SFGate: Dem. Speaks Out Over Airline Ticket Fees

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Wednesday, February 9, 2005 (AP)
Dem. Speaks Out Over Airline Ticket Fees
By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press Writer


   (02-09) 14:16 PST WASHINGTON, (AP) --

   A Senate Democrat blasted the Bush administration Wednesday over plans to
raise ticket fees for airline passengers _ a budget proposal that would
pay for a host of homeland security programs.

   The proposed White House budget, released earlier this week, would raise
existing ticket fees by $3 to help finance a $2.2 billion increase in the
fiscal 2006 budget of the Department of Homeland Security.

   "I am one of the strongest advocates for more transportation security
resources in Congress," Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., wrote in a letter
dated Wednesday to President Bush. "But we cannot balance the budget on
the backs of the traveling public and small business people."

   "You campaigned on a message of fear that your opponent would raise taxes
upon taking office," added Lautenberg, a member of the Senate Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. "However, it turns out that
the first act of your new term includes a proposal to raise taxes on
millions of American families."

   Homeland Security Department spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said the fee
increase makes up for $400 million in federal security measures that the
Bush administration is not asking commercial airlines to reimburse.

   "Last year, the administration requested the airlines reimburse $750
million for security, and this year's request is only $350 million,"
Roehrkasse said. "The difference would come from revenues in passengers'
fees."

   Under the budget proposal, passenger fees would increase in 2006 from
$2.50 to $5.50 for a direct one-way flight, or from $5 to $8 for flights
making multiple stops. That means round-trip passengers could pay up to
$16 per ticket in security fees. Already, passengers pay an average of
$45.87 in taxes and fees above ticket costs, Lautenberg's aides said.

   The fees are widely opposed by commercial airlines, employees and
passenger groups which charge that the fee increase _ totaling an
estimated $1.5 billion _ would threaten the economy, jobs and local air
service.

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Copyright 2005 AP

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