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"We're not trying to point fingers at the airlines," Tomer said. "There are a lot of people flying and we simply don't have the capacity to handle them." Among the ideas put forward by the Brookings researchers: use technology that would allow planes to fly closer together, consider privatizing airports, and let airports charge airlines more for takeoff and landing slots during peak hours. Airlines are likely to oppose variable slot charges. They say departure times at hub airports are set to provide connections for people coming from smaller airports and to get passengers where they're going at a convenient time, such as early in the business day. Charging airlines more for peak-hour flights "will do nothing to reduce congestion. It will simply add another tax on passengers," said David Castelveter, a spokesman for the Air Transport Association, a trade group for the biggest U.S. airlines. The trade group says congestion can be reduced by modernizing the nation's air traffic control system. Airlines sued the Bush administration and successfully blocked a plan to auction takeoff and landing slots around New York. The administration said auctions would reduce traffic at Kennedy, LaGuardia and Newark Liberty airports. ___ A link to the Brookings Institution report, "Expect Delays: An Analysis of Air Travel Trends in the United States," can be found at
http://www.brookings.edu/metro/air_travel.aspx
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