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<classification authority="sudocs">GA 1.13:T-RCED-99-84</classification>
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 <subject>Airports</subject>
 <subject>Federal aid for transportation</subject>
 <subject>Air transportation operations</subject>
 <subject>Facility construction</subject>
 <subject>Funds management</subject>
 <subject>Federal grants</subject>
 <identifier>FAA Airport Improvement Program</identifier>
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<titleInfo>
 <title>Airport Financing: Annual Funding As Much As $3 Billion Less Than Planned Development</title>
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<abstract>Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO discussed airport funding
issues, focusing on: (1) the amount airports are spending on capital
development and the sources of those funds; (2) comparing airports&apos;
plans for development with current funding levels; and (3) what effect
will various proposals to increase or make better use of existing
funding have on airports&apos; ability to fulfill their capital development
plans.&lt;p/&gt;GAO noted that: (1) 3,304 airports that make up the federally supported
national airport system obtained about $7 billion from federal and
private sources for capital development; (2) more than 90 percent of
this funding came from three sources: tax-exempt bonds issued by states
and local airport authorities, federal grants from the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) Airport Improvement Program (AIP), and passenger
facility charges paid on airline tickets; (3) the magnitude and type of
funding varies with airports&apos; size; (4) the nation&apos;s 71 largest airports
accounted for nearly 80 percent of the total funding; (5) airports
planned to spend as much as $10 billion per year for capital development
for the years 1997 through 2001, or $3 billion per year more than they
were able to fund in 1996; (6) the difference between funding and the
costs of planned development is greater for smaller commercial and
general aviation airports than for their larger counterparts; (7)
smaller airports&apos; funding would cover only about half the costs of their
planned development, while larger airports&apos; funding would cover about
4/5 of their planned development; (8) airports&apos; planned development can
be divided into four main categories based on the funding priorities of
AIP; (9) about $1.4 billion per year was planned for safety, security,
environmental, and reconstruction projects, FAA&apos;s highest priorities for
AIP funding; (10) another $1.4 billion per year was planned for projects
FAA regards as the next highest priority, primarily adding airport
capacity; (11) other projects FAA considers to be lower in priority,
such as bringing airports up to FAA&apos;s design standards, add another $3.3
billion per year; (12) airports anticipated spending another $3.9
billion per year on projects that are not eligible for AIP funding, such
as expanding commercial space in terminals and constructing parking
garages; (13) several proposals to increase or make better use of
existing funding have emerged in recent years, including the amount of
AIP funding and raising the maximum amount airports can levy in
passenger facility charges; (14) under current formulas, increasing the
amount of AIP funding would help small airports more than larger
airports, while raising passenger facility charges would help larger
airports more; and (15) other initiatives, such as AIP block grants to
states, have had varied success, but none appears to offer a major
breakthrough in reducing the shortfall between funding and airports&apos;
plans for development.</abstract>
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<identifier type="preferred citation">GAO/T-RCED-99-84</identifier>
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<note>Testimony</note>
<extension>
 <searchTitle>GAO/T-RCED-99-84; Airport Financing: Annual Funding As Much As $3 Billion Less Than Planned Development;
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<subject>
 <topic>Airports</topic>
 <topic>Federal aid for transportation</topic>
 <topic>Air transportation operations</topic>
 <topic>Facility construction</topic>
 <topic>Funds management</topic>
 <topic>Federal grants</topic>
 <topic>FAA Airport Improvement Program</topic>
</subject>
<relatedItem type="isReferencedBy">
 <titleInfo>
  <title>United States Public Law 264 (104th Congress)</title>
</titleInfo>
 <identifier type="public law citation">Public Law 104-264</identifier>
</relatedItem>
<relatedItem type="isReferencedBy">
 <titleInfo>
  <title>United States Public Law 277 (105th Congress)</title>
</titleInfo>
 <identifier type="public law citation">Public Law 105-277</identifier>
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