Marlin suggested the entire user-fee discussion was being carefully advanced by the administration in advance of the Trust's reauthorization by Congress, scheduled for 2007.

"That's a convenient confluence of events," she said.

FMI: www.natca.org, www.faa.gov

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