Why are we paying rich people to pollute our air?

In 2022, the PGA held the US Open Golf Championship (for the fourth time)
at The Country Club in Brookline. In the week before the tournament,
Hanscom Field in Bedford  was unusually busy as the wealthier members of
our society came to town in their private planes.  I listened as they flew
over my home, one after another.

“No long lines or six-across seating for them,” I thought.  “Must be nice
to have so much money you can afford your own plane.”

According to *The Boston Globe* on May 21st, ), a lot more people have
enough money to buy a plane.  Private aviation is booming.  In what may be
a symptom of rising income inequality, there were 2.8 million private plane
flights over the United States (half of all flights in the world) in 2022.
This was an 11% increase in flights over 2020, and 18% higher than before
the pandemic.

*The Globe* claims that more than four times as many planes land at Hanscom
Field as did 30 years ago..   So, Hanscom is now advancing plans to add 27
new hangers for planes, and a 150-car parking lot for their owners and
friends.

The problem is that flying is one of the “dirtiest” ways to travel, and
private jets are especially bad. They emit FORTY-FIVE TIMES more carbon
pollution per passenger than commercial jets, and 1,100 TIMES more
pollution than trains, according to the Institute for Policy Studies. So,
every new plane means new CO2 in the atmosphere at a time when we are
trying to reduce it!

Hanscom Field, like almost every airport in the country, is subsidized with
our tax dollars — both federal and state. Large airports (e.g., Logan,
O’Hare, Kennedy) get the most subsidy, but a significant amount goes to
support airports that have no commercial traffic – although it is very
difficult to find out exactly how much.  (Hanscom Field’s five-year
financial report of income and expenditures does not detail either federal
or state aid.)

I spent a couple of hours digging around the Federal Aviation
Administration’s (FAA) website to find figures on one subsidy going to
approximately 3,800 “non-primary” airports. These are usually small
airports with one short runway, no tower, no staff, no instrument landing
aids and no scheduled passenger flights. The FAA website has a 90-page
listing of these airports and their five-year development plans*, *The FAA
Airport Improvement Program.   Eligible airports can be reimbursed up to
90% of the cost of qualifying infrastructure projects such as runways and
roads .In  Massachusetts there are 20 private air fields (including such
small communities as Montague and North Adams).  They received more
than $150 million from this one federal program in the five years ending in
2025.
There are other programs and other subsidies, both state and federal.
Senator Ed Markey introduced a bill that would increase the specially
reduced federal tax on the jet fuel they use, for example..

Big business takes big advantage of these subsidies.  *The Wall Street
Journal* reports that large companies are expanding the use of corporate
jets by executives (a tax-deductible expense), and many allow their
executives to use the jets for personal travel.  The incidence of such
travel has been increasing rapidly.  The median annual value of private jet
travel for S&P 500 CEOs was $133,448 2022, while finance chiefs got a
median benefit of $21,610.  Note that they don’t pay income taxes on this
benefit, which is yet another subsidy from your taxes to the upper income
folks.

Imagine that you have one of those jobs that included access to private
jets, and you decide to take the family to Disney World.  You make a
reservation with your company travel department, and at the appointed time
you go to one of these non-priority airports, which doesn’t handle any
airlines. You park for free, board your private jet on the tarmac, and fly
straight to Orlando. You and your family likely have the plane to
yourselves, so you spread out on the comfy recliners and relax.

You did not pay for the flight or the parking. And your income is not
increased by the value of the flight. The company gets to deduct all the
costs, reducing its taxes.  Subsidies all around for a family likely
earning a million dollars a year.

“Corporate aircraft should be for business use only,” said Charles Elson,
founding director at the Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the
University of Delaware. Executives using corporate planes for personal use
should pay for it.”

Private aviation injects huge amounts of CO2 into our atmosphere. Why do we
encourage its expansion with tax breaks and subsidies?  Why are we
subsidizing people who don’t need the subsidy to do something that hurts us
all?
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