Who should I blame for being stuck in Kentucky without a flight ... I have to miss my son's baseball game on Sat am.
Are you saying that the government was hurting the poorer worker, and lining the pocket of the bourgeois? I cannot believe Bush administration is still screwing the little man. [sarcasm intended]
danivon wrote:What is interesting is that even before RJ's post, the Senate had passed the Reducing Flight Delays Act of 2013, allowing the FAA to allocate funds to stop the furlough. It seems there was a lot of money (c. $250M) in the FAA budget that was unallocated - is that down to the FAA, or to the people who set the budgets (Congress & the Administration)?
Anyway, the RFDA went through the House and has been enacted, and the USDoT on Friday past announced that it meant no more furloughs and keeping the 'low activity' towers open until the end of the fiscal year. But without any new money.
Hooray for Congress, huh? Acting swiftly when the effects of the sequester hit air travellers. As I'm flying over to the US in less than a week (Norlins, baby!!!), it even reduces the stress on us foreign tourists.
Of course, they did the exact same thing as soon as the sequester hit things like Meals on Wheels for the elderly, administering of chemo for cancer patients, pre-K education for kids from low income households...
Oh, well, no, I don't see that they did.
Well, it's part of the economy, and business uses it a lot, and it helps tourism, and I don't know about your set-up, but there is a military and security aspect to aviation regulation as well.Ray Jay wrote:In the US system we also pay airline fees that fund about 2/3rds of the FAA. They are on a per passenger per landing basis. It does raise the question: why should air travel be subsidized at all by general funds? Is it another example of government subsidizing the well off or is there some other reason?
You could change the basis of fees with or without privatisation. There are allIt also raises the question whether the per passenger charge is the right mechanism as the charge does not line up with the cost. (The cost is really based on per plane, and planes have variable numbers of passengers. A private company may try to line up its variable cost with its variable revenue. Yes, they would have to be regulated by a national body that should weigh in on these decisions.)
Each government department has its own rules (set by Congress) and budgets. I still don't see why a law was necessary if what you have said is the complete truth about the FAA. The correction was to release funds that were not allocated to the areas affected. If they could have been, no law need be passed, but a massive and public debate showing the interpretation was incorrect would have done it.The mechanism of the sequester was open to interpretation. Yes each budget grouping was subject to cuts, but the definition of a grouping was open to interpretation. Did the FAA have to cut x% of its air traffic control line item, or could it have just cut x% of its total budget? The FAA decided to interpret the sequester in the most narrow way possible so it would inflict the maximum pain on air traffic. This was a conscious political decision. The funding was corrected by explicitly saying they should interpret it differently, and not by providing more funds to the FAA.
Some do, some don't. Sometimes they have a 'political' reason to pass on pain to customers to make a point. I suggest you look at RyanAir as an example of a private company that is incredibly reluctant to protect its customers from pain, but is also successful. Annoyingly so, but they are.A private company faced with a similar decision would have made cuts to inflict minimum pain on its customers. That's exhibit 1 for privating the organization. Private companies go thru cuts all the time and figure out how to make them palatable to their customers and cause the least amount of disruption.
So those people affected who didn't have an effective and vocal lobby (as well as something in common with Congressmembers, such as a need to fly to and from work) can go jump.Like many Americans, I'm okay with the sequester so far. Perhaps the cuts down the road will be too severe, but we have to control the beast. Our deficit is forecasted to decline for the next 3 years, and this is part of the reason. If Congress can come up with a more sensible budget, I'm all for it. But in the meantime we have to control costs somehow and the sequester seems to be the only thing that we have right now.
Each government department has its own rules (set by Congress) and budgets. I still don't see why a law was necessary if what you have said is the complete truth about the FAA. The correction was to release funds that were not allocated to the areas affected. If they could have been, no law need be passed, but a massive and public debate showing the interpretation was incorrect would have done it.
As above, that's kids from poor families who could benefit from pre-K schooling when HeadStart gets sliced, or cancer sufferers who need chemo but who can't get it from their doctors because of slicing Health funding.