Here’s How Much The “America Strong” Flyover Cost The Military

Here's How Much The “America Strong” Flyover Cost The Military
The U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds and U.S. Navy Blue Angels flew information behind a KC-10 Extender assigned to Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J., April 28, 2020. The demonstration teams flew over New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania to honor thousands of healthcare workers, essential employees, military personnel and other first responders who are at the front lines of the battle against COVID-19. (U.S. Air Force photo by Chief Master Sgt. Christopher Ottenwess)

The Navy and Air Force announced “America Strong Flyovers” for frontline workers at the end of April, using the famous Blue Angels and Thunderbirds. The displays were scheduled for areas hardest hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

Some national media outlets like the NY Daily News and Washington Post reported at the time that flying the squadrons costs taxpayers $60,000 an hour, prompting skepticism about the displays versus the need for personal protective gear and economic stimulus. Often, these complaints are also criticisms of President Donald Trump and his administration.

In a joint statement announcing “America Strong,” the US Navy and Air Force called the flybys “critical training requirements” for both squadrons:

Pilots must execute a minimum number of flight hours to maintain proficiency. These flyovers will incur no additional cost to taxpayers.

That’s the message squadrons in Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana gave. In Ohio, a spokesperson said the training budget had already been set and the flyover courses were designed to stay within existing travel.

“Rather than doing a single day of round-robin flybys, we are doing them over the course of several days so that we can tie them in with our regularly scheduled training missions, as not to incur any additional costs, but at the same time allowing us to pay tribute to our frontline and essential workers,” said Ohio 180th Fighter Wing Senior Master Sergeant Beth Holliker.

“For Cincinnati, we’ll conduct our flybys as we are leaving our training airspace, on our way home, back to Toledo,” she added.

Kentucky’s 123rd Airlift Wing flew two C-130s over parts of the Bluegrass State last weekend in “Operation American Resolve.”

It, too, said the flyovers were “accomplished as part of regular and mandatory proficiency training required to keep aircrews current and qualified and incurred zero additional cost to taxpayers.”

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