Hellcat wrote:
And they are NOT diverted training missions. They ARE intentionally scheduled flights. How do I know? I have a friend who has flown a few of these flights.
I've flown some in the C-130. In some respects, you
all are right. First, the squadron is expected to execute 100% of its allocated flying hours each fiscal year. (I don't manage my personal finances that way and always thought that the candidate who proposes a plan to change the gov't budgetary process to where you "spend what you need" and aren't rewarded or penalized would be a winner, but, I digress.)
Yes, they probably convert a pure training line to a flyover. Of course it depends on the type of plane, the location, fuel planning, etc. For instance a B-2 can go fly a legit 6+ hour profile with the fly-by as just one "time control" event worked in. I don't fly the F-16 but I suspect that the typical sortie is a 1.5 and the whole thing may be dedicated to the display. So yes, there is a cost incurred for diverting a jet for the time it takes for the event, but again, we have flying hours to execute - that's the reality.
That said, our local training routes do get a bit stale. When I'm asked to hit an exact TOT over an exact geographic point - that takes planning, coordination, and a fair amount of work. The airspace over a large event will no doubt be congested with news helos, blimps, tall buildings, airliners flying to downtown airports, whatever. One could argue there's more training value in flying an unfamiliar route - because that's what we do in wartime. And just because I'm doing it over a crowd doesn't change our mission into something worthless. Fact is, we fly low-level every week and make a "pass" over some drop zone in the sticks where our only audience is a farmer and some deer. Does that make it a waste of time and money too?
I don't have the numbers, but when you look at the overall DoD flying budget and cull out the time solely dedicated to fly-bys, I bet it is smaller than a drop in the bucket. As long as they stay responsibly allocated and because I know first-hand that there is something to learn from every mission, then I have no problem with it - I want to see my taxes spent wisely too.
Ken