The Aircraft Owners and
Pilots Association last week released a status update on a number of informal
Part 13 complaints filed with the FAA against three U.S. airports, Chicago
Waukegan (UGN), Florida’s Key West International (EYW) and Asheville Regional
(AVL) in North Carolina.
The association dropped
its complaint against Chicago Waukegan Airport in late January after that
airport’s management team chose a "self-help" option to address
pricing and access issues without a further nudge from the FAA. AOPA said,
however, it continues to press the FAA for resolution of the same issues at Key
West and Asheville.
The complaints, filed on
behalf of seven AOPA member pilots, said these airports “failed to protect the
rights of aircraft operators to park at these airports without being forced to
pay for additional services they did not need or want,” as well as “egregious
pricing practices under minimal oversight.” Each of the airports also operates
just a single FBO. Coincidentally, all of the airports in question are served
by Signature Flight Support, one of the largest FBO chains in the United
States.
Signature argued that its
two FBOs (at EYW and AVL) hold an exclusive lease for the entire transient
general aviation parking ramp and are not bound by FAA standards designed to
protect reasonable access to public ramp space. According to Signature, only
the runway and taxiway are considered protected public assets, not any
portion of the transient parking area.
Ken Mead, AOPA’s general
counsel said, “This would be a scary precedent. Airports would effectively be
permitted to hand over the entire parking ramp to a single FBO without
competition or other restrictions to ensure reasonable access for users. Aside
from active runways or taxiways, there would be no other public assets
available for transient operators despite millions of federal and local dollars
invested in these airports.”
Interestingly, Asheville’s
executive director Lew Bleiweis said no one ever complained to the airport
about pricing or access before AOPA’s informal complaint appeared on
his desk. With 129 aircraft based on the airport and 30 other people on the
waiting list for T-hangar space, “that hardly reflects an uncompetitive
environment in which Signature is able to exert monopoly power.” Historically,
Part 13 complaints only evolve after parties at an airport are unable to
amicably resolve a problem.
Mead agreed it was unusual
that pilots came directly to the association rather than dealing with airport
management first. “I do not know why the tenants were not complaining to the
airport directly,” he said. While some pilots might not understand they should
be raising these complaints directly with the airport first, Tom Haines, AOPA’s
senior vice president of media and communications, said it’s “often transient
pilots who are most unhappy about these kinds of pricing and access problems,
people who don’t have those local connections.”
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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