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- BUSINESS, Page 53Business NotesTRANSPORTATIONFly the Taxing Skies
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- Air-passenger traffic in the U.S. has zoomed more than 150%
- since 1974, yet that was when the last major new American
- airport opened (Dallas-Fort Worth International). To relieve
- the worsening jet gridlock, the Bush Administration last week
- proposed a $47 billion five-year plan to provide new aviation
- facilities, ranging from runways to air-traffic-control
- computers. And who will pick up the tab? The Federal Aviation
- Administration wants 85% of the funding to come from new taxes
- on jet fuel and tickets, which could add $20 to the average
- domestic fare.
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- But the plan's takeoff may be delayed in Congress. Some
- lawmakers believe that the FAA should first spend the $7.6
- billion surplus already set aside in a fund for aviation
- improvements. Meanwhile, strain on the system keeps growing.
- By 2001, the FAA predicts, annual air-passenger traffic will
- increase an additional 68%.
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