Alamo Rent-A-Car appeals the district court’s decision, after a trial on stipulated facts, that the airport access fee schedule enacted for the Palm Springs Regional Airport does not violate the Commerce Clause. We affirm.
Alamo is assessed the contested access fee for using the airport access roads to pick up and drop off airline passengers who rent its cars. The access fee charged is seven percent of the gross receipts Alamo generates from customers picked up at the airport. The fee schedule was patterned after a similar schedule enacted by the Sarasota-Manatee Florida Airport Authority, which the Eleventh Circuit upheld against a very similar Commerce Clause challenge brought by Alamo.
See Alamo Rent-A-Car v. Sarasota-Manatee Airport Authority,
Like the Sarasota-Manatee user fee upheld by the Eleventh Circuit, the Palm Springs user fee easily satisfies the test established by
Evansville-Vanderburgh Airport Authority Dist. v. Delta Airlines,
Finally, the fee is not excessive in comparison to the governmental benefits conferred. Alamo’s calculation of the costs of airport “security, maintenance, and overhead” do not include debt service. The
Evansville
Court explicitly found debt service to be a cost which a user fee could attempt to defray.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We reject Alamo’s argument that charging a fee for use of the entire airport facility violates 49 U.S.C.App. § 1513(a). "Congress passed § 1513(a) to deal primarily with local head taxes on airline passengers.”
Aloha Airlines Inc. v. Director of Taxation of Hawaii,
