TheĀ stateĀ of Wyomingās two jets were busy in 2024, shuttling 2,460 passengers 161,954 miles on a total of 780 flights through Dec. 13.
The use of theseĀ planes has comeĀ under scrutinyĀ lately with some questioning whether theĀ stateĀ needs to own two.
The Wyoming Department of Transportation was the biggest department user of the aircraft, navigating 280 trips over 214 days.Ā Second was the governorās office, coming in at 200 trips.Ā
For the sake of this story, CowboyĀ StateĀ Daily considered any flight between two destinations a full trip.Ā
Where Are They Going And Whoās On Them?
In-stateĀ travel was by far the biggest destination for those using theĀ stateās two Cessna Citation jets.
The jets exist in order to allowĀ stateĀ officials to get to certain destinations around theĀ stateĀ much more quickly than they would by car.
Gov. Mark Gordon took 217 trips throughout the year on the jets, usually accompanied by his policy director Randall Luthi.
Most of the governorās trips were within Wyoming, making multiple stops per day.
He also took trips to Arizona, Virginia, Washington, D.C., Illinois, California, Utah, Colorado, Idaho and Nevada.
Gordon also hopped onĀ planes with members of the Oil and Gas Commission, Wyoming Business Council and Wyoming Supreme Court.Ā
StateĀ Board Members As Well ā¦
Members of a fewĀ stateĀ boards also used theĀ planes, usually to travel to meetings. Often, members of the board were picked up at various locations around theĀ state, not unlike a school bus picking kids up for school.
For instance, members of the Wyoming Board of Medicine took aĀ stateĀ planeĀ that made stops in Casper, Sheridan and Rock Springs to pick up members for their meeting in Cheyenne to avoid traveling the snowy roads. The next day, they took a similar trip back.
They arranged a similar trip for their meeting in late April.
The Industrial Siting Council did the same for meetings they held in July and October. The council also took a trip to Casper in September where it picked up a few of its members around theĀ stateĀ on the way to an event.
Kimberly Mazza, public information supervisor for the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality, saidĀ the council uses the state plane to attend permit hearings and council meetings that directly address specific permit issues. The permittees pay for the council members' travel that is required to obtain and maintain a permit.
Cody resident Bruce McCormack was on a few of these flights himself for Aeronautics Commission meetings, of which he is the chair. He said offering these trips toĀ stateĀ board members has been a longstanding practice in Wyoming and that the use of theseĀ planes has been studied numerous times by the Legislature.
āItās an efficiency thing,ā he said. āIt really helps getting people to meetings and back home in a fast and safe way.āĀ
StateĀ Rep. John Bear, R-Gillette, said heās not sure if the use of theseĀ planes byĀ stateĀ board members is appropriate but does acknowledge that itās difficult to find people to fill these roles.
The University of Wyoming used theĀ planes 85 times throughout the year, including flying down former Wyoming Senator Al Simpson and his family on Aug. 22 for the opening of the Alan K. Simpson Center of Clinical and Experiential Learning on campus.
The school also flew their board of trustees down from Cody and Jackson to their meeting in Laramie in late September.
Members of the Legislatureās Energy Council took trips on theĀ stateĀ planes to North Dakota and Oklahoma throughout the year.

Questions Remain
Bear has been one of the most vocal voices in questioning whether theĀ stateĀ needs two jets. Heās consistently advocated for selling one of theĀ stateās jets to reduce costs, and questions whether the amount of flight time taking place warrants having two of the aircraft.
āWould theĀ stateĀ be better off investing in the commercial aviation part of our economies, which always seem to suffer from a lack of business?ā he questioned.
Bear also wonders if it would be less expensive and more reliable to charter privateĀ planes instead of paying for two crews, fuel and maintenance of theĀ stateās current fleet.
āWe could easily charter flights during the down time for maintenance of the one jet,ā he said. āAs our revenue outlook diminishes, we should be looking for solutions that save the taxpayersā hard-earned money.ā
Rep. Landon Brown, chair of the House Transportation Committee, told CowboyĀ StateĀ Daily last month he believes it would be more expensive for theĀ stateĀ to pursue this option and that theĀ planes actually save theĀ stateĀ money when compared to other modes of travel.Ā
According to WYDOT, the twoĀ planes combined cost $2.4 million to run in both 2022 and 2023. Itās budgeted about $1.2 million each for theĀ planes in 2024 and the same amount in 2025 as well.
TheĀ stateĀ of Wyoming purchased the jets for $14.6 million in 2002 during former Gov. Jim Geringerās administration and when the dot-com financial bubble burst. McCormack said Simpson was instrumental in bringing an adjustment to the federal severance tax disbursals that allowed Wyoming to be able to afford theseĀ planes.
āThe wholeĀ stateĀ should be proud of Al for helping make that permanent funding increase happen,ā McCormack said, āpart of the first use of which was buying those two jets.ā
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Leo Wolfson can be reached at leo@cowboystatedaily.com.