Following the Airlines’ Lead, the FAA Charges Air Show Extra Fees

Just in time for the start of next week’s annual AirVenture at Wittman Regional Airport in Oshkosh 

Scott Spangler
3 min readJul 26, 2013

The Federal Aviation Administration’s dominant mission is providing air traffic control (ATC) to all U.S. aviation activities that require the safety this service provides. This includes aviation events that attract a large number of aircraft, like the EAA’s AirVenture in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, which begins next Monday and draws roughly 10,000 airplanes each year, making Wittman Regional the world’s busiest airport for the week.

Until this year, taxes on aviation fuel and airline tickets paid for ATC. Citing the consequences of Congress’ self-inflicted budget sequestration, they now charge air shows a fee for ATC services. EAA’s bill, nearly $500,000, was a bit like a FAA-version of the airline industry’s a la carte baggage fees. The FAA’s justification for the fees died, like the airlines’ rationalizations, in the fetid swamp of cynicism created by government and big business long ago as they redeveloped society so that it met their needs at the expense of their customers.

In other words, they did it because they could.

Government has been trying to recreate an airline business model of charging fees for everything, and sequestration gave them the “authorization” to do it. What’s really ironic is that airline fees, which are not taxed like tickets or fuel, contribute no revenue to the aviation infrastructure, airports, capital improvements, and FAA operations, including ATC. Yup, airline fees are a parasite, and to make up for the financial nutrition it sucks from the system, FAA is starting with ATC fees.

According to the Washington Post, since they started the practice, the airlines have collected $12.8 billion in fees for something that was once free. In 2012 they collected $924 million—that’s right, nearly a billion dollars—in baggage fees, a 3 percent increase over the same period in 2011.

The days when Congress could counteract such fees are waning. With its members, in both parties, behaving like self-absorbed only children, the current Congress is on pace to do less than the one that preceded it. Besides, its members are beholden not to voters, but to the big businesses that fund their reelection campaigns. And we get exactly what we deserve because we keep re-electing them.

Some have suggested that incorporating or privatizing ATC might be a way to overcome the inevitable arrival of more fees. That might work in some place like Canada that, according to the Daily Show, effectively regulates its banking industry. As an old-school, professionally trained journalist, words cannot describe the convoluted emotions that come with the realization that the broadcast news source I trust most to tell both sides of the story (so I can make up my own mind rather than being told how to think), is a comedy show that fuels its satire with objectivity.

Come to think of it, I remember reading about people’s concerns when NavCanada moved to the private sector, but honestly in reporting other stories about different companies that work within this system, I haven’t heard of any big problems. But that doesn’t mean it will work here. If you want to know where private sector ATC will go in America, look at the other attempts at solving similar funding problems, Amtrak and the U.S. Postal Service. For the reason behind their poor performance, look to a micromanaging Congress.

The really bad news is that there is no quick and easy solution to this problem. As a nation and an industry, we’re addicted to anything quick and easy, like the bottom line numbers that come with fees on things we once provided as part of serving our customers.

Scott Spangler is the Editor of Jetwhine.com, where this article first appeared.

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Scott Spangler

Freelance writer and photographer specializing in aviation and small town travel.