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Indiana Governor Has "No Idea" About Costs of Commercial Flights


Cross Posted from The End of the American Century

 

Indiana's Governor Mitch Daniels, using a $1000 per hour state aircraft for a trip to Washington, appeared clueless when a reporter asked him if it might be cheaper to fly commercial and stay an extra night in DC.

Last weekend, Daniels was flying to Washington for the annual meeting of the National Governors Association when the plane developed a crack in one of the windows, forcing it to land in Columbus. He flew on from there on a commercial flight.

The state-owned plane, a King Air prop, costs $791 per hour for fuel plus $184 in maintenance costs for each hour of flying. The flight from Indianapolis to Washington takes about two hours.

According to the Indianapolis Star, when he was asked why he didn't fly commercial in the first place, Daniels said there was no commercial flight that would have gotten him to Washington on time. "I would've had to come the night before and buy a hotel room and I don't know what else." When asked whether it still wouldn't have been cheaper to fly commercial, even if it meant another night in a hotel, Daniels said "I have no idea."

This seems a peculiar response from the former director of the national budget, and a man who President Bush referred to as "The Blade" for his acumen at budget cutting. But even then, Daniels was not so good at keeping spending under control. During his tenure as director of the Office of Management and Budget from 2001 to 2003, the federal budget flipped from a $236 billion surplus to a $400 billion deficit.

So I took the liberty of checking up on prices for the gov. The Governors Association was meeting at the J.W. Marriott hotel in DC. A king size bed on a weekend night costs about $200--though almost certainly the governors attending the conference received a reduced convention rate. A commercial roundtrip flight from Indy to DC--non-stop and at least as fast as flying a smaller turboprop--also runs about $200.

So to fly commercial and stay an extra night would have been roughly $400. To fly the 9-seat King Air, without having to "buy a hotel room and I don't know what else" costs about 2k each way, for a total of $4000. Ten times as much, Mr. Governor.

Maybe this is trivial, but Daniels' cavalier dismissal of the question on costs betrays an arrogance and profligacy that is unbecoming of a public servant. Some of our Congressional representatives have grilled the bailout CEOs about their use of corporate jets. Surely our elected representatives should be held to at least the same standards, particularly in this time of deficits, belt-tightening, and sacrifice.


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Maybe this is trivial, but Daniels' cavalier dismissal of the question on costs betrays an arrogance and profligacy that is unbecoming of a public servant. Some of our Congressional representatives have grilled the bailout CEOs about their use of corporate jets. Surely our elected representatives should be held to at least the same standards, particularly in this time of deficits, belt-tightening, and sacrifice.

I don't think it's trivial at all. Recommended.


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it's time for Indiana to put the plane on E-Bay, also.

That was comic, but there's truth in it too. Rec'd.

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"Daniels has racked up the frequent flier miles on state aircraft, primarily two State Police airplanes and a Department of Transportation helicopter. According to a review of state records by The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette last year, Daniels traveled by state aircraft 52 times through the first seven months of 2008 and 61 flights during 2007."

"The state owns five helicopters and seven fixed-wing planes, and is selling a 1977 Cessna and a 1986 MD-500E helicopter."


http://www.indystar.com/article/20090223/NEWS05/902230333

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Well, the answer is obvious. Commercial flights like that don't have a First Class section any more, or even Business Class. You don't expect someone THAT important to fly with the "sheep and the goats," do you?

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Nailed a governor!! Well done, well said.

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King Air is a work horse... not a luxury jet. He's right, it's an efficient way to fly... especially if there was a staff member flying along. Media loves to bash people flying private planes... because "we all have to wait in line to get on the SWA flight and waste our time, and so should they". That's BS. I would prefer that the governor spent his time governing and attending to matters of our interest instead of wasting time with airlines... to me his time is of value. Perhaps we should suggest that he take the Metro into DC as well!!! And by the way, as jet fuel is about $4.20 per gallon (at least here it is), that's about $571 per hour for fuel alone in a Beechcraft King Air 350.

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Um, you didn't make your case. I can tell you, having flown for years, that when a "governor" who is "governing" shows up they don't waste any time. They have special parking spaces; their every move is expedited, and they can "govern" all they want. They are no more important than for example, a doctor going to present a paper on the latest treatment for malaria. Or for that matter, than a person going to the funeral of a dear friend, and who has to think of what he/she wants to say about him.

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David Mason

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Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Butler University. Most recent book is "The End of the American Century" (Rowman & Littlefield, 2008).

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