Final Agency Decision (03/09/2023)
| FAA Docket No.: | 16-19-16 |
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| Author: | Shannetta R. Griffin, Associate Administrator for Airports |
| Complainant(s): | Jason Theuma; Paragon Skydive |
| Respondent(s): | State of Arizona Department of Transportation |
| Airport(s): | Grand Canyon National Park Airport (GCN) |
| History: | Director’s Determination (01/21/2022) |
| Holding: | Affirmed in Part and Overturned in Part No Violation of Grant Assurance 23, Exclusive Rights Violation of Grant Assurance 22, Economic Nondiscrimination No Violation of Anti-Head Tax Act Corrective Action Plan Ordered |
Complainant, a commercial aeronautical airport tenant and skydiving operation, alleged violations by the State of Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) of Grant Assurance 22, Economic Nondiscrimination, and Grant Assurance 23, Exclusive Rights, and the Anti-Head Tax in a lease by its imposition of various fees, conditions, and requirements such as requiring skydiving liability insurance that was not commercially available, or available at reasonable terms; restricting operations to only tandem skydives; refusing to lease additional space when the space sought was unoccupied; imposing a 10% gross receipts fee when similarly situated operators were charged 1.5% of their gross receipts; and imposing arbitrary and capricious parking fees. (Director’s Determination, p. 4.)
Respondent, ADOT, as airport authority, replied that Complainant was improperly using Part 16 to attempt avoiding its contractual obligations under its lease. (Director’s Determination, p. 4.)
The Director evaluated three issues, specifically whether ADOT violated: (1) Grant Assurance 23, Exclusive Rights, by offering similarly situated tenants at the airport more favorable rights and
privileges than those offered to Complainant; (2) Grant Assurance 22, Economic Nondiscrimination, by imposing unjustly discriminatory lease terms on Complainant; and (3) the Anti-Head Tax Act by requiring payment of 5% of Paragon’s gross receipts of skydiving sales to the State.
The Director found no violation of Grant Assurance 23, Exclusive Rights, given that Complainant was still operating on the airport providing skydiving services and had been doing so since 2016. (Director’s Determination, pp. 8-9.) “[S]ince [Complainant] still has access at the Airport, the Director is unpersuaded there is any exclusive right violation based on Paragon’s claims; thus no violation of Grant Assurance 23.” (Director’s Determination, p. 9.)
Next, the Director considered whether Respondent violated Grant Assurance 22, Economic Nondiscrimination, by virtue of Respondent offering similarly situated tenants on the airport more favorable lease rights and privileges than those offered to Complainant. More specifically, Complainant argued that numerous terms of its lease imposed by Respondent, the state transportation authority, violated Grant Assurance 22, as follows:
According to the Director, the Respondent was not in violation of Grant Assurance 23, Exclusive Rights. However, the Director found the Respondent was in violation of Grant Assurance 22, Economic Discrimination:
The Director required further information as to the remaining allegations. That is, the Director ordered Respondent to submit additional information to demonstrate compliance regarding requirements for commercial general liability insurance; parking fees; gate access fees; additional space at the airport; and reporting of new employees. (Director’s Determination, p. 22.)
ADOT raised four issues on Appeal corresponding to Allegations 1, 3, 6, and 7 under Issue 2 from the Director’s Determination, as follows:
[1.] Whether the Director erred when he indicated ADOT only provided one skydiving insurance provider and when he relied upon the Part 13 complaint finding and the unsworn statement of Ms. Amey to find the skydiving insurance requirement unreasonable (Allegation 1) and in violation of Grant Assurance 22.
[2.] Whether the Director erred when he determined the Products Completed Operation insurance requirement to be unreasonable (Allegation 2) and in violation of Grant Assurance 22 without considering ADOT’s primary reason for the insurance coverage.
[3.] Whether the Director erred when he found ADOT’s lease restriction on solo jumps (Allegation 6) a violation of Grant Assurance 22.
[4.] Whether the Director erred when he found Paragon similarly situated to air tour operators and determined the disparity in the fee on gross receipts unreasonable (Allegation 7) and in violation of Grant Assurance 22.
(Final Agency Decision, p. 7.)
The Associate Administrator partially upheld and partially overturned the Director’s Determination.
Specifically, the Associate Administrator found that the Director’s Determination in relation to Allegations 1 (skydiving liability insurance requirement), 3 (products completed operation insurance requirement), and 6 (limiting solo jumps) were supported by a preponderance of reliable, probative, and substantial evidence, and, therefore, affirmed the Director’s Determination which found the airport sponsor in violation of Grant Assurance 22.
Notwithstanding the above, the Associate Administrator overturned the Director’s Determination in regard to Allegation 7 (10% gross receipts fee versus a 1.5% fee on air tour operations), finding that the Complainant, Paragon, was not similarly situated to air tour operators and could be treated differently, therefore. (Final Agency Decision, p. 23.) In addition, the Associate Administrator found that the comparison of the 1.5% fee on air tour sales to a 10% fee on retail sales was misrepresented in the pleadings. (Final Agency Decision, p. 23.) A review of the Complainant’s lease indicated that it was charged a flat monthly rate for its skydiving sales and a 10% rate for its other sales. (Final Agency Decision, p. 23.) The flat rate equates to much lower than 10% based on its monthly skydiving sales. (Final Agency Decision, p. 23.) Further, two air tour operators had either a 10% fee on other retail sales or an additional fee on gift shop sales in addition to the 1.5% fee on air tour sales. (Final Agency Decision, p. 23.) This, the Associate Administrator observed, indicated that there was not a large discrepancy in the fees that would be considered unreasonable and inconsistent with Grant Assurance 22. (Final Agency Decision, p. 23.) Accordingly, the Associate Director overturned the Director’s Determination in regard to Allegation 7. (Final Agency Decision, p. 23.)
| Index Terms: | Air Tour Flights; Anti-Head Tax; Contract; FAA Order 5190.B, Airport Compliance Manual; Grant Assurance 22, Economic Nondiscrimination; Grant Assurance 23, Exclusive Rights; Gross Receipts Fee; Insurance (Products—Completed Operations); Lease; Liability Insurance (Skydiving); Similarly Situated Tenants; Skydiving (Tandem) |
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