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At the Height of an Energy Crisis, Fat-Cat CEOs Still Litter the Skies with Private Jets

By Chuck Collins and Sarah Anderson, The Baltimore Sun. Posted June 28, 2008.


The private-jet perk is -- literally and figuratively -- a high-profile sign of an executive reward system out of control.

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If shareholders, corporate watchdogs and consumer groups would like to know just how weak the oversight of corporate management is in America, they need to check out the abuse of corporate jets.

The private jet industry has more than doubled its sales in the past five years, and corporate executives form the backbone of its clientele. In addition to legitimate business trips, many executives and their families have access to the company jet for personal use, an expense picked up by their companies' other stakeholders, including shareholders and employees. And the rest of us pay a price in diminished air quality as a result of these heavily polluting jets.

Private jet owners probably have noticed that wholesale fuel prices have increased 418 percent over the past five years, adding $5,000 to a Gulfstream jet flight between New York and Los Angeles. But this is small potatoes for a high-flier who shelled out 10,000 times that amount or more to buy the plane in the first place. At a time when both major-party presidential candidates are vowing to give shareholders greater influence over executive compensation, the private-jet perk deserves special attention.

Stakeholders now can get a better look at jet usage among corporate titans, because new rules require the disclosure of all perks valued at more than $10,000. Personal use of corporate jets was the most common perk among 386 of the largest companies on Standard & Poor's 500. A Corporate Library study found that more than half of the 215 companies surveyed allowed or required executives to use company aircraft on personal trips, with a median cost to shareholders of $182,929.

The companies with the highest fliers include Abercrombie & Fitch, which gave CEO Mike Jeffries $1.4 million worth of corporate jet time over the past two years, and Starwood Hotels, which spent $866,178 in 2006 flying CEO Steven Heyer back and forth between his Atlanta home and corporate headquarters in New York.

Sometimes it's the CEOs' relatives who benefit. Tyson Foods Chairman John Tyson is allotted 120 hours per year of corporate jet time, which he can parcel out to friends and family whether or not he accompanies them on the trip. In 2007, Qwest Communications ponied up several hundred thousand dollars so that new CEO Edward Mueller's wife and stepdaughter could use the corporate jet to commute between Qwest's Denver headquarters and a home in California.

It's the norm these days for the largest firms to require CEOs to use private jets for all travel, including personal vacations, citing concerns for their executives' security. New York University School of Business professor David Yermack says this arrangement "is like telling the CEO: 'We insist that you eat at a five-star restaurant for your own nutrition, and we insist that you drink $800 champagne for your health.'"

When corporate boards are approving such outrageous perks, you have to wonder what else they might be signing off on. Indeed, in virtually every recent case of corporate corruption, private jets have played a role. Countrywide Financial's Angelo Mozilo, under investigation for his role in the subprime mortgage meltdown, threatened to resign in 2007 unless the company let his wife fly with him and cover his personal taxes for the perk.

The private-jet perk is -- literally and figuratively -- a high-profile sign of an executive reward system out of control. It's time for corporate stakeholders, including institutional investors, to intervene to help CEOs break the habit.

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See more stories tagged with: ceo pay, private jets, ips

Chuck Collins is a senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies. Sarah Anderson is a fellow at the institute and director of the Global Economy Program. They are co-authors of the report "High Flyers: How Private Jet Travel Is Straining the System, Warming the Planet and Costing You Money."

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View:
CEO pollutes the Environment!
Posted by: williameon on Jun 28, 2008 3:52 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wonder do if they have to check their bags and go through security?
I doubt it.
The sky is full of Military and Corpirate Jets
Spewing Pollution and wasting fuel.
While the people suffer at the pump.
When Corpirate CEOs Loot
Who pays for it?
We all do!
With:
Lower wages
Outsourcing
Higher Taxes
Cuts in Employee benefits
Pollution
Corruption
Poverty
Sickness
Poor eduction
Homelessness
A decaying infrastructure
A Declining Dollar
ADD your own:

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

What the hell did you expect?
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Jun 28, 2008 5:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This nation's principle source of commerce is CRIME! White collar, good old fashioned street or hi-tech, the result is the same. Crime pays big time and produces big bucks that prove the axiom that money talks and suckers walk. As the nitwits elect another batch of criminals in November that laud capitalism and free trade, it might just be time to unpack a Marx-Engels reader and rethink G-8 and its progeny. Oh well, I'm off to my Gulfstream....must visit my puppies in the Caymans sweet thing.

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» Everything is collaping NOW. Posted by: pangolin
The Taxation of Personal Use is Another Abuse
Posted by: FoonTheElder on Jun 28, 2008 6:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not mentioned in this article is the taxation of the personal use of the plane.

The personal use is taxed at the equivalent cost of a commercial plane ticket. So even if the a trip actually costs $10,000, the amount that is income to the executive is probably somewhere around $1,000

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observer
Posted by: davy on Jun 28, 2008 6:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You just don't get it. These are Very Important People.

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» RE: observer Posted by: weenie
Balking at increased fees to fund FAA
Posted by: JSquercia on Jun 28, 2008 6:33 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I recently read an article that showed that Private Aviation (these guys) was fighting an attempt to increase the fees they pay to FAA . These numbers may not exact but represent a general idea of the "burden" they pay , they account for 30% of flights but pay like 12% of the costs . This means that the Commercial Airline passenger is subsidizing these voracious bastards even as they waste precious fuel .
I loved the analogy about Ceo's being forced to eat at Expensive Restraunts for their Nutrition . Corporate Boards are a joke with a small group of individuals serving on multiple Boards creating a tightly closed network of interlocking Directorates .

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Irony...
Posted by: gnaw_bone on Jun 28, 2008 7:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I still chuckle at the ironic situation I found myself in in 2000. Our union was on strike; I picketed at a site directly across the street from the local civil aviation airport. I spent a lot of time in the rain, standing by a burn barrel, watching CEO's come and go in their jets....

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And to add insult to injury....
Posted by: fearlessmanateehunter on Jun 28, 2008 7:57 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is no security whatsoever at any of the private jet ports as well as the Areo Communities. I happen to be one of those perk holders who has a, well I'm ashamed to say, let's just say, private jet at my disposal. Which, I might add, I've only used once, for a novelty purpose only. No big deal and embarrassing to boot.

What amazed me was, how I was allowed to drive up to the tarmac, pull up right next to the jet, climb on board with my associates and all our bags and never once, were we searched or even asked for an ID. I couldn't believe it....!

I was truly embarrassed and felt shame as I thought of all the nice people "travelers" who have to endure the ridiculous and humiliating, standard security procedures when traveling on commercial airlines. I remember arriving at my destination and being escorted to the "VIP" lounge at the private terminal where I felt like crawling under a rock.

Anyway, this is not about me. This is about the double standard of security that is applied to the American People.

My best regards,

The Fearless Manatee Hunter
Killer of the Gentle Sea Cow

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» There's no security?? Posted by: gellero1
Let the Market Speak
Posted by: billgee on Jun 28, 2008 8:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It will take time
Theyll find out

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» RE: Let the Market Speak Posted by: Marlena
» Or the Tooth Fairy Posted by: pangolin
Let us not forget
Posted by: robbie.seal on Jun 28, 2008 9:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No mention of the rising stars in the business world... The guys making themselves fat on the Global Warming Industry... Al Gore and his ilk fly around, in private jets, selling their carbon credits. Celebs fly from event to event in their jets. All the while telling you and me to cut our usage... Why no outcry for these criminals?

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» RE: Let us not forget Posted by: TagsNOLA
just one word....
Posted by: drlongo on Jun 28, 2008 9:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...disgusting!

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This article Soars!!!!
Posted by: Gravitas on Jun 28, 2008 10:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just like the CEOs. And meanwhile companies gripe employees health insurance costs too much. I encourage everyone to share this article with someone. Either e-mail, or better yet, sneak in the executive break room and post a copy on the bulletin board!

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Politics of Envy
Posted by: gellero1 on Jun 28, 2008 11:13 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lots of people with some money have their own jets, aircraft, or use NetJet timeshare.

That includes your car dealer, the strip mall owner, small business owners etc.

So what...it's their money, not yours. That industry employs thousands in manufacturing and support. The money circulates. Or perhaps you'd like to kill another industry, like steel and mining and logging.

This article doesn't even have its facts straight. The FAA issue was about paying for IFR and Flight Service time............something that would kill general aviation in this country. The power to tax ( or set user fees ) is the power to destroy.

Alternet posters never seem to be at the level that can get access to these material benefits. Maybe you should ask yourself why you're still where you are. It's certainly not the fault of the people you envy.

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» RE: Politics of Envy Posted by: TagsNOLA
» RE: Politics of Envy Posted by: tommy_slothrop
» Supply Side Economics Posted by: synx
» RE: Politics of Envy Posted by: Maxemum
Re: Corporate Boards do Suck
Posted by: gellero1 on Jun 28, 2008 11:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Definitely collusion in corporate boards..........usually made up of Execs of other companies. One hand washes the other. But how do you change that??

Corporations seem more bent on stock price than dividends, which is the way it used to be before mass communication and stock mass speculation.

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The Tragedy of the Commons: the Environmental costs
Posted by: stilldreaming on Jun 28, 2008 12:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Environment is a Bank which gave us humans credit for millenia. We took and took and took, and never replenished the capital.

Aall of us humans and animals and plants are paying out expensive and precious currency out of our ecological capital for frivolous pursuits.

CEO's more than the rest of us. But everyone has used gasoline (and polluted) for pure fun.

I'm not saying CEO's are entitled, they are not. But how many 4-wheelers, how many small boats, how many small aircraft, how many . anything with an engine! -- are run daily for fun? And a growing population, every one wanting to "play," everyone wanting the overconsumption lifestyle, in every country.

With zero thoughts towards the environment we are polluting.

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Put the Corporate Loot BACK into Commercial Air Travel
Posted by: 2Truthy on Jun 28, 2008 1:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Imagine what would happen if taxpayer subsidies were applied NOT to corporations for the expressed purpose of hiring cheap foreign labor to take our jobs here so that greedy inv4estors can wildly profit but to instead divert all that taxpayer loot BACK into the commercial airline industry which ran smoothly during the days of airline regulation?

Horrors, no... some self-annointed V.I.P. might break a nail tossing their precious pet carriers into one of those filthy TSA screening bins or get their Hermes silk ascots stuck in the conveyor belts while reaching for their cracked Blackberry or worse --- contract a deadly disease by breathing the SAME air that those dreadful beasts from the third world bring with them.

Oh, the places we can go when we finally realize the rewards of deregulation…elites have a much better idea: they don't want to fly the unfriendly, dangerous skies any more than you do. AlterNet keeps running an Al Gore ad about global warming, so why don't we ask the wealthy businessman directly if he cares to influence his private jet set pals any differently to stop the wholesale sell out of our jobs and the collapse of the commerical airline industry so that a few elites can be walled off from the unwashed masses?

Read article "PRIVATE JET PROFITS AND DEMAND SOAR AS TSA RIPS OFF AIRLINE PASSENGERS"

BlondeSense
-2Truthy

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Answer to "Politics of Envy"
Posted by: GPFrank on Jun 28, 2008 7:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now, come on, what does Abercrombie and Fitch have to do with steel and logging?

Is it envy why we question why the honchos are not given security checks like the rest of us?

And are these birds not the ones who outsource
and put offshore companies to avoid taxes but also to avoid paying American workers?

Are we objecting out of envy? What about the mere clutter of the skies? Are you celebrating
the work air traffic controllers have to do?

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Other considerations
Posted by: maude21 on Jun 28, 2008 10:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I once had a bf who is now a very rich Arab-American. Long time citizen, legitimate businessman, as far as I know. Wealth is well-deserved outcome for one who suffered poverty and adversity aplenty. FYI, he's not a Muslim.

While I have no contact with this man, I do assume he's not flying commercial. What's going to happen if he does? Despite his presentableness, he still looks very Arab. Does he need or deserve to spend time in security detention?

Then there's the phrase from Lee Iacocca's first book defending private jets because he didn't want his executives wasting time in airports. Remember Lee? He's the one who bailed out Chrysler with corporate welfare and was thoroughly lionized by the populace.

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» Yes! Posted by: Pale_Green_Pants
» One more thing.. Posted by: Pale_Green_Pants
Their time is so valuable that they cannot be burdened with commercial flight
Posted by: blogbooks on Jun 28, 2008 11:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Seriously.

These guys are pulling down hundreds of millions per year.

You really think they should be waiting in line with the retirees and tourists?

There is an entire lobbyist organization in Washington D.C. that does nothing but lobby the FAA and government to keep private jet access at major air ports.

NBAA

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Money to Burn
Posted by: GreyFoxThree on Jun 29, 2008 6:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course they do. They have money to burn and could care less about the environment! they are too good for that! LOL

JT
Is your ISP WATCHING you?

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Don't blame them actually
Posted by: Libsrule on Jun 29, 2008 9:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hate to rain on the parade here,but if I had the money I would fly private too. I've flown a bit over the last few years and it has become such a pain in the butt that if I was rich I'd use them.

TWO hours standing in line. THEN paying ridiculous money for some crappy food, then waiting another hour or so AND doing it all again on the return. AND I got stuck one time on a tarmac for close to 2 hours waiting to lift off.

AS well and this really frosts my butt WHAT IS UP WITH EVERYONE FLYING LIKE THEY ARE LOUNGING AT THEIR HOUSE??

You begin to notice just how many people are freaking slobs when they travel. I'm NOT talking about putting suits and ties on, but for chris's SAKE, at least dress nice.

I got stuck on one flight next to some slob who was wearing sandals and his feet were dirty and he smelled, his clothes consisted of a dirty white tshirt and shorts. He hadn't shaved and looked like he hadn't washed his hair in weeks. He promptly fell asleep and farted the whole way. THIS WAS FIRST CLASS!!

The attendants actually felt bad for me, they kept coming over to me to offer drinks and food constantly and I didn't want to get drunk on the plane or I would have awakened this jerk.

EVEN if it had been an emergency you ALWAYS have time to clean up a little even at the airport. The flight was sold out so he wasn't on standby or anything. They never called standby.

So between having to put up with people with no grooming talents beyond the ability to put pants and a shirt on and the interminable waits, I'd fly private too if I could afford it just because the government and slobs have made it more desirable.

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» No worries. Posted by: pangolin
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