Runway inflation: how flying wedding chapels and Alaskan bush pilots landed a share of the airline bailout.

AuthorMencimer, Stephanie
PositionAttack on America, 2001, how some airlines benefited from the disaster, thanks to handouts of taxpayer's money by Congress

IN THE DAYS IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING September 11, members of Congress took to the airwaves and the floor of the Capitol with dire warnings that if Congress did not act quickly, the American airline industry would go belly-up, bringing the nation's business to a halt. The major airlines were estimated to be losing $300 million a day. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) declared: "The effect on the airlines of the September 11 terrorist attack put Congress in the unenviable position of having to take immediate action to prevent the collapse of the aviation industry as a result of the federally ordered grounding of all aircraft."

With lightning speed, virtually no hearings, and almost unanimous support, Congress swept into action. The result was a bill designed to protect the nation's "essential air service," with a package of loan guarantees and outright cash grants, totaling $15 billion. In supporting the bill, Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) said that he was pleased that the Senate was "moving with great speed to insure the short-term stability of our nation's airlines.... the Senate has come together for the good of this great nation to do the right thing. That is, to keep the airlines in the air."

Despite the insistence of members of Congress that the airline bailout was of vital national importance, it was immediately decried as a boondoggle for big business. And why not? Companies like American Airlines and Northwest lobbied hard for its passage and are indeed its primary beneficiaries; $3.1 billion had already been paid to these big firms by the end of January, and billions more are still to come.

What most people don't realize, though, is that the bailout bill was also a boondoggle for hundreds of little aviation companies, far from the terrorist-crippled corridors of New York and Washington, whose business activities hardly qualify as critical public transport. Thanks to the aviation industry's friends in Congress, the term "essential air service" now includes practically every tour bus with wings.

Hub and Stroke

When Japanese businessmen want to take a vacation in the great American outdoors, they frequently seek the help of Warbelow's Air Ventures. Warbelow's is a charter service that, among other things, delivers mail to remote Alaskan villages and takes hunters and fishermen on guided trips into the Alaskan bush so they can shoot grizzlies and caribou. It also happens to be an unexpected beneficiary of the federal airline bailout. While it can't match the losses of Delta Airlines, Warbelow's has so far received $95,000 from...

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