Gerald
08-03-11, 11:43 AM
The US could lose up to $1bn (£610m) in airline ticket taxes, officials say, amid an impasse in Congress over the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).
The agency has been forced into partial shutdown after its operating authority expired on 23 July.
The government has already lost more than $200m because airlines are unable to collect taxes on ticket sales. Some 4,000 FAA staff are on unpaid leave.
Lawmakers are not due back from their annual leave until September.
Close to 4,000 FAA employees, including engineering technicians and computer specialists, have been forced to take a temporary leave of absence due to the partial shutdown.
The FAA has also told tens of thousands of construction workers on airport projects to stop work.
It is reported to have asked dozens of airport inspectors to work without pay and charge their government travel expenses to their personal credit cards.
Congressional lawmakers have been deadlocked on whether to extend the FAA's funding because of a row over ending subsidies to 13 rural airports.
The Republican-controlled House of Representatives did pass legislation that included cuts and kept the FAA's operating authority in place until mid-September.
But Senate Democrats opposed the cuts and went into recess on Tuesday until early September without voting on the bill.
A spokesman for Democratic leader Harry Reid said the Senate would not allow House Republicans to "jam through a policy" on subsidies within a stop-gap funding extension bill.
The partial shutdown is expected to last at least until congressmen arrive back from their annual break.
The FAA debate was overshadowed on Monday and Tuesday by last-minute legislation passed in Congress to increase the US debt ceiling and avert a financial default.
'Another Washington wound'
The shutdown is costing the federal government some $200m per week in passenger ticket taxes that can no longer be collected, officials say.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-14391886
Note: 3 August 2011 Last updated at 15:32 GMT
The agency has been forced into partial shutdown after its operating authority expired on 23 July.
The government has already lost more than $200m because airlines are unable to collect taxes on ticket sales. Some 4,000 FAA staff are on unpaid leave.
Lawmakers are not due back from their annual leave until September.
Close to 4,000 FAA employees, including engineering technicians and computer specialists, have been forced to take a temporary leave of absence due to the partial shutdown.
The FAA has also told tens of thousands of construction workers on airport projects to stop work.
It is reported to have asked dozens of airport inspectors to work without pay and charge their government travel expenses to their personal credit cards.
Congressional lawmakers have been deadlocked on whether to extend the FAA's funding because of a row over ending subsidies to 13 rural airports.
The Republican-controlled House of Representatives did pass legislation that included cuts and kept the FAA's operating authority in place until mid-September.
But Senate Democrats opposed the cuts and went into recess on Tuesday until early September without voting on the bill.
A spokesman for Democratic leader Harry Reid said the Senate would not allow House Republicans to "jam through a policy" on subsidies within a stop-gap funding extension bill.
The partial shutdown is expected to last at least until congressmen arrive back from their annual break.
The FAA debate was overshadowed on Monday and Tuesday by last-minute legislation passed in Congress to increase the US debt ceiling and avert a financial default.
'Another Washington wound'
The shutdown is costing the federal government some $200m per week in passenger ticket taxes that can no longer be collected, officials say.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-14391886
Note: 3 August 2011 Last updated at 15:32 GMT