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#1
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![]() As a private pilot, I make frequent use of the NWS's Aviation Digital Data Service (see 1). I especially like their "Java Tools" graphic presentations of METAR, TAF, and AIR/SIGMET data. Senate Bill S. 786 (see 2) could well kill such NWS weather presentations in favor of private sector subscription or advertisement supported Internet weather services. AccuWeather.com has been a vocal proponent of this bill. The Senator sponsoring this bill is from AccuWeather's home state. I have been arguing the case against this bill with AccuWeather's Michael Steinberg in an online forum on ipetitions.com (see 3). If any of my fellow pilots wish to add their voice to the discussion, I would appreciate it. I must admit that I have reached the limit of my patience with Michael Steinberg, who characterizes my views as "a bunch of distortions at best". I believe that I have presented an accurate interpretation of the likely effects of this bill and I also believe that any "distortions" in the forum largely originate with AccuWeather's Michael Steinberg. I urge those who care about this issue to sign the online petition, join the online forum, and write their own senators with their opinions of this bill. 1: NWS ADDS: http://adds.aviationweather.noaa.gov/ 2: S. 786: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c109:s786: 3: http://www.ipetitions.com/campaigns/SaveTheNWS/ FlyBoy |
#2
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Thank you for this information. I have written my Senator, and I will
follow this. Send an email to me If I may be of further service. |
#3
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FlyBoy wrote:
IÂ*mustÂ*admitÂ*thatÂ*IÂ*haveÂ*reachedÂ*theÂ*limit Â*ofÂ*my patience with Michael Steinberg, who characterizes my views as "a bunch of distortions at best". Why are you trying to convince someone with so obvious a financial interest in eliminating this service for which we'd continue to pay so as to subsidize his firm? You might as well come into groups and try to convince us that Man Was Not Meant To Fly. - Andrew |
#4
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Andrew Gideon wrote:
Why are you trying to convince someone with so obvious a financial interest in eliminating this service for which we'd continue to pay so as to subsidize his firm? Now that's just plain silly, Andrew. I'm not trying to convince him of anything, I am trying to expose his specious arguments for what they are. Indeed, rarely in public debate are the opposing debaters trying to convince each other. Rather, they are trying to convince the audience. The audience in this case are the readers of the forum. Got it? |
#5
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On Fri, 06 May 2005 13:11:59 -0400, Andrew Gideon
wrote: FlyBoy wrote: I*must*admit*that*I*have*reached*the*limit*of*my patience with Michael Steinberg, who characterizes my views as "a bunch of distortions at best". Why are you trying to convince someone with so obvious a financial interest in eliminating this service for which we'd continue to pay so as to subsidize his firm? I really don't follow why you are saying what you are saying, but the bill needs to be defeated. Check with the AOPA and EAA. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com You might as well come into groups and try to convince us that Man Was Not Meant To Fly. - Andrew |
#6
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![]() "FlyBoy" wrote in message ... As a private pilot, I make frequent use of the NWS's Aviation Digital snip... I urge those who care about this issue to sign the online petition, join the online forum, and write their own senators with their opinions of this bill. 1: NWS ADDS: http://adds.aviationweather.noaa.gov/ 2: S. 786: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c109:s786: 3: http://www.ipetitions.com/campaigns/SaveTheNWS/ FlyBoy This could end up like things in Russia. Public money funded resources are deemed too inefficient to be run by the government, so the assets are put up for bid to private companies. The private company acquires the asset, and then sells the service to the public.Very bad idea for the NWS, very bad idea for our freeways, very bad idea for our airways... |
#7
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Blueskies wrote:
"FlyBoy" wrote in message ... As a private pilot, I make frequent use of the NWS's Aviation Digital snip... I urge those who care about this issue to sign the online petition, join the online forum, and write their own senators with their opinions of this bill. 1: NWS ADDS: http://adds.aviationweather.noaa.gov/ 2: S. 786: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c109:s786: 3: http://www.ipetitions.com/campaigns/SaveTheNWS/ FlyBoy This could end up like things in Russia. Public money funded resources are deemed too inefficient to be run by the government, so the assets are put up for bid to private companies. The private company acquires the asset, and then sells the service to the public.Very bad idea for the NWS, very bad idea for our freeways, very bad idea for our airways... I'm not sure it is all that bad. I think if most "public" services were provided by a free enterprise system, then we'd get a lot more in aggregate for our money. The problem that many of us, me included, don't like to accept is that aviation is not self-supporting and is subsidized heavily from other revenue sources. A private enterprise wouldn't likely have this subsidy so the user costs would reflect the true cost of the sytem and this likely would be ugly ... even if GA only had to pay for the meager subset of services that it really needs. Most GA airports simply couldn't survive without subsidies. I don't know if this is true for freeways or not, but I'm not sure they are self supporting either if you consider the total costs, both capital and expense to maintain them. It all comes down to what is less costly, the waste in government or the profit margin that a private enterprise would require. If the private enterprise is efficient enough that it can make a profit and still cost less than a government agency, then it is a good deal overall. Matt |
#8
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Flyboy wrote:
The audience in this case are the readers of the forum. Got it? Then that he characterizes your views as "a bunch of distortions at best" should be of limited concern if the audience is clear that he's being duplicitous. - Andrew |
#9
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![]() I'm not sure it is all that bad. I think if most "public" services were provided by a free enterprise system, then we'd get a lot more in aggregate for our money. This can only be true where there is free competition and where the value is measurable (if you die without healthcare, then its hard to measure its value). Also, if the government must have the weather already (which it must) then it is likely efficient for us all to have them dissemanate it. How many of the private weather firms have there own satellites anyway? The problem that many of us, me included, don't like to accept is that aviation is not self-supporting and is subsidized heavily from other revenue sources. I have argued this myth a thousand times, and no one listens. It simply is not provable given our system of other heavily subsidized activities being involved. Pointing to the subsidies is not enough. You need to show that it is MORE subsidized than other activities, as well as trace all the taxes (monetary and regulatory) on it. I will be happy to cut my subsidy if we can the rest as well. Let the poor beg the rich, and the food supply shrink if that is what you want. A private enterprise wouldn't likely have this subsidy so the user costs would reflect the true cost of the sytem and this likely would be ugly ... even if GA only had to pay for the meager subset of services that it really needs. I suppose if weather were off the budget, the TV stations would end up paying for a lot of it. And the airlines would HAVE to have it. I suspect I could get almost all I need for free anyway. Most GA airports simply couldn't survive without subsidies. I am not too sure of that. The only thing GA airports HAVE to have is protection from permanent closure. After all, if we want to be able to fly someplace, there has to be a place to land SOMEWHERE near there. NIMBY's be damned. Besides, the GA airports by definition have their ability to compete taken away by the heavily subsidized airports the carriers use. This argument won't be over until Delta and AMR start building their own airports. Since there are still successful privately owned airports I will chalk up the need for subsidies to government inability to manage them without graft and inefficiency. I don't know if this is true for freeways or not, but I'm not sure they are self supporting either if you consider the total costs, both capital and expense to maintain them. My point exactly! The only sure thing is that our taxes are being spent on lots of things we don't individually care for. It all comes down to what is less costly, the waste in government or the profit margin that a private enterprise would require. If the private enterprise is efficient enough that it can make a profit and still cost less than a government agency, then it is a good deal overall. This is true but the problem is measuring the costs and benefits. It's not easy. Weather has national security value and therefore must be predicted at least somewhat well. To my knowledge, all weather services are using some of the NWS resources at this time. I could be wrong, but this tells me we don't know well if a free market in weather prediction is profitably sustainable. It could be that we are unwilling to pay for the amount of accuracy which the government requires. Matt |
#10
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Matt Whiting wrote:
I think if most "public" services were provided by a free enterprise system, then we'd get a lot more in aggregate for our money. I disagree. I remember when the Weather Station first came out, they had very frequent local reports and paging of text weather of various cities every 20 minutes or so. Also had some aviation weather, as I recall. Then they started attracting advertisers. The pilot weather was gone the next time I saw a report. By 1995, the local cable companies had replaced the local weather reports with their own ads. TWS corrected that a few years later by announcing that the local weather would be displayed every 10 minutes (on the 8s). That forced the cable companies to play it. Basically, if you need something special and are perceived to be a minority, private enterprise will cut you right out of the picture. If weather info is provided only by private enterprise, we won't have pilot weather unless something like AOPA provides it for us. George Patterson There's plenty of room for all of God's creatures. Right next to the mashed potatoes. |
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