🔍
The US Government Program That Pays For Your Flights - YouTube
Channel: Wendover Productions
[0]
This video was made possible by Curiosity
Stream.
[3]
When you sign up at the link in the description
you’ll also get access to Nebula—the streaming
[6]
video platform that Wendover is a part of.
[10]
A quite reasonable question would be why the
American government is paying United Airlines
[14]
$4,780,955 a year to fly from their hub in
Newark to the small, northern Maine town of
[22]
Presque Isle.
[23]
The question could also be asked for why they
pay Boutique Air $3,328,207 a year to fly
[30]
from Dallas and Houston to the small Texan
city Victoria, or why United Airlines is paid
[35]
$2,317,073 a year to fly from Denver to Pueblo,
Colorado.
[40]
Well, these are subsidies, and in some cases,
quite hefty ones.
[45]
Take that flight from Houston to Victoria,
Texas.
[47]
Boutique will sell one of the seats on their
small prop plane for as low as $54 on this
[52]
route.
[53]
The government, however, will chip in an additional
$380 per passenger through this subsidy.
[59]
Lastly, for Denver to Pueblo, United sells
tickets for $86 but then pockets $282 from
[65]
the government.
[67]
Each of these routes and hundreds more around
the US are part of a little-known US government
[71]
program called the Essential Air Service.
[74]
The premise of the program is simple.
[76]
For the most part, and of course there are
exceptions, flying to small towns is not profitable
[81]
for commercial airlines.
[83]
This makes sense.
[84]
When operating an airline, there are a number
of fixed costs for every flight operated.
[89]
No matter if an aircraft seats six passengers
or 600, an airline is going to need to have
[93]
check-in agents, baggage handlers, gate agents,
pilots, dispatchers, sales agents, and more.
[99]
Since those fixed costs are distributed between
fewer passengers with smaller planes, the
[103]
cost to operate per passenger tends to get
higher when you get down to the smallest sizes
[108]
of planes.
[109]
Of course, airlines could compensate for this
by raising fares on these routes, but, like
[113]
many countries, the US has a significant economic
divide between its rural and urban parts.
[119]
In general, the more populated a place is,
the wealthier its inhabitants are.
[123]
So, say there’s a city of 1 million and
a town of 10,000.
[128]
Barring any other variables, you would expect
the demand for flights in the city of 1 million
[132]
to be about 100 times greater than in the
town of 10,000 since its population is 100
[137]
times greater, but when you add the real-world
variable of income, knowing that those in
[142]
the town of 10,000 earn less, demand would
go down for flights from the town since its
[147]
inhabitants are less able to pay.
[149]
Therefore, considering income, you might expect
to have 150 times more demand from the city,
[155]
even though its population is only 100 times
greater.
[157]
When you then add the variable of price, given
that tickets average more expensive from smaller
[161]
towns, that would further reduce their demand
so now, the city might have 200 times more
[166]
demand, despite having only 100 times higher
population.
[170]
Of course, airlines need demand to make a
route viable.
[173]
Even if they’re only flying a tiny plane
to that 10,000 person town daily, they still
[178]
need seats filled to make it commercially
successful.
[181]
As we’ve just demonstrated, demand decreases
exponentially the smaller a town gets so the
[186]
number of small towns that would actually
prove to be commercially viable to airlines
[190]
in the US is small.
[192]
That’s not to say they don’t exist, though.
[194]
For example, let’s look at Colorado’s
13 commercial airports—Grand Junction, Cortez,
[199]
Durango, Telluride, Montrose, Gunnison, Aspen,
Hayden, Eagle County, Alamosa, Pueblo, Colorado
[205]
Springs, and Denver.
[207]
Of these, clearly Denver and Colorado Springs,
as cities, are not going to be subsidized,
[212]
but then the remaining 11 airports are all
in fairly small towns.
[216]
However, of these eleven, only the service
to Cortez, Alamosa, and Pueblo are subsidized
[222]
with the Essential Air Service program.
[224]
Now, this is interesting considering that
Gunnison has a smaller population than Cortez,
[228]
Hayden has a smaller population than Alamosa,
and Grand Junction has a smaller population
[232]
than Pueblo.
[233]
The difference between these three subsidized
airports and all the other small ones is that
[237]
these are all in the mountains.
[239]
Cortez, Alamosa, and Pueblo are not.
[242]
That means that all these other airports are
near ski resorts and therefore have strong
[246]
inbound demand from tourists.
[249]
This is the major circumstance when service
to small towns is commercially viable alone—when
[253]
it serves tourist hotspots—but in other
cases, it’s just extremely rare for these
[257]
type of routes to make enough money for it
to be worth it airlines.
[260]
So, very simply, the idea of the Essential
Air Service program is to close the gap between
[266]
what it takes for a route to be worth it an
airline and how much they’ll earn from operating
[269]
to a small city.
[271]
Through a bidding process, airlines will be
granted the contract to operate these routes,
[275]
getting paid anywhere from $144,000 a year—as
in the case of Mokulele Airlines’ service
[280]
from Kahului to Hana, Hawaii—up to $4.7
million a year—as in the case of United’s
[285]
service from Newark to Presque Isle, Maine.
[287]
Now, airlines are paid per flight operated,
not per passenger, which means that they will
[291]
happily and regularly operate flights with
just a couple or no passengers.
[296]
Plenty of airlines running EAS routes would
be profitable without selling a single ticket—solely
[301]
through the government’s payment—so a
whole industry has arisen around servicing
[305]
these routes.
[306]
While the large airlines like United, Delta,
and American do bid and operate these routes,
[311]
the smallest plane they each operate is a
50-seat CRJ-200.
[315]
Plenty of these routes have far less demand
than that, even if there’s just one daily
[320]
flight.
[321]
That’s why smaller airlines have evolved.
[323]
Take the example of Air Choice One.
[325]
They’re a tiny airline operating a dozen
Cessna Grand Caravans from Minneapolis to
[329]
Ironwood, Mason City, and Fort Dodge; Chicago
to Ironwood, Mason City, and Burlington; Mason
[334]
City to Fort Dodge and Burlington; St Louis
to Burlington, Fort Dodge, Jonesboro, and
[338]
Jackson; and then finally Atlanta to Jackson.
[341]
Of Air Choice One’s thirteen routes, every
single one is subsidized by the Essential
[346]
Air Service.
[347]
The airline earns $15.7 million in revenue
yearly through this before actual ticket sales.
[353]
These sorts of small, regional airlines, of
which there are dozens in the US, would likely
[357]
not exist without the Essential Air Service
program as the type of flying they do would
[361]
certainly not be profitable.
[363]
Worth mentioning is that a system of subsidies
for routes to small towns is not unique to
[368]
the US.
[369]
In Europe, they’re known as Public Service
Obligation routes, or PSOs.
[373]
This system is a little more complicated than
the US’ with varying terms for when and
[377]
how airlines get paid, but the amount of compensation
varies quite a bit more than in the US.
[382]
For example, in the UK, the effective per-passenger
subsidy ranges all the way from $4.57 for
[388]
FlyBe’s route from London Heathrow to Newquay,
up to, apparently, more than $1,000 per passenger
[393]
in the case of Airtask’s routes in the Shetland
Islands.
[396]
The US, though, has more federally subsidized
routes than the entirety of the European Union
[401]
because, after all, the geography of the US
is quite different.
[405]
The US is one of the least dense developed
countries in the world.
[409]
If the population of the US lived as densely
as that of the UK, it would fit comfortably
[414]
in just California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona.
[417]
Given this spread, it does have an issue with
transport.
[421]
The rural areas of the US are just hard to
get to and from, and this can make a bad economic
[426]
situation worse.
[428]
As just one example, companies can and have
made the decision to move their operations,
[433]
whether factories or headquarters, from smaller
towns to bigger ones in order to be closer
[437]
to large airports.
[439]
Outside the US, transport to rural areas is
often provided by train and, while part of
[443]
the reason for the US’ minimal development
of passenger railroads is lack of interest,
[447]
it would also be tough, in many places, to
build a financially viable passenger railroad
[452]
due to the country’s vastness.
[454]
Without these flights, the only public transportation
in or out of much of rural America would be
[459]
the bus, at best.
[461]
In the lower 48, this program helps communities.
[464]
In Alaska, though, there are plenty of communities
that quite literally would not exist without
[469]
these subsidies.
[470]
65 of the US’ 179 EAS routes are within
the state of Alaska.
[475]
A big reason for that is that only 14% of
Alaska’s municipalities are connected to
[481]
the outside world by road.
[482]
The state is just so vast and harsh that building
roads to most of these areas wouldn’t make
[488]
sense.
[489]
In place of roads, Alaska’s rural towns
have airports, meaning that, in many cases,
[493]
their essential air service subsidized flights
are the only ways in or out.
[498]
So, the way the Essential Air Service works
is clear, but is it effective at its goal
[503]
of elevating the economy of rural areas of
America?
[506]
Well, according to one of the most comprehensive
studies done on the matter in recent years,
[511]
every 1% increase in passenger traffic at
a subsidized airport leads to the per-capita
[516]
income of that community increasing by 0.12%.
[520]
It’s tough to know exactly how much of a
passenger number increase the program leads
[524]
to, but this at least serves as evidence that
the underlying supposition of the program,
[529]
that air service leads to economic opportunity,
is true.
[532]
What’s also true, though, is that the Essential
Air Service program is not as efficient as
[537]
it could be.
[538]
For example, for the longest time, Southern
Airways Express has been getting $2.3 million
[543]
a year to fly from Hagerstown, Maryland to
Pittsburg and Baltimore.
[546]
That’s despite the fact that BWI airport
is just 67 miles or 108 kilometers away from
[552]
Hagerstown.
[553]
In the air, the flight takes about 30 to 40
minutes, given the slow speed of the Cessna
[557]
Grand Caravan.
[559]
Driving between the two airports takes about
70 to 80 minutes and, for anyone without a
[563]
car, there are commercial airport shuttles
operating between Hagerstown and BWI.
[567]
What’s more, Hagerstown is also an hours
drive from DC’s National and Dulles Airports,
[573]
and Hagerstown Airport even has regular, non
EAS-subsidized routes to Myrtle Beach, Orlando,
[578]
and Tampa.
[579]
It’s safe to say that a town like Hagerstown
is benefiting far less from its multi-million
[584]
dollar subsidy than a town like Adak, Alaska.
[587]
That’s why, in late-October, 2019, Hagerstown
got the axe.
[591]
It will no longer be subsidized by the Essential
Air Service program.
[595]
Under increased scrutiny, the requirements
for this program have gotten stricter and
[599]
stricter in recent years.
[601]
Nowadays, to be eligible, a community has
to be more than 70 miles or 110 kilometers
[606]
from the nearest major airport, has to cost
the government less than $200 per passenger
[610]
if its within 210 miles or 340 kilometers
of the nearest major airport, and has to average
[615]
more than 10 passengers per day unless its
further than 175 miles or 280 kilometers from
[620]
the nearest major airport.
[622]
With these requirements, more and more communities
are losing their funding.
[626]
Some of these are clearly justified.
[628]
While flights might be nice, nobody’s loosing
out on opportunity by having to drive or take
[632]
the bus an hour from Hagerstown to BWI.
[635]
There is, and long has been, though, talk
of completely eliminating the program.
[640]
Now, without telling you what to think, I’m
just going to present some numbers.
[643]
It costs the US government about $290 million
a year to run the Essential Air Service—a
[649]
program that connects hundreds of communities
to the outside world.
[652]
For that same amount of money, the government
could build about 40 miles or 65 kilometers
[656]
of highway, it could pay to maintain all of
the US government’s empty or disused buildings
[660]
for 62 days, or it could buy 1/7th of a B-2
Spirit Bomber.
[665]
In government terms, $290 million just isn’t
that much.
[672]
Some exciting news: I’ve just gotten back
from filming a documentary about something,
[676]
somewhere.
[677]
That's all the info you get, aside from that’s
its actually good and that it’s a Nebula
[680]
original meaning that you watch it when it
comes out at the end of November, you’ll
[683]
have to head to Nebula—the streaming site
built by myself and a bunch of other creators.
[687]
To make that easier, though, Nebula has partnered
with Curiosity Stream—the streaming site
[691]
home to thousands of top-quality documentaries
and non-fiction TV shows.
[696]
Curiosity Stream is worth signing up for by
itself—beyond just its great library, its
[699]
available pretty much everywhere for a very
reasonable cost of just $3 a month.
[703]
That $3 a month Curiosity Stream membership,
though, now also gets you access to Nebula
[708]
if you sign up at CuriosityStream.com/Wendover.
[710]
That’s really an amazing deal for two top-quality
streaming sites and, the best part is, you’ll
[716]
be supporting myself and so many other independent
creators while you do it.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





