Bolen Thanks House GA Caucus for Opposition to User Fees
/National Business Aviation Association (NBAA) President and CEO Ed Bolen today thanked the leaders of the House General Aviation (GA) Caucus for their continued support of “one of America’s greatest industries,” and repeated opposition to proposals that would be harmful to general aviation, including user fees.
Bolen provided his comments in a briefing provided by leaders with several GA organizations, conducted for Capitol Hill staff with House lawmakers serving in, or interested in joining, the GA Caucus. The briefing focused on some of the major policy concerns confronting the GA industry.
“General aviation provides over 1.2 million jobs – good manufacturing and service jobs – and also supports tens of thousands of American businesses,” Bolen explained to a capacity crowd in a Capitol Hill hearing room. “General aviation serves the nation’s communities by providing vital air transportation, and also helps in times of need, by providing medical evacuations, and responding to natural disasters.”
Bolen thanked lawmakers in the GA Caucus, and their staff, for fighting off repeated proposals to impose user fees on general aviation, most recently in President Obama's fiscal year 2015 federal spending proposal, released in March. That proposal was opposed by the chairman and ranking member of the House GA Caucus, a move welcomed by NBAA and other GA groups.
“From the business aviation perspective, we have always maintained that anything a user fee can do, a fuel tax can do better, and more efficiently – and that benefits both the government and users of the system, from large companies to small businesses and individuals,” Bolen said.
“None of us likes paying taxes, and we don’t want to pay more than is necessary, but we would like the tax mechanism to be as efficient as possible,” Bolen added. “We think the general aviation fuel taxes are the single-best way to generate revenue to support the aviation system.”
For example, Bolen said a fuel tax is prepaid by the user, which makes avoidance impossible. The fuel tax requires no new bureaucracy – no ‘Sky-R-S’ – to ensure everyone pays for using the aviation system. A fuel tax does not burden the operator with situations that can distract from safety, by introducing decisions about whether or not to incur additional flight services.
Bolen also noted that a fuel tax imposes no new administrative cost burden on operators to file, is well understood and accepted by users, and actually incentivizes operators to make their aircraft use as fuel-efficient as possible, which in turn benefits the environment with lower emissions.
Before concluding, Bolen added that while user fees are among the major threats to general aviation, Congress also needs to continue supporting America’s network of airports – including those used by general aviation. “GA airports facilitate mobility, business and commerce, providing economic development opportunities and vital air transportation services, especially in smaller communities with little or no airline service,” Bolen said. “We need to continue supporting these airports, at the federal level, as part of a single, national aviation-transportation system.”
As an example of a recent concern in this area, Bolen referred to a congressional vote taken earlier this month on a noise-curfew amendment for a reliever airport in southern California. While the outcome of the vote on the amendment affirmed the need to keep all airports operating as part of a national system, “that amendment was a reminder that there are ongoing attempts from local interests to compromise the national nature of our aviation system,” Bolen said.
In concluding, Bolen said, “NBAA and its Members have long been united with the rest of the general aviation community in supporting the fuel tax and opposing user fees. We thank the GA Caucus, and many others in Congress, for hearing our industry’s voice about the user-fee threat, the need to preserve our national system of airports and other important issues. We look forward to continuing our work with the caucus on policies that help promote an essential American industry.”
Also taking part in the GA Caucus briefing were Mark Baker, president and CEO, Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association; Pete Bunce, president and CEO, General Aviation Manufacturers Association; Tom Hendricks, president and CEO, National Air Transportation Association, and; Matt Zuccaro, president, Helicopter Association International.