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#1
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So I was flying on a biz trip across the country yesterday, and happened
to pick up an old USA Today, and I read the Editorial page, and what do I see? Apparently, the editors of USA Today are showing support for Richard Anderson, CEO of Northwest Airlines. Since it was a cross-country flight, I had a few hours to write a response, which I sent today to the editors of USA Today, as well as to the News department of AOPA. Not that I really expect my voice to make a difference, but I attached it here.... "Regarding your editorial columns on the Cost of Air Travel from Thursday, April 15, 2004 (USA Today page 12A, columns 1&2). As a Business Owner, and a Frequent Flyer, I can understand why Richard Anderson, CEO of Northwest Airlines, would complain about monies that he has to collect from his passengers and pass on to the government. After all, air travel is down, costs are up, and airfare wars are brewing, all making it very difficult to successfully compete in the airline business. Who else to blame but the General Aviation pilot who "pays less". However, to make the comparison equitable, one has to look at it in an "apples-to-apples" manner. Mr. Anderson, because of his desire to cut costs and increase profits clearly has not done this. As a private pilot, I fly a grand total of about 150 hours per year, in a plane that cruises approximately 135 miles per hour, covering a grand total of about 20,000 miles per year. I write this letter, sitting in the coach cabin of a 757 flight from New York to Seattle, flying 180 people 2500 miles at 500 miles per hour in about 5 hours. And shortly after I get off, the plane will turn around and go back - doubling its air time. It does this twice per day, every day, for a grand total of about 2 MILLION miles per year. And that is one plane in the airlines fleet of hundreds of thousands that do the same thing for Richard Anderson and other Airline executives and shareholders. I think most people believe that you must be wealthy to fly private planes. They watch Donald Trump's gold-laced private Jet full of Champaign-drinking executives and figure that's how it must be for everyone. And certainly, for a small sector of General Aviation - executives and stars like Donald Trump - it is that way. But for a majority of General Aviation pilots, this is not the case. The plane I fly (which I don't own, but share as part of a flight club) is smaller than my car, weighs less than my car, and costs more to operate and maintain than my car. The plane, a Piper Archer, has 4 seats in it, but cannot actually hold 4 average-sized people without sacrificing fuel to accommodate weight capacities. It flies at a maximum speed of about 135 miles per hour, and requires 100 octane, low-lead gas that costs more than the fuel you buy for your car, and in fact costs more than Jet Fuel. I use my plane in much the same way I use my car. I fly for both business and pleasure - flying to customer sites, business meetings, vacation destinations, and the occasional tour of the Hudson River. While I do earn more than the median income level in some years, I am by no means wealthy. I use some of the FAA resources for weather briefing and Air Traffic Control services. But I use far fewer of those resources than Richard Anderson, whose fleet consumes more of these services in a single hour than I will in a lifetime. I do believe it is appropriate for General Aviation pilots to share fairly in the expenses associated with regulating, controlling, and protecting airspace. However, it needs to be fair and equitable across all of the services provided. And while Air Traffic Control services and Weather services are used by all of us, many other FAA services are not. For example, it is highly unlikely that during our four hour flight from New York to western Pennsylvania the plane will be hijacked by my wife sitting in the seat next to me. As such my usage of the TSA security system is substantially less than that of air-buses that fly hundreds of strangers thousands of miles every day, and apparently require careful screening, monitoring, and X-Raying by the TSA. I'm not certain what the best method for fairly and equitably splitting the cost of these services is, since I am not totally familiar with all of the services that the FAA provides, nor how much they cost for different planes and passengers. However, it seems to me that the only sensible way to share costs equitably and fairly is based on consumption, usage, and wear. Tolls are different for Cars, Motorcycles, Buses, and Trucks, for exactly this reason. And already this type of approach is used in calculating landing fees based on airplane weight. In the case of Air Traffic and Weather services, consumption and usage is mostly measured in time - time spent talking to Weather Briefing personnel and Air Traffic Controllers. The best (and perhaps only legitimate) way to measure time in an airplane is by fuel consumption. However since other things, like security screening, are consumed on a per-passenger basis, it is only reasonable to charge a fee per passenger as well. I suspect Mr. Anderson already realizes this. I suspect that Mr. Anderson's motivation for his diatribe is based mostly on cost-cutting initiatives and greed, and on his recognition that the average airline passenger has minimal knowledge of General Aviation and the FAA system, beyond what they see on TV. By taking advantage of public ignorance, he can muster up support for a big cost cutting measure without cutting so much as a paper clip from his own expense report. Imagine how proud his shareholders will be! After all, if the government reduces the fees attached to your round trip airfare, who, exactly, do you think will pocket the difference?" |
#2
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As a private pilot, I fly a grand total of about 150 hours per year, in a
plane that cruises approximately 135 miles per hour, covering a grand total of about 20,000 miles per year. I write this letter, sitting in the coach cabin of a 757 flight from New York to Seattle, flying 180 people 2500 miles at 500 miles per hour in about 5 hours. Absolutely excellent letter! Packed with clear facts, logical comparisons, reasonable arguments. Send it to a local paper or two (at each end of your flight) and help educate some folks directly, too. |
#3
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StellaStar wrote:
As a private pilot, I fly a grand total of about 150 hours per year, in a plane that cruises approximately 135 miles per hour, covering a grand total of about 20,000 miles per year. I write this letter, sitting in the coach cabin of a 757 flight from New York to Seattle, flying 180 people 2500 miles at 500 miles per hour in about 5 hours. Absolutely excellent letter! Packed with clear facts, logical comparisons, reasonable arguments. Send it to a local paper or two (at each end of your flight) and help educate some folks directly, too. I agree that this was an excellent letter, but I will be surprised if it is ever published in its entirety. Space in a paper is a premium commodity, and editors are always trying to compress articles, columns, and the like into a minimal volume. In an effort to maximize the effect of any "letter to the editor" that you write, you should use the same techniques reporters use when they file their stories. Put the most important items at the start of the letter, and sprinkle the supporting information throughout. Your goal should be to have your letter written so that if the editor deletes all but the first 25%, you've still made your point. Rich Lemert |
#4
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I appreciate the feedback.
I actually submitted it to the Op-Ed feedback people, who claim that the typical article is 650-750 words. Mine was about 900, IIRC, so I was hoping it might still make it... Of course, if I actually thought it would have gotten published, I would have waited until then to post it here. ![]() darwin smith wrote in news ![]() StellaStar wrote: As a private pilot, I fly a grand total of about 150 hours per year, in a plane that cruises approximately 135 miles per hour, covering a grand total of about 20,000 miles per year. I write this letter, sitting in the coach cabin of a 757 flight from New York to Seattle, flying 180 people 2500 miles at 500 miles per hour in about 5 hours. Absolutely excellent letter! Packed with clear facts, logical comparisons, reasonable arguments. Send it to a local paper or two (at each end of your flight) and help educate some folks directly, too. I agree that this was an excellent letter, but I will be surprised if it is ever published in its entirety. Space in a paper is a premium commodity, and editors are always trying to compress articles, columns, and the like into a minimal volume. In an effort to maximize the effect of any "letter to the editor" that you write, you should use the same techniques reporters use when they file their stories. Put the most important items at the start of the letter, and sprinkle the supporting information throughout. Your goal should be to have your letter written so that if the editor deletes all but the first 25%, you've still made your point. Rich Lemert |
#5
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![]() "Judah" wrote in message ... I appreciate the feedback. I actually submitted it to the Op-Ed feedback people, who claim that the typical article is 650-750 words. Mine was about 900, IIRC, so I was hoping it might still make it... Of course, if I actually thought it would have gotten published, I would have waited until then to post it here. ![]() 350 words max it save masses of time as they dont have to edit it and ruin the points you are making. It is better to be brutal with your own work and any point you think is weak, take out. Carry on doing this till you have a very pithy and easy to read piece. Too many stats will have most readers turning to the next article by the third statistic. |
#6
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You're right: it's a good letter, but it will almost certainly never get
published. Every newspaper has a word limit on LTTEs. Some are as low as 150 words. I think the average is about 200. Writing a letter that meets the paper's restrictions while still getting a point across is a literary exercise unto itself. Dave Reinhart StellaStar wrote: As a private pilot, I fly a grand total of about 150 hours per year, in a plane that cruises approximately 135 miles per hour, covering a grand total of about 20,000 miles per year. I write this letter, sitting in the coach cabin of a 757 flight from New York to Seattle, flying 180 people 2500 miles at 500 miles per hour in about 5 hours. Absolutely excellent letter! Packed with clear facts, logical comparisons, reasonable arguments. Send it to a local paper or two (at each end of your flight) and help educate some folks directly, too. |
#8
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In article , Judah
wrote: And that is one plane in the airlines fleet of hundreds of thousands that do the same thing for Richard Anderson and other Airline executives and shareholders. one nit: The airlines fleet isn't made up of "hundreds of thousands" -- Bob Noel |
#9
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Your right. I should have checked my facts once I was on the ground before
I sent it off. Where would I find out the total number of airplanes owned by all of the airlines worldwide? Bob Noel wrote in : In article , Judah wrote: And that is one plane in the airlines fleet of hundreds of thousands that do the same thing for Richard Anderson and other Airline executives and shareholders. one nit: The airlines fleet isn't made up of "hundreds of thousands" |
#10
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Judah wrote:
Where would I find out the total number of airplanes owned by all of the airlines worldwide? Take a look at the FAA registered aircraft databases. Pick out a tail number on a commercial airliner (e.g. one of United's all end in UA) and search. You'll find that almost none of the major carriers own the equipment. It's handled thru leasebacks. Now, the leasing company (that actually owns the aircraft) may also be owned by the same holding company as the carrier (e.g. AMR owns American Airlines, UAL owns United Airlines) but the carrier itself doesn't own it. If you dig far enough into the UAL website, you can find all the odd companies that are owned by UAL, Corp. Fascinating! And if you like that, dig into the Viacom list of companies... That one's even more fun! |
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