Lots of stuff going on here with what you might have heard on the radio. First and foremost there is a movement to have the FAA update and modernize the nation's Air Traffic Control infrastructure. Many of the groups that are pushing for this are also resorting to political type ads to get people on board.
I am sure the line about private jet tax breaks is included in the ad just to get the reaction that JSC posted here. Why are (wealthy) private jet owners getting tax breaks while (I am paying for the ATC system?) There are some tax breaks for private jet owners. Just like there are tax breaks for buying a Prius or Tesla. If you offer tax breaks for one form of transportation, why not for others? So the tax breaks really have nothing to do with the larger argument of the radio ad. Further the tax breaks for private jet owners would come no where near funding the ATC modernization that this radio ad wants. It is just a line or three to get the JSC reaction and hopefully more people looking into this ad and ATC modernization. For what it is worth, I don't think private jet owners should get a tax break for their jets. Just like there shouldn't be a tax break for a Prius or Tesla or for farming or ranching or paying your state taxes or your mortgage interest, etc, etc, etc. Get rid of every single tax break today and lower rates for everyone.
As for the ATC modernization it is certainly needed. Our current system operates off of a radar based system. Air Traffic controllers work off of paper strips instead of digital strips. Our system has no fallbacks or redundancy. If a TRACON goes down due to a loss of power or a snow storm, the area that is controlled by that TRACON comes to a stop. Further our current system wastes a ton of time and millions of gallons of fuel each month as it requires pilots to fly their planes hundreds of miles out of the most direct path. Instead of a radar based system we can and should move to a GPS based system. Here is an example of a standard flight path that I fly a bunch between San Antonio and Dallas.
This is an approximation but it is very close. It is close just over 400 miles. Meanwhile with a more modern ATC system the flight plan would look more like this:
This shorter route is under 300 miles. So it saves 120 miles on a short trip between San Antonio and Dallas and almost 20 minutes. Now multiply that across the 12 flights a day American Airlines flies each day from San Antonio to Dallas and the 10 flights Southwest flies between San Antonio and Dallas. (Note Southwest operates into Dallas Love Field, but the flight plan is quite similar.)
In a more modern ATC system the pilots would fly direct to a point near the destination airport where they would sequence for landing. Controllers would only get involved at take off and landing and if there were a potential conflict with another aircraft. This would save a ton of time and fuel and money.
Further it would increase safety. You may have seen the near miss in San Francisco a few weeks ago. An Air Canada flight from Toronto lined up on taxiway when attempting to land in San Francisco. Luckily one of the planes on the ground let ATC know they were lined up on the taxiway not the runway and the controller canceled their landing clearance. The Air Canada flight went around and landed safely. The issue with this situation though is the controllers can't tell with any degree of certainty where planes are with our radar based system. With a modern GPS based system the controller would have known that the Air Canada plane was lined up on the taxiway and could have stepped in when the plane was still miles from the airport.
So yeah, lots going on here. Questions?