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Thu, Mar 17, 2005

AOPA: President's Budget Threatens GA Airports

Boyer Tells Airport Conference Each Airport Could Lose $150,000 In Entitlements

The Bush Administration's budget proposal for fiscal year 2006 is bad for general aviation airports and could cause each eligible airport to lose a $150,000 "entitlement" next year. AOPA had worked hard to put that aid for small airports into law several years ago. That threat to GA airports was one of the key points in AOPA President Phil Boyer's keynote speech Tuesday night to the FAA's Eastern Region Twenty-eighth Annual Airport Conference in Hershey, Pennsylvania.

Boyer spoke to more than 600 airport managers, consultants, and government officials, detailing what AOPA has done and is doing to protect airports such as Albert Whitted Airport and Witham Field in Florida; Lee's Summit in Missouri; and Rialto, Santa Paula, and Truckee-Tahoe airports in California.

FAA Regional Administrator Arlene Feldman introduced Boyer, saying, "Phil Boyer and AOPA are the voice of general aviation."

"AOPA's top priorities are protecting airports, fighting temporary flight restrictions and user fees, and reducing the cost of flying," said Boyer. "And one of the biggest threats to airports right now is the reduced Airport Improvement Program funding in President Bush's proposed FAA budget."

Overall, the president cut the FAA's 2006 budget by 1.27 percent. But the administration took a much bigger chunk out of the Airport Improvement Program (AIP), lopping off some $600 million from the amount Congress had authorized. If the AIP budget is not increased from the $3 billion proposed by the administration, general aviation airports are going to be hurt significantly more than the air carrier airports because of funding formulas written into law. If the AIP budget drops below $3.2 billion, the set-aside for GA airports would be reduced from 20 to 18.5 percent. That means GA would get an even smaller portion of a smaller pie.

Even worse for small GA airports, the general aviation "entitlement" of up to $150,000 per eligible airport would also be eliminated. For many small airports, that is the only source of federal funding.

"The small airports that can afford it the least will be hurt the most," Boyer told the conference.

To protect those GA airports, AOPA focuses on three key areas, Boyer said. First, the association provides advocacy and support from headquarters. That includes lobbying Congress for laws to protect airports and adequate funding; media and public relations efforts, such as the General Aviation Serving America Web site; and specific campaigns such as community information efforts for threatened airports.

AOPA also provides support for its regional representatives and Airport Support Network volunteers, whose hard work at the community level has frequently been key in saving an airport.

Boyer noted that while AOPA can do a lot to help save airports, the involvement of local pilots and community support is really the deciding factor.

The FAA recognized that by presenting its first annual General Aviation Airport of the Year award to Upshur County Regional (W22) in Buckhannon, West Virginia. The award was accepted by Airport Commission President William Wellings, who is also the AOPA Airport Support Network volunteer for Upshur County.

The airport had been threatened, but "we focused on changing the outlook of the community and campaigned for community support," said Wellings. They showed the benefits of the airport, and the FAA recognized the turn-around and improvements.

Boyer noted that the 600-plus turnout at the conference is the largest he's ever seen. "I think this indicates a growing interest in general aviation," he said.

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

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