-T /
T /
+T |
Comment(s)
Monday, August 18, 2008
RAA Supports ATA Suit
In strongly worded statement supporting the Air Transport Association’s lawsuit aimed at blocking the Administration’s plan to auction off the nation’s airspace, Regional Airline Association President Roger Cohen said major cities will be shut out of access to New York. Meanwhile, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg sent a letter to DOT Secretary Mary Peters and Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Executive Director Christopher Ward, saying he wanted the pilot program on slots implemented. Bloomberg previously opposed the caps imposed by the Federal Aviation Administration on flights at the three New York City airports calling them ineffective and harmful to the New York economy.
ATA's lawsuit, a petition for review filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, states that the FAA slot auction is, in effect, a final rule that "should be held unlawful and set aside because these actions are in excess of the FAA's statutory authority; constitute unauthorized regulatory action disguised as property management; are contrary to express statutory limitations imposed by Congress in the 2008 Consolidated Appropriations Act; are without observance of procedure required by law; and are arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, and otherwise not in accordance with law,” charged ATA.
"FAA's plan is not only unlawful, it is both surprising and perplexing," said May. "It is surprising because the end result will be more flights during the busiest times of the day at Newark, even as we suffer through yet another delay-plagued summer, and it is perplexing because the announced slot auction precedes formal rules to auction slots at Newark and other airports. Sadly, FAA believes that it has the right to make up the rules as it goes along. FAA should focus its efforts on fulfilling its responsibility to provide the infrastructure and air traffic resources necessary to meet the public's demand for safe air transportation services, instead of finding new ways to inhibit economic growth and further tax an already overtaxed traveling public."
“Someone has to stop the madness, and we hope the US Court of Appeals acts swiftly and decisively to prohibit this DOT scheme before only the rich and famous can fly into New York,” said Cohen. “Unless DOT gets stopped in its tracks, travelers from major cities such as Dayton, Indianapolis, Louisville, and Knoxville could get shut out of ever flying into the Big Apple, let alone the 70 percent of communities across the US whose only service is from regional airlines. RAA joins with ATA, our mainline partners, the general aviation community, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey and most importantly, bipartisan majorities in Congress in strong opposition to the Administration’s plan.”
The suit was expected. "FAA's claim that it can use its property management authority to auction slots is intellectually dishonest and a disturbing end run around Congress," said May. "Every transportation administration except this one has acknowledged that it does not have the authority to implement auctions and other so-called market mechanisms. Yet this administration believes it can ignore the statutory limits of its authority to remake the industry as it sees fit.”
ATA's lawsuit, a petition for review filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, states that the FAA slot auction is, in effect, a final rule that "should be held unlawful and set aside because these actions are in excess of the FAA's statutory authority; constitute unauthorized regulatory action disguised as property management; are contrary to express statutory limitations imposed by Congress in the 2008 Consolidated Appropriations Act; are without observance of procedure required by law; and are arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, and otherwise not in accordance with law,” charged ATA.
"FAA's plan is not only unlawful, it is both surprising and perplexing," said May. "It is surprising because the end result will be more flights during the busiest times of the day at Newark, even as we suffer through yet another delay-plagued summer, and it is perplexing because the announced slot auction precedes formal rules to auction slots at Newark and other airports. Sadly, FAA believes that it has the right to make up the rules as it goes along. FAA should focus its efforts on fulfilling its responsibility to provide the infrastructure and air traffic resources necessary to meet the public's demand for safe air transportation services, instead of finding new ways to inhibit economic growth and further tax an already overtaxed traveling public."
“Someone has to stop the madness, and we hope the US Court of Appeals acts swiftly and decisively to prohibit this DOT scheme before only the rich and famous can fly into New York,” said Cohen. “Unless DOT gets stopped in its tracks, travelers from major cities such as Dayton, Indianapolis, Louisville, and Knoxville could get shut out of ever flying into the Big Apple, let alone the 70 percent of communities across the US whose only service is from regional airlines. RAA joins with ATA, our mainline partners, the general aviation community, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey and most importantly, bipartisan majorities in Congress in strong opposition to the Administration’s plan.”
The suit was expected. "FAA's claim that it can use its property management authority to auction slots is intellectually dishonest and a disturbing end run around Congress," said May. "Every transportation administration except this one has acknowledged that it does not have the authority to implement auctions and other so-called market mechanisms. Yet this administration believes it can ignore the statutory limits of its authority to remake the industry as it sees fit.”

Join us on: Twitter AVProNet