Your Flight Has Been Delayed
As the holiday travel rush approaches, air travelers grounded by
delays should take a moment to think about why they're
stuck in airports or on the tarmac. There's a good chance
Washington is to blame.
"The air traffic control system in the United States is
technologically obsolete," says Robert W. Poole, Jr., director of
transportation studies at Reason Foundation, the nonprofit that
publishes Reason.tv. "This model is basically the same model that
we have used since the beginning of air travel."
The technology the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) uses to
navigate $200 million jets is less advanced than the GPS technology
drivers use to navigate $20,000 cars.
Poole says the system could safely handle more planes if the FAA
used modern technology that would provide real-time information
about where planes are. But the funding process, overseen by
pork-hungry members of Congress, often thwarts technology upgrades.
The only way to get the politics out of our air traffic system is
to take the system away from the politicians. Why not let a private
corporation manage the skies?
That may sound like a far-out, free-market idea, but Canada doesn't
think so.
Our neighbors to the north often take pride in their lavish
government programs, yet they allow a private corporation called
Nav Canada to manage their air-traffic control system. Canada's
approach, often called commercialization, has some surprising
supporters in the U.S., including Al Gore, who pushed for
commercialization when he was Bill Clinton's vice president.
"Your Flight Has Been Delayed" is written and produced by Ted
Balaker. Director of Photography: Alex Manning; Field Producers:
Paul Detrick and Hawk Jensen. The host is Nick Gillespie.
Approximately 7.28 minutes. Scroll down for embed code and downloadable versions.
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