The legislation approved by a House Appropriations subcommittee would give $173 million in the upcoming budget year to the Essential Air Service, which provides subsidies to small airlines to fly unprofitable routes. That's a $53 million increase.
In many cases the flights are nearly empty. In other instances, such as flights between Buffalo Niagara International Airport and Jamestown, N.Y., just 76 miles away, it's quicker to drive than fly.
The Bush administration sought unsuccessfully to cut the subsidies, which keeps flights going to 107 communities spread across 31 states in the continental U.S. and 45 tiny towns in Alaska. But the Essential Air Services program enjoys strong support among lawmakers; in April, 22 senators wrote White House budget director Peter Orszag to demand more money for it.
"Simply put, the Essential Air Service program was a promise made to rural America, and a promise that must be kept," the senators wrote.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Cheap Flights to Yakutat, Alaska
Under the auspices of the Essential Air Service program, the US government provides subsidies for air travel to rural destinations. So, for example, you and I pay nearly $2 million a year under the program to subsidize flights into Yakutat, Alaska. The House recently voted to increase the budget for this wealth-destroying initiative.
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