National Post (National Edition)

U.S. cuts ground military air shows

- By M.L. Johnson

MILWAUKEE • Dozens of air shows that draw tens of thousands of people and generate millions of dollars for local economies have been cancelled this year after the U.S. military grounded its jet and demonstrat­ion teams because of automatic federal budget cuts.

For years, the biggest draws at air shows have been the military’s two elite jet teams, the U.S. Navy’s Blue Angels and the U.S. air force’s Thunderbir­ds, and their intricate stunts.

The armed services have also provided F-16, F-18 and F-22 fighter jets and the U.S. army Parachute Team, known as the Golden Knights. All the teams were grounded as of April 1 to save money, and the military also dramatical­ly curtailed its help with ground displays of various aircraft.

Those cutbacks have affected more than 200 of the approximat­ely 300 air shows held in the United States each year, said John Cudahy, president of the Internatio­nal Council of Air Shows.

About 60 shows have been cancelled, and he expects more cancellati­ons as the season progresses and hope for restoratio­n of the budget cuts fades.

He predicted 15% to 20% of the shows won’t return next year, even if the military begins participat­ing again.

“The worst case is that they either cancel and go out of business, or they don’t cancel and they have such poor attendance and they go out of business,” he said.

Local economies also will feel the sting of the cancella-

[It’s] like having the Super Bowl

tions without the air shows bringing in crucial tourism dollars.

Representa­tives for some of the nation’s biggest air shows, such as the air and water shows in Chicago and Milwaukee and the Experiment­al Aircraft Associatio­n’s AirVenture in Oshkosh, Wis., said they didn’t expect a lack of active military jets to affect their events.

The Chicago and Milwaukee shows are held along the shore of Lake Michigan, where large crowds are expected to gather for a free spectacle; the Oshkosh event is primarily a convention of pilots and aviation enthusiast­s, with an air show attached.

But organizers of other events said they expected such a dramatic drop in attendance that they felt they had to cancel.

Thunder over the Blue Ridge in Martinsbur­g, W.V., an easy day trip from Baltimore and Washington, won’t happen. The two-day show drew 88,000 people when the Thunderbir­ds performed in 2010, said Bill Walkup, one of the board members and manager of the Martinsbur­g airport.

“Having the Thunderbir­ds or the Blue Angels is like having the Super Bowl, it’s a household name,” Mr. Walkup said.

Without a jet team, the show typically draws 15,000 or fewer. Organizers also faced a challenge because the show had been hosted for the past few years by the West Virginia Air National Guard.

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