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![]() The news item below cites International Air Transport Association as saying that its members pay between $85 and $125 to process one invoice: NBAA GIVES THUMBS UP TO HOUSE FAA BILL (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195540) The House of Representatives FAA reauthorization legislation (H.R.2881 ()) has been received with open arms by the National Business Aviation Association (NBAA), thanks to the bill's support for ATC modernization without aviation user fees. NBAA President and CEO Ed Bolen praised House leaders for understanding "that the aviation system must be modernized to meet capacity demands [and] that user fees shouldn't be mistaken for a modernization plan." In previous testimony before Congress, Bolen said user fees are costly for governments to administer, requiring a large, expensive bureaucracy. Additionally, NBAA said user fees come with an administrative burden for operators and cited International Air Transport Association (IATA) reports that IATA members spend between $85 and $125 to process one invoice. The association said user fees can also be increased at any time to make up for declining revenue. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195540 http://www.iata.org/whatwedo/finance...al_billing.htm http://www.iata.org/workgroups/airpo...-standards.htm But Robert Poole states that ATC user fees could be collected cheaply as is the current practice for international over flight charges: http://www.avweb.com/podcast/podcast/195418-1.html June 18, 2007 Reason Foundation's Robert Poole Makes the Case for User Fees Robert Poole, Director of Transportation Studies at nonprofit think-tank Reason Foundation, has long been an advocate of aviation user fees, as well as a supporter of commercializing the U.S. air traffic control organization. In an interview with AVweb Editor-in-Chief Chad Trautvetter, Poole explains why he sees user fees and a privatized ATC system as good things for airspace users, despite what the aviation alphabet groups and some congressional members have been saying lately about user fees. Note that this is an extra-special double-length podcast, coming in at 16 minutes. Is $85 and $125 processing cost per invoice cheaper than the current cost of processing aviation fuel and ticket taxes? |
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Larry Dighera wrote:
The news item below cites International Air Transport Association as saying that its members pay between $85 and $125 to process one invoice: NBAA GIVES THUMBS UP TO HOUSE FAA BILL (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195540) The House of Representatives FAA reauthorization legislation (H.R.2881 ()) has been received with open arms by the National Business Aviation Association (NBAA), thanks to the bill's support for ATC modernization without aviation user fees. NBAA President and CEO Ed Bolen praised House leaders for understanding "that the aviation system must be modernized to meet capacity demands [and] that user fees shouldn't be mistaken for a modernization plan." In previous testimony before Congress, Bolen said user fees are costly for governments to administer, requiring a large, expensive bureaucracy. Additionally, NBAA said user fees come with an administrative burden for operators and cited International Air Transport Association (IATA) reports that IATA members spend between $85 and $125 to process one invoice. The association said user fees can also be increased at any time to make up for declining revenue. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195540 There is absolutley no doubt that implementing user fees will have a massive overhead associated with it.... collecting and processing these fees. Take a look at the IRS... collecting processing taxes (which are essentially "user fees") .. its a MASSIVE bureaucracy which cost taxpayes an insane amount of overhead. A simple national sales tax would be far more efficient. But wait... isn't that what we already have in aviation fuel taxes? I submit that governemnet never met a new bureaucracy it didn't fall in love with.... more federal employees.. more union members... perpetuation of the 'species'. |
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On Jul 8, 3:46 pm, kontiki wrote:
Take a look at the IRS... collecting processing taxes (which are essentially "user fees") .. its a MASSIVE bureaucracy which cost taxpayes an insane amount of overhead. That's just not a fact. The IRS "bureaucracy" costs roughly $10 billion divided by $2 trillion collected. That only .5% in collection costs, the most efficient in the world. The FAA originally proposed an unspecified user fee for just landing/departing Class B. That could be collected by the Airport Authorities at 30 big airports and turned over periodically to FAA. The stupid Senate made it a $25 IFR fee for all turbine aircraft, w/o saying how FAA would collect. However, law could say that IRS collects this, like on a quarterly form the way the airline ticket tax is voluntarily paid to IRS. Voluntarily compliance would be extremely high, since FAA could provide an IFR data file to IRS for computer match. Anybody not fessing up gets a notice. Don't pay within X days, no turbine IFR flight plan for that operator gets accepted by FAA's system! Hardly any other IRS tax has such a cheap and effective enforcement mechanism. FAA could manage this also at low cost. Probably more than .5% of collections, since IRS has the procedures/experience in place, but not much more. I don't agree with IFR user fees, but I don't agree either with hyperbole as to actual cost. F-- |
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![]() "ktbr" wrote in message ... wrote: On Jul 8, 3:46 pm, kontiki wrote: Take a look at the IRS... collecting processing taxes (which are essentially "user fees") .. its a MASSIVE bureaucracy which cost taxpayes an insane amount of overhead. That's just not a fact. The IRS "bureaucracy" costs roughly $10 billion divided by $2 trillion collected. That only .5% in collection costs, the most efficient in the world. The FAA originally proposed an unspecified user fee for just landing/departing Class B. That could be collected by the Airport Authorities at 30 big airports and turned over periodically to FAA. I don't buy those numbers. There are so many hidden costs invloved... What about the libilites for benefits for all the IRS employees... the computer equipment, office space, electric bills, printing costs... storage facilites and processing tax returns. You also never mentioned the hidden costs (costs employees pay but don't realize they do). The personnel overhead and the countless thousands of UNPRODUCTIVE time spent on simply *complying* with IRS filing and paperwork. There is a 'cost' associated with every single employee that ultimately comes out of the employees potential income. The IRS and its miriad of confusing rules and printed publications cannot be justified. Yea, when McClellan was shutting down, the USAF claimed the shop rate was something like $50.00 an hour for their hydraulics shop. We went through, and folks were just standing around with millions of dollars of equipment and inventory all over the place. They (the govment) did not have a clue what it costs to do business... |
#7
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... On Jul 8, 3:46 pm, kontiki wrote: Take a look at the IRS... collecting processing taxes (which are essentially "user fees") .. its a MASSIVE bureaucracy which cost taxpayes an insane amount of overhead. That's just not a fact. The IRS "bureaucracy" costs roughly $10 billion divided by $2 trillion collected. That only .5% in collection costs, the most efficient in the world. That's because WE do all the paper work. Get a look at what some tax group calculate it costs the citizens to record, compute and file each year. It's seveal times the $10B for the IRS thugs. The FAA originally proposed an unspecified user fee for just landing/departing Class B. That could be collected by the Airport Authorities at 30 big airports and turned over periodically to FAA. The stupid Senate made it a $25 IFR fee for all turbine aircraft, w/o saying how FAA would collect. However, law could say that IRS collects this, like on a quarterly form the way the airline ticket tax is voluntarily paid to IRS. Voluntarily compliance would be extremely high, since FAA could provide an IFR data file to IRS for computer match. Anybody not fessing up gets a notice. Don't pay within X days, no turbine IFR flight plan for that operator gets accepted by FAA's system! Hardly any other IRS tax has such a cheap and effective enforcement mechanism. FAA could manage this also at low cost. Probably more than .5% of collections, since IRS has the procedures/experience in place, but not much more. I don't agree with IFR user fees, but I don't agree either with hyperbole as to actual cost. Check what other nations costs are for collecting fees. |
#8
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![]() "kontiki" wrote in message ... Larry Dighera wrote: The news item below cites International Air Transport Association as saying that its members pay between $85 and $125 to process one invoice: NBAA GIVES THUMBS UP TO HOUSE FAA BILL (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195540) The House of Representatives FAA reauthorization legislation (H.R.2881 ()) has been received with open arms by the National Business Aviation Association (NBAA), thanks to the bill's support for ATC modernization without aviation user fees. NBAA President and CEO Ed Bolen praised House leaders for understanding "that the aviation system must be modernized to meet capacity demands [and] that user fees shouldn't be mistaken for a modernization plan." In previous testimony before Congress, Bolen said user fees are costly for governments to administer, requiring a large, expensive bureaucracy. Additionally, NBAA said user fees come with an administrative burden for operators and cited International Air Transport Association (IATA) reports that IATA members spend between $85 and $125 to process one invoice. The association said user fees can also be increased at any time to make up for declining revenue. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195540 There is absolutley no doubt that implementing user fees will have a massive overhead associated with it.... collecting and processing these fees. Take a look at the IRS... collecting processing taxes (which are essentially "user fees") .. its a MASSIVE bureaucracy which cost taxpayes an insane amount of overhead. A simple national sales tax would be far more efficient. But wait... isn't that what we already have in aviation fuel taxes? Have you seen how much overhead Canada or New Zealand's ATC systems cost? |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Petition against user fees | Bat T Ball | General Aviation | 1 | June 2nd 07 01:27 AM |
Here come the user fees | Steve Foley | Piloting | 20 | February 16th 07 12:41 AM |
GA User fees | Jose | Piloting | 48 | December 24th 05 02:12 AM |
ATC User Fees | Larry Dighera | Piloting | 80 | May 12th 05 07:20 AM |
User Fees | Dude | Owning | 36 | March 19th 05 05:57 PM |