TFaudree_ERAU
Mashin' dem buttons
The bullcrap fees go to the airport you choose to use NOT to provide the services that you use that the National Airspace System provides.
Ok, so how about the 7.5% FET?
The bullcrap fees go to the airport you choose to use NOT to provide the services that you use that the National Airspace System provides.
The only thing that creates jobs in the private sector is demand. Taxes don't really have much to do with it (to a point). Case in point..corporate profits are at all time highs, buy they are still not hiring.nd you're smart enough to know that it's not the job of the government to create jobs. That's the responsibility of private business. You keep taxing the crap out of them, and they can't afford to create jobs. Drop the taxes, and jobs magically appear. Not a very difficult concept to grasp.
Good on the Republicans for standing up for themselves.
The only thing that creates jobs in the private sector is demand. Taxes don't really have much to do with it (to a point). Case in point..corporate profits are at all time highs, buy they are still not hiring.
The bullcrap fees go to the airport you choose to use NOT to provide the services that you use that the National Airspace System provides. I would say between $75.00 and $100.00 for a corporate jet. That won't break the bank on your per hour operating cost and will help supplement the services corporate operators use.
The only thing that creates jobs in the private sector is demand. Taxes don't really have much to do with it (to a point). Case in point..corporate profits are at all time highs, buy they are still not hiring.
Taxes in China are actually higher on a corporate level than here when you account for all our deductions.
Another example, would you actually give up an extra $500,000 (example) in profit just so you don't have to pay $150,000 in tax? Step over dollars much?
$75 to $100 for what? Per flight? You are nuts! Most of the tax that comes fuel are FEDERAL, that goes to run things like ATC, and run the FAA inspectors. Seggy I think you are confused, he is not talking about fees for using an airport, we all have to pay that and some people do choose what airport to use accordingly. We are talking about taxes. Specifically the tax for the aircraft and fuel taxes.
Health coverage scares the crap out of me. It's not only a problem for the uninsured but also the insured as hospitals buy up each other/merge and reduce the bargaining power of the health insurance companies, raising premiums for everyone.They're scared of what kind of additional financial burdens will be placed on them. Obamacare ring a bell?
If I'm understanding correctly, commercial operators pay 7.5% on ticket prices, plus $3.90 per head. Non-commercial operations only pay a fuel tax; right now it's $0.218/gallon.
Let's not forget, however, that a commercial operator takes up a lot more of the FAA's time with certification and oversight. So, we'll say that the 7.5% goes towards that. For the most part, non-commercial operators only take up a Fed's time if something goes awry.
To tell me that we don't pay our fair share is quite an absurd statement.
So do we, when we buy it for stock. Not sure how that relates to FAA funding, however.Plus they pay liquor taxes
So do welanding fees
And that pays for ATC how?bring in tax revenue from the passengers shopping at the airports
Which takes all of 4 minutesNon-Commercial operators are also ramped checked
Yep, taxed as wellthe maintenance shop they bring their plane to is subjective to FAA oversight
Seriously? Please explain how it could possibly use MORE resources. We're usually on random routes between smaller airports. In no way does that impact the airline's decision to continue to utilize piss poor scheduling practices which pound a hub airport with 100 flights per hour.and they use the same, if not more resources with enroute FAA Facilities
brining a Flight Check Airplane to podunkville to tune the ILS, Terminal VORs, etc. You forgot quite a few things here infrastructure wise.
That is still nuts, while commercial airline operations only make up roughly 40% of the roughly 85000 flights in the United States per day, every single one of them uses the ATC system. Roughly 15% of the use is by the Military, and most of those use the system. Roughly 20% is used by corporate aircraft (this includes 135 cargo operators, contract carriers, and other business) most of which probably use the system for long flights, and the last 25% is used by the week end warriors and small PP's doing touch and goes or short XC's. I think its safe to say that most of the last group do not use the ATC system.Yes per flight.
The airlines subsidize the corporate operators. The small amount of taxes the corporate operators pay do not cover the cost of their services they use. The $75 to $100 per flight will help a little.
Headshot... I'm deadYou guys realize you're arguing about who should be paying more to cover the FAA's 0.3% of the federal budget, right?
For comparison, if you received an unexpected $1,000 credit card bill in the mail, right now you'd be fighting with your wife over who should pay for the $3 bag of gummie bears someone bought.
This is exactly what the idiots in charge are hoping for.
Wouldn't you want a 9% tax rate?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/06/most-profitable-corporations-tax-rate_n_1746817.html
That is simply not true. You need FAA inspectors, airport navaids to be repaired, etc. Time for GA to pay for those services.
If you agree that airline passengers are funding the NAS, and that they do so because the airlines are building that cost into the price of a ticket, then how do you propose to make the AIRLINES pay more? Won't they just build THAT into the price of a ticket as well?I've said this a couple times before on here, I'll say it again. The national airspace system is a PUBLIC use system. Guess how the majority of the public uses the system. On the AIRLINES. The airlines aren't paying for the ATC system the passengers are because the airlines have those things put into the price of a ticket. The airlines are the ones not paying their share. They don't pay the fuel tax the GA world does. The airlines should be paying more, not trying to make others pick up the slack that the airlines aren't paying. The majority of the fees and taxes should be paid by the airlines because that's how the majority of the public accesses the system. Sounds like a democratic way of handling it to me.
Carry on.
If you agree that airline passengers are funding the NAS, and that they do so because the airlines are building that cost into the price of a ticket, then how do you propose to make the AIRLINES pay more? Won't they just build THAT into the price of a ticket as well?
I've said this a couple times before on here, I'll say it again. The national airspace system is a PUBLIC use system. Guess how the majority of the public uses the system. On the AIRLINES. The airlines aren't paying for the ATC system the passengers are because the airlines have those things put into the price of a ticket. The airlines are the ones not paying their share. They don't pay the fuel tax the GA world does. The airlines should be paying more, not trying to make others pick up the slack that the airlines aren't paying. The majority of the fees and taxes should be paid by the airlines because that's how the majority of the public accesses the system. Sounds like a democratic way of handling it to me.
Carry on.
If you agree that airline passengers are funding the NAS, and that they do so because the airlines are building that cost into the price of a ticket, then how do you propose to make the AIRLINES pay more? Won't they just build THAT into the price of a ticket as well?