My Senator wrote back to me...

Cap'n Jack

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Cap'n Jack
Response from Ben Nelson, D-NE regarding user fees:

December 15,
2006


Mr. Jack Silver
<Address deleted>

Dear Jack:
Thank you for contacting me regarding issues related to the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). I was glad to receive
your letter on these important matters.
As Congress continues discussions on the reauthorization of the
FAA during the 110th Congress, financing our aviation system to
keep up with the demand on the system into the future will be the
biggest, and most contentious, issue we deal with as part of these
discussions.
First, the FAA has stated that the taxes and fees supporting the
Airport and Airways Trust Fund will expire in 2007 and that the
fund's balance will soon go below zero. I understand the concerns
general aviation has with respect to proposals which have been
floated calling for increased user fees on general aviation as a way
to pay for use of the national air system. I would be hesitant to
support an effort that would simply shift the burden of financing
from one segment of the aviation industry to another. The current
system of using aviation taxes and the U.S. Department of the
Treasury's general fund financing has served us well, and we
should be very cautious about considering any attempt to abandon
that system. I also believe general aviation must have input into
any financing plan which comes out of the FAA.
Second, the general fund's share of FAA appropriations has
declined by 2 percent in each of the last four years, from 24
percent in 2003 to an estimated 18 percent in 2006. Clearly,
taxpayers deserve the scrutiny of Congress regarding how our
general funds are spent; however, the public also expects safe,
efficient air travel. Therefore, I think the FAA's continued use of
general funds is warranted.
Lastly, I think it is appropriate, as Congress takes up FAA
reauthorization legislation, to look at where there could be more
flexibility within the FAA, but the safety of air travel must be our
first priority. We should be extremely cautious in abdicating any
Congressional oversight over the FAA and should only do so
where it is clearly necessary.
Thank you again for contacting me, Jack. Your comments and
concerns are an important part of the legislative process, and I
encourage you to continue sharing your thoughts and ideas.
Sincerely,
Ben Nelson
U.S. Senator
 
User fees are a bad idea, period. Ask any pilot who has flown in Europe regarding costs as well as the time it takes to get billed. Phil Boyer said it takes as long as six months before he sees a bill. Don't we already have one bureaucracy operating this way? Well, maybe more than one.

As it stands now, about 18% of FAA funding comes from the general fund. About 23 cents from every gallon of fuel you buy goes toward the trust fund. The rest of the funding comes from fees paid through commercial passenger traffic.

Boyer made a good case for the fund's continued growth under the current plan, not a decline. As with any government agency who wants money, I'd first want to know WHY they want it and WHAT specifically it's to be used for. And, I'm sure they are no different than most agencies who spend every dime at the end of a fiscal period. The premise is... if you have funds left over, you obviously don't need any increases in the following year.

I don't trust congress to just look over everything and have absolute control. But, I don't trust the FAA with absolute autonomy, as well.
 
Glad you received a response. Apparently Senator Lamar Alexander is too important (yea, right) to send anything but a computer generated "thanks for your letter" response :mad:
 
Kevin-

Thanks for writing to your senator too. I don't know how much it will help, but it can't hurt either.
 
Response from Ben Nelson, D-NE regarding user fees:

Hey, Jack. I'm from Nebraska too and last month voted for my
first ever Democraft. It was Ben Nelson. He's usually pretty
sensible and Ricketts scared me.

I'm going to send him a note too.

RT
 
Hi Roger-

I just moved out here a few months back. I thought the Ricketts ad about Ben raising wild turkeys to avoid $10,000 in taxes was pretty funny, but I thought that even if true, Ben is pretty good. I think that school board members in New Jersey scam taxpayers out of more money! You gotta get into the hundreds of thousands of dollars before your opponent can make an issue of it, but only if s/he didn't get caught.
 
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