Thursday
Jun262008
Oil soaring, airlines nosediving
The airline industry’s impact on entrepreneurs and the US economy was discussed by the House Committee on Small Business. Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D-N.Y.) said that the United States is in an air travel crisis and that small business owners across the country will feel the impact of struggling airlines.
Paul Ruden, vice president of legal affairs for the American Society of Travel Agents, said demand for airspace and runways exceeds supply in the United States. Ruden stated that excess demand for seats, congestion in airports, the introduction of fees for services once included in the ticket price, and the increased cost of oil leave consumers alienated. Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio) said airline fuel costs have increased from $16 billion in 2000 to an estimated $61 billion in 2008. Chabot suggested increasing domestic oil production, citing a FOX News survey which says 76 percent of Americans support drilling offshore and in Alaska.
Roger Dew, president and CEO of the Travel Industry Association, said Americans’ frustrations with airline travel predates the soaring price of oil and that oil costs will only amplify frustrations with security lines and an unreliable infrastructure. Terry Segerberg, a small business owner in Cincinnati, Ohio, said airline and other transportation costs are forcing her and other business owners to spend thousands monthly on travel, a reality that causes companies to struggle to remain competitive. Kevin Mitchell of the Business Travel Coalition said Congress can help entrepreneurs by cracking down on oil speculation, strengthening the dollar, pressuring OPEC to increase oil supply, and suspending federal taxes and fees on airlines until March 2009.
Paul Ruden, vice president of legal affairs for the American Society of Travel Agents, said demand for airspace and runways exceeds supply in the United States. Ruden stated that excess demand for seats, congestion in airports, the introduction of fees for services once included in the ticket price, and the increased cost of oil leave consumers alienated. Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio) said airline fuel costs have increased from $16 billion in 2000 to an estimated $61 billion in 2008. Chabot suggested increasing domestic oil production, citing a FOX News survey which says 76 percent of Americans support drilling offshore and in Alaska.
Roger Dew, president and CEO of the Travel Industry Association, said Americans’ frustrations with airline travel predates the soaring price of oil and that oil costs will only amplify frustrations with security lines and an unreliable infrastructure. Terry Segerberg, a small business owner in Cincinnati, Ohio, said airline and other transportation costs are forcing her and other business owners to spend thousands monthly on travel, a reality that causes companies to struggle to remain competitive. Kevin Mitchell of the Business Travel Coalition said Congress can help entrepreneurs by cracking down on oil speculation, strengthening the dollar, pressuring OPEC to increase oil supply, and suspending federal taxes and fees on airlines until March 2009.
Republicans defend Congress from 'liberal coastal elites'
Davis went on to say that the views of the Speaker do not represent the views of our nation as a whole, and she should not continue to put energy reform on the back burner. Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio) said that the one thing Pelosi has been unwilling to do is pass legislation that would bring immediate relief to the American people--drilling for oil in coastal and protected regions.
Rep. John Shimkus (R-Ill.) said that in his home district, many Americans have told him they will vote Republican in this upcoming election, some of these constituents being lifelong Democrats. Shimkus went on to say these partisan switches can be contributed to several reasons, in particular because they feel the Democratic Party has not, and continues to not do enough to help the American people.