January 29, 2010 - Aviation and Airport Development Updates

January 29, 2010 - A summary review of Aviation and Airport Development related news and information that was made public during the past ten days.  These were all first posted, in abbreviated form, on http://twitter.com/smtaber. Trisha Ton-Nu also contributed to this post. If you would like to receive this update in an e-mail delivered to your inbox every week, please send an e-mail to subscribe@calairlaw.com with the word “subscribe” in the subject line.

FAA Runway Test Set for Tuesday. --- Pat Kelly, News Herald, January 14, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration will conduct crucial flight tests on the 10,000-foot runway of the $318 million Northwest Florida Beaches International Airport under construction near West Bay, Florida. A small turbo-prop plane with special avionics will be used to help fine-tune the runway’s low-visibility navigation equipment as part of a “data-collecting exercise” that will enable the airport to open by May 23, 2010.
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FAA Conducts First ‘Flight Inspection’ at NorthwestFloridaBeachesInternationalAirport. --- Nicole Morten, Nicole Morten, January 19, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration conducted its first runway and flight inspection at Northwest Florida Beaches International Airport on Tuesday, January 19, 2010. Inspectors will be looking at every piece of technology transmitting signals to make sure there is no interference with air traffic control, pilots, and any electronic navigational gear. The inspection will likely take two to three days and once crew members gather all of the data needed, they will prepare a report of their findings and report and remove from service any equipment that is not functioning as it should.
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Gary Airport Passes FAA Inspection. --- Keith Benman, NorthwestIndiana Times, January 15, 2010
Gary/Chicago International Airport in Illinois received its second positive report from regulators, in addition to receiving a “clean bill of health” for airport finances three weeks ago. The Federal Aviation Administration inspection found “zero operation or airfield maintenance           discrepancies” and Airport Director Chris Curry was pleased with the airport’s positive start to 2010.
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Alternative Aviation Fuels Lauded. ‑-- Federal Aviation Administration, January 14, 2010
The Commercial Aviation Alternative Fuel Initiative (CAAFI), a Federal Aviation Administration-sponsored effort to develop environmentally sound and sustainable-alternative jet fuels, received Air Transport World’s Joseph S. Murphy Industry Service Award, one of the most coveted and valued honors by a leading aviation-industry publication. CAAFI combines innovative public-private partnership with an initiative to foster efforts to ensure critical issues in fuel safety, research and development, environmental impacts, and business and economic viability are addressed.
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Wind Co. Abandons Suzie’s Peak. --- Save Our Seashore, January 17, 2010
Vermont Community Wind Farm has decided to abandon Suzie’s Peak in Ira, Vermont, citing the location to be “too controversial and too problematic.” VCWF had planned to build an 80-megawatt wind farm in and around Ira, but met with public outcry and a potential veto from the Federal Aviation Administration, as the wind turbines may have posed a navigation hazard to nearby Rutland Airport. The company is still looking at 34 potential sites in Ira and nearby towns.
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The Death of 100LL Avgas. --- All Things Aviation, January 20, 2010
At a recent Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association Aviation Summit a number of aviation industry leaders commented that lead will be removed from aviation fuels in the near future, especially with the government’s growing concern for the environment. It is likely that legislation will soon be passed prohibiting lead in 100LL (Low Lead) avgas and requiring an unleaded version instead.
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Mount Pleasant’s Airport Could Add 40 Acres for Runway. --- Hilary Farrell, CentralMichigan Life, January 20, 2010
Airport officials are working on a plan to add 40 acres of land to Mount Pleasant Municipal Airport in Michigan so that the airport’s crosswind runway can be increased from 2,500 feet to 4,000 feet. Assessments for the site were approved last year and should be completed in late spring or early summer, after which the city will look further into purchasing the land. The assessments cost is $80,000 and the 40 acres will cost $100,000, with the assessments covered by federal and state grants and 97.5 percent of the parcel of land likely to be paid by federal grants as well.
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Potential Defects in Cockpit-Door Locks Worry Officials. --- Andy Pasztor, The Wall Street Journal, January 21, 2010
Cockpit-door locks installed on at least 1,600 widely used jetliners to keep intruders from accessing flight decks might be defective, worrying airlines and aviation authorities. The electrical controls or the bolts used to secure the doors can jam or fail to operate properly, and thousands of commercial jets worldwide will likely require some type of cockpit-door modification.
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Bellingham Airport to Shut Down for Much of September. --- John Stark, The Bellingham Herald, January 21, 2010
Bellingham International Airport in Washington could shut down for nearly three weeks in September 2010 for a $23 million project to resurface the runway and adjoining taxiway. The 6,750-foot runway is in poor shape and the resurfacing project will include improved drainage to extend the life of the new runway, while the 7,250-foot taxiway will be widened from 60 feet to 75 feet. All but $1.2 million of the cost of the project will be borne by the Federal Aviation Administration.
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FAA Sends Temporary Air Traffic Control Tower to Haiti.--- Federal Aviation Administration, January 21, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration dispatched a portable, temporary control tower to Haiti to help assist with aircraft operations at Port-au-Prince International Airport. The tower is 44 feet long, 13 feet high and eight feet wide, and weighs about 25,000 pounds, with two diesel-powered generators and supporting fuel tanks, and tools other support equipment for installation and maintenance. This tower and others like it are often used by the FAA to support airports where existing towers are out of service after a disaster.
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Sussex Airport Owner is Ordered to Repay $372,000 He Embezzled From FAA. --- Joe Ryan, The Star-Ledger, January 21, 2010
Paul G. Styger, owner of a small airport in Sussex County, New Jersey, admitted to embezzling from the Federal Aviation Administration and was ordered by a federal judge to serve two years of probation and repay $372,000 to the government. Styger received about $3.1 million from the FAA beginning in 2004, but began pocketing money intended for upgrading the runway, airfield, and other facilities in 2007.
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Truckers Threaten to Go on Strike, Shut Airports. --- Fran Spielman, Chicago Sun-Times, January 22, 2010
Two thousand Chicago truck drivers may authorize a strike that could cripple vital city services like snow removal, garbage collection, and airport operation to protest Mayor Richard Daley’s decision to reduce their hours and “ignore” their contract. O’Hare and Midway airports could be shut down because only Federal Aviation Administration-approved drivers with certified background checks can drive on the tarmac and clear snow and ice from runways.
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Marana, Pinal Airpark Looking to Form a Partnership for Regional Shipping Center. --- Roger Yohem, Inside Tucson Business, January 22, 2010
Pinal Airpark and the town of Marana are discussing absorbing the airpark into the town’s economic development portfolio, a move that could make the airpark a regional shipping and distribution center for freight and cargo. A possible rail yard may be going in nearby, and with the interstate Pinal County would have a “three-legged stool” of economic development.
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County to Perform Wildlife Hazard Study at Arcata-EurekaAirport. --- McKinleyville Press Blog, January 22, 2010
The Humboldt County Public Works Department-Division of Aviation will conduct a 12-month Wildlife Hazard Assessment (WHA) to identify potential wildlife species and habitat conditions hazards to aircraft at Arcata-Eureka Airport. The study is being undertaken at the request of the Federal Aviation Administration, who will then determine whether a wildlife management plan will be needed for the airport. The WHA will identify potentially hazardous wildlife species on or near the airport, analyze wildlife attractants on and in the airport vicinity, and provide recommendations to avoid potential hazards.
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Airliner Forced to Land After Colliding With Bird. --- Joan Lowy, Associated Press, January 22, 2010
A large bird was sucked into the right engine of United Flight 915’s Boeing 757-200 shortly after takeoff on Friday, January 22, 2010. There were no injuries but the pilot quickly returned the plane to the airport and it landed safely.
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Airports Chief: Ease Restrictions on General Aviation at Reagan National. --- Brian Trompeter, Sun Gazette, January 23, 2010
Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority president James Bennett is eager to see post-9/11 restrictions on general aviation flights eased at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. Reagan National used to accommodate 10 to 12 general aviation flights an hour, but now handles just one or two a day. Carmine Gallo, administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration’s Eastern Region, said aviation officials are holding an ongoing and aggressive discussion about general aviation at Reagan National, but its proximity to the Pentagon and key landmarks in Washington, D.C. makes it an attractive potential terrorist target and thereby requires “extraordinary measures.”
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Wind Farms Run Into Turbulence With the FAA. --- Steven Taber, Aviation & Airport Development Law Blog, January 25, 2010
Many companies are developing plans for wind farms to help move the nation from its over-reliance on petroleum products for its energy needs and as a response to the current emphasis on renewable energy and sustainability. Wind companies are fending off Endangered Species Act lawsuits and other environmental issues, but now have to contend with the Federal Aviation Administration, which is raising the issue of wind farms’ potential obstructions to aviation.
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FAA Sets Deadline for Airport Funds. --- R.G. Edmonson, The Journal of Commerce Online, January 25, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration has set a February 22, 2010 deadline for local airport authorities to apply for entitlement funds under the Airport Improvement Program. If local authorities do not meet the deadline, the agency will be unable to award the funds or declare them protected carryover funds, as the Airport and Airway Trust Fund expires on March 31, 2010. If Congress extends the Federal Aviation Administration Extension Act again towards a date later than March 31, the FAA can continue to grant funds under the improvement program.
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FAA Proposes Limits on Companies Hiring FAA Inspectors. --- Aeroclix, January 26, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration is proposing to put limits on airlines and other operators hiring FAA safety inspectors and their managers for two years after those employees leave the agency. The rule would prevent such organizations and anyone who owns or manages a fractional ownership program aircraft from employing or contracting with former FAA inspectors and managers to represent them in agency matters, if the former employee had any direct oversight of the certificate holder in the preceding two years. The “cooling-off” period is designed to prevent any creation of the perception of inappropriate activities.
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GAO Report: Regional Airport Planning Could Help Address Congestion If Plans Were Integrated with FAA and Airport Decision Making. --- United States Government Accountability Office, December, 2009
A recent Government Accountability Office report recommends that the Federal Aviation Administration create a review process for regional airport system plans and give priority to funding airport projects that are consistent with those plans. A number of airports are or will be significantly capacity constrained and thereby congested within the next 16 years, and the development and implementation of regional airport plans would likely identify additional solutions to help relieve airport congestion.
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European Flight Agency Issues Safety Directive Regarding Sikorsky Chopper. FAA Also Issues Airworthiness Directive. --- Michael Macdonald, Associated Press, and Federal Register, January 27, 2010
The European Safety Agency and the Federal Aviation Administration have both issued directives that require the replacement of a key part in the Sikorsky S-92A helicopter, the type of helicopter involved in a crash off the coast of Newfoundland that killed 17 of the 18 people aboard. Both agencies are calling on operators of the Sikorsky Model S-92A helicopters to replace a filter bowl in the chopper’s main rotor gearbox, as loss of oil from the main gearbox filter, if not detected and corrected, could lead to main gearbox failure and likely result in the need to make an immediate landing.
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L.A.-Area Airports See Drop in Passenger Traffic in 2009. --- Dan Weikel, Los Angeles Times, January 27, 2010
Passengers handled by Los Angeles International Airport fell 5.5% from 59.8 million to 56.5 million in 2009, while traffic at nearby Ontario Airport dropped 9.6% to 4.9 million. Gina Marie Lindsey, executive director of Los Angeles World Airports, which operates LAX and Ontario, was optimistic, saying that passenger volumes for December 2009 were 3.6% higher than December 2008, and that the airports had been expected to “end the year worse off” than they were.
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FAA Seeks Checks of Pilot Oxygen Systems on Boeing Jets. --- Andy Pasztor, The Wall Street Journal, January 28, 2010
New rules proposed by the Federal Aviation Administration call for checks of some cockpit oxygen hoses that can catch fire if there is a short circuit in a nearby electrical panel. The rules would cover three separate Boeing models and come more than a decade after manufacturers first warned airlines that certain parts posed potential fire hazards. It is unusual for the FAA to wait so long to mandate safety actions in the wake of a manufacturer’s recommendation, but the agency does not apparently consider the hoses to be high-priority safety hazards because it has proposed giving carriers three years to complete the inspection and replacement efforts.
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Planes Get Too Close on Approach to LAX. --- Associated Press, January 26, 2010
An error by an air traffic controller allowed a commuter plane to get too close to a Boeing 767 on approach to Los Angeles International Airport last week. Pilots are required to maintain five miles of separation to avoid wake turbulence that can send smaller planes out of control, but an American Eagle Embraer E315 came within three miles of the tail of the Chilean-based LAN Airlines plane while flying at about 7,000 feet.
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FAA Cites Progress in Drive to Improve Commuter Airline Safety. --- Andy Pasztor, The Wall Street Journal, January 27, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration said new government and safety initiatives have succeeded in lifting the overall safety of U.S. commuter airlines, with the improvements stemming in part from closer government oversight of pilot training and from moves by carriers to better identify and track weak pilots. In a report released Tuesday, January 25, 2010, most airlines were given generally high grades for their response to the FAA’s call to step up commuter safety last June, and there was much coverage of the agency’s efforts to improve safety.
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FAA Investigates Misuse of Lasers on Airplanes. --- Jonelle Merrill, ABC4.com, January 26, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating incidents of lasers being pointed into cockpits--pilots from different airlines including Delta and Southwest reported four laser sightings within the space of an hour on Sunday, January 23, 2010. FAA spokesperson Mike Fergus for the Northwest Region pointed out that most laser sightings do not amount to much more than an annoyance for pilots, but that there have been incidents where a pilot has had to go to the hospital for some treatment. Lasers are especially dangerous because they can be found at most office supply stores and can fall into anyone’s hands.
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Group Says Wind Watch Project Impacts Need Review. --- Anne Adams, The Recorder, January 28, 2010
Highland County, Virginia citizens are concerned that Laurel Fork, the protected stream in western Highland, might be seriously affected by the planned industrial wind facility on nearby Allegheny Mountain. The group has asked the state Department of Conservation and Recreation to take another look at the potential impacts of the facility and to include public participation in a more thorough review, and if ignored, will look for help with other agencies and find other options available to ensure the stream is protected by the Clean Water Act.
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Airport Airing Concerns Ahead of Windmill Vote. --- Charles Owen Bluefield, McClatchy-Tribune Regional News, January 27, 2010
The chairman of the Mercer County Airport Authority in West Virginia said he will personally hand-deliver a letter of opposition to the Tazewell County Administrator, with a decision on a controversial wind turbine farm for East River Mountain only days away. The letter addresses the airport’s concern about safety with the windmills being on the mountain and doubling the height of the ridge, making the approach to Mercer County Airport more hazardous than it already is. Dominion and BP Wind Energy North America, the two companies that have proposed the construction of the wind farm, said they have already spoken to the Federal Aviation Administration and performed an initial analysis that showed no impact on the flight path at the airport.
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3rd Quarter 2009 Air Fares: Average 3rd-Quarter Domestic Air Fares Fell 14.4% From 3rd Quarter 2008; Top 100 Airports: Highest Fare in Huntsville, Lowest Fare at Atlantic City. --- Bureau of Transportation Statistics, January 28, 2010
Average domestic air fares in 2009 fell to their lowest July-to-September level since 2005, dropping 14.4 percent from the third quarter of 2008, the largest year-to-year decline on record. Third quarter average fares were up 1.7 percent from the second quarter of 2009, however. Of the top 100 airports based on 2008 operating passengers, the highest third quarter average fares were in Huntsville, Alabama, while the lowest fares were at Atlantic City, New Jersey. Only Savannah airport, among the top 100 airports ranked by originating passengers reported, a year-to-year average fare increase for the third quarter, at 2.5 percent.
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November 13, 2009 - Aviation and Airport Development Updates

A summary review of Aviation and Airport Development related news and information that was made public during the past week.  These were all first posted, in abbreviated form, on http://twitter.com/smtaber. Trisha Ton-Nu also contributed to this post. If you would like to receive this update in an e-mail delivered to your inbox every Monday, please send an e-mail to subscribe@calairlaw.com with the word “subscribe” in the subject line.

FAA: 2 Planes Came Within 90 Feet on Ground at LAX. --- Associated Press, October 28, 2009.
The Federal Aviation Administration determined that a runway incursion at Los Angeles International Airport brought two passenger planes within 90 feet of each other on Sunday, October 25, 2009. A Midwest Express jet taxied toward a runway on which a Northwest Airlines Boeing 757 was taking off, though the jet was supposed to stop. The pilots of both planes will be questioned.
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FAA Issues Notice of ROD for FEIS Concerning Proposed Improvement Activities at Rocky GutierrezAirport in Sitka, AK. --- Federal Register, October 29, 2009.
The Federal Aviation Administration gave notice that it had issued a Record of Decision for the Final Environmental Impact Statement and Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act Section 810 Evaluation for Proposed Improvement Activities at Rocky Gutierrez Airport in Sitka, Alaska. The ROD included descriptions of the projects proposed by the Airport Sponsor and evaluation of the projects, as well as federal, state, and local actions that are needed prior to the implementation of the projects. The ROD also identified several of the FAA’s preferred and environmentally preferred alternatives, and alternatives selected by the FAA for implementation.
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Military Says Fighters Should Have Been Launched When Northwest Flight Overshot Airport. --- Lolita C. Baldor, Associated Press, October 29, 2009.
A top commander said the military would have launched fighter jets to track down the Northwest Airlines flight that overshot its destination if officials had been notified sooner. General Gene Renuart, head of U.S. Northern Command, learned of the incident only minutes before the Federal Aviation Administration regained contact with the pilots. He said delays must be corrected, and Northern Command is doing an internal review of the incident.
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FAA Finds Proposed Chiofaro Towers a Hazard. --- Casey Ross, Boston Globe, October 29, 2009.
Preliminary Federal Aviation Administration findings indicate that developer Don Chiofaro’s proposed towers near the New England Aquarium will have to be cut in half, because the tower complex with its proposed heights of nearly 800 feet would pose a hazard to planes taking off and landing at nearby Logan International Airport in Boston, Massachusetts. A principal at Chiofaro’s development firm said that the ruling was expected and the company still plans to pursue high-rise development on the property.
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Atlanta Airport Project Gets Stimulus Funds. --- LexisNexis, October 30, 2009.
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Georgia was awarded almost $34 million in stimulus funds through the Federal Aviation Administration’s Airport Improvement Program, to help pay for construction of a new terminal. The total cost of the terminal, expected to be completed by spring 2012, is $1.35 billion, and the 12-gate facility will connect to the existing international Concourse E, creating a 40-gate international air travel complex.
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Air Transport Association Urges U.S. Climate Negotiators to Oppose Climate Change Tax Targeting International Air Passengers. --- PRNewswire, October 30, 2009.
The Air Transport Association of America urged climate negotiators to oppose the “International Air Passenger Adaption Levy,” which would single out aviation to raise $10 billion per year for climate-change projects to be built in developing countries, and would likely take the form of an exorbitant climate change tax imposed on airlines and their passengers. In a letter to Todd Stern, the U.S. Special Envoy for Climate Change, the ATA impelled the United States to oppose the tax and instead support the industry’s proactive proposal for a global and sectoral approach to aviation and climate change.
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FAA Issues Intent to Rule on OAK’s Request for a PFC to Connect OAK to BART. --- Federal Register, November 2, 2009.
The Federal Aviation Administration plans to rule on and invited public comment on a proposed Passenger Facility Charge at Metropolitan Oakland International Airport, which would go toward providing a direct people mover connection between the Coliseum Bay Area Rapid Transit station and the airport.
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Federal Officials Reject Restrictions on Night Flights at BobHopeAirport. --- L.A. Now, November 2, 2009.
A request by the Burbank-Glendale-Pasadena Airport Authority for a curfew at Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, California was rejected by the Federal Aviation Administration for being unreasonable because it would create an “undue burden on commerce” and negatively affect the national air transportation system. The FAA found that the airport failed to meet four of the six conditions required of a restriction proposal, and several major cargo companies including Fed Ex and United Parcel Service opposed the implementation of a curfew.
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Hawaii Airport Getting New Control Tower. --- Associated Press, November 2, 2009.
Construction on a new $39 million air traffic control tower at Keahole-Kona International Airport in Hawaii is to begin in December, and is expected to be put into use in May 2012. The current 51-foot tower was built in 1970 to control a 6,500-foot runway, but after it was extended to 11,000 feet in 1993, it was more difficult for controllers to see the north end. The new tower should provide controllers better views of the airfield.
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Small Airports Land Big Money. --- Thomas Frank, USA TODAY, November 2, 2009.
A USA TODAY analysis shows that Congress has steered $1.1 billion since 2001 to “pet projects” at airports that cater to private planes, with approximately $100 million being allocated to low-priority projects. These “earmarks” projects have been criticized for potentially detracting from federal aid that could be used for projects to ease flight delays at the nation’s busiest airports, but a Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman said that the earmarks account for only 5% of airport grants.
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Stealth-Mode Wind Turbines. --- Peter Fairley, Technology Review, November 2, 2009.
Danish wind turbine company Vestas and United Kingdom defense contractor Qinetiq believe they may have the solution to the wind-turbine-related aviation radar interference problem: the first “stealth” wind-turbine blade. Turbines can interfere with radar by reflecting radar systems’ microwave signals and creating shadows that erase planes from radar operators’ screens and clutter those screens with the turbines’ signature. The stealth blade is constructed of material that absorbs radar, and the blade produces a markedly smaller signature in comparison to conventional blades.
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Congressman Sherman Proposes Legislation to Allow Nighttime Curfews at Valley Airports. --- California Chronicle, November 3, 2009.
In the wake of the Federal Aviation Administration’s rejection of the Burbank-Glendale-Pasadena Airport Authority’s application for a waiver to impose nighttime curfews at Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, California, Congressman Brad Sherman is proposing legislation that would allow Bob Hope and Van Nuys Airport to implement mandatory nighttime curfews from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m.
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FAA Issues Airworthiness Directive for ATR Model ATR42 and ATR72 to Correct “An Unsafe Condition.” --- Federal Register, November 3, 2009.
The Federal Aviation Administration adopted a new Airworthiness Directive for ATR Model ATR42 and ATR72 airplanes requiring action to address an unsafe condition related to the “unacceptable” probability of ignition risk.
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Safer Standards Urged After North Las Vegas Crashes. --- Keith Rogers, Las Vegas Review-Journal, November 2, 2009.
A Clark County Aviation Department report found that 75 percent of the accidents involving experimental and other aircraft at North Las Vegas Airport in Nevada were caused by pilot error. The report gave several recommendations for the Federal Aviation Administration, which the agency is reviewing and considering, barring those recommendations that have already been implemented.
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IG Report Faults NY Delay Initiative. --- Adrian Schofield, Aviation Week, October 30, 2009.
The Department of Transportation’s Inspector General found that benefits have been seen in just five of the Federal Aviation Administration’s 30 completed New York airport and airspace initiatives. Most of the completed initiatives were either not used or used infrequently, and the IG questioned their viability as “effective delay-reduction solutions.” The IG’s report also found that the FAA lacks an effective process for evaluating the usefulness of the individual initiatives, thereby preventing it from determining if the initiatives provide any benefits.
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Lawmakers Seek Ban on Laptops in Airline Cockpits. --- Joan Lowy, Associated Press, November 3, 2009.
Senator Byron Dorgan, chairman of the aviation subcommittee, said he is planning on introducing a bill that will ban the use of computer laptops and other personal electronic devices in airline cockpits, to prevent an incident like the Northwest Airlines plane that overshot its destination from occurring again. Currently the Federal Aviation Administration does not prohibit pilots from using such devices, except below 10,000 feet when the plane is taking off or landing. Other lawmakers have also indicated that they would support such legislation.
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Acadia to Develop Air Tour Regulations. --- Heather Seavey, WCSH, November 4, 2009.
Acadia National Park in Maine and the Federal Aviation Administration are working together to develop new regulations for scenic air tours that fly over the park. The new regulations would be designed to limit noise for park visitors and wildlife, and would extend to a ½ mile perimeter around the park boundaries and up to 5,000 feet above ground level.
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Northwest Pilots Appeal License Revocation. --- Joan Lowy, Associated Press, November 5, 2009.
The Northwest Airlines pilots who overshot their Minneapolis destination by 150 miles and had their licenses revoked by the Federal Aviation Administration are appealing the revocation with the National Transportation Safety Board. The FAA revoked the pilots’ licenses because they said the pilots put the 144 passengers of the flight in serious danger, and highlighted the incident as an example of the “erosion of professionalism” among commercial pilots.
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FAA Proposes Millions in Penalties Against United Airlines. --- Business and Legal Resources, November 5, 2009.
The Federal Aviation Administration is proposing a $3.8 million civil penalty against United Airlines for operating one of its Boeing 737 aircraft on more than 200 flights in a less-than-airworthy condition. The airline had violated its own maintenance procedures on one of the plane’s engines—two shop towels, and not the required protective caps, had been used to cover openings in the oil sump area.
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FAA Tracking Planes That Flew Over House Hit By Ice. --- ChicagoBreakingNewsCenter, November 5, 2009.
The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating an incident wherein a large piece of ice fell from the sky and hit a home in Chicago, Illinois on Wednesday, November 4, 2009. The house lies under one of O’Hare International Airport’s flight paths, and FAA investigators will seek to identify which planes were overhead at the time of the incident, and if any may have reported a leak, which could then be the source of the ice.
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Are Some Airlines Just Too Dangerous to Fly? --- Richard Korman, Miller-McCune, November 4, 2009.
A recently-conducted study found that certain old planes operated from Latin America, the Middle East, and Africa have more accidents. Developing countries are more likely to use old planes beyond their “designed economic life,” and maintenance of these planes may fall short of international standards, though it is difficult to establish global standardization. The European Union launched an airline blacklist in 2006, and passengers should avoid those carriers or carriers from Federal Aviation Administration-downgraded countries, though international maintenance standards should be implemented and enforced.
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Photos Show AA Plane at Center of Safety Investigation. --- Scott Friedman, NBC DallasFort Worth, November 4, 2009.
American Airlines is being investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration after the airline voluntarily self-disclosed a discrepancy in several of the screwheads used to hold AA plane #279’s skin. The screws appear to be ordinary and unlike the rivets generally used, but the carrier insists that they are aerospace quality and were only installed just before the plane was moved to the New Mexico desert and retired. The FAA is investigating whether the plane carried any passengers with the changed screws, and whether the plane was deliberately moved to the desert graveyard to keep it out of sight of inspectors.
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Barclay Urges Senate to Pass FAA Bill; Eliminate AMT Penalty. --- Aviation News, November 4, 2009.
Charles Barclay, president of the American Association of Airline Executives, is urging the Senate to pass the Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization bill quickly and permanently eliminate the AMT penalty on airport private activity bonds.
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Director of Singapore Firm Sentenced for Illegally Exporting Controlled Aircraft Components to Iran. --- Department of Justice, November 5, 2009.
Laura Wang-Woodford, one of the directors of Singapore-based Monarch Aviation Pte Ltd., was sentenced in federal court in Brooklyn to 46 months in prison for conspiring to violate the U.S. trade embargo by exporting controlled aircraft components to Iran. Along with her husband, Brian D. Woodford, who served as chairman and managing director of Monarch and who remains a fugitive, Ms. Wang-Woodford illegally exported aircraft parts and U.S. military aircraft components. At the time of her December 23, 2007 arrest in San Francisco, she was also in possession of catalogues from a Chinese company from which all U.S. citizens and entities are prohibited from engaging in business.
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FAA Chief: Pilots Must Refocus on Professionalism. --- Joan Lowy, Associated Press, November 4, 2009.
Federal Aviation Administrator Randy Babbitt told an aviation club that pilots must refocus on professionalism, and that recent incidents like Northwest Flight 188, which overshot its destination by 150 miles, and the Buffalo, New York crash that killed 50 people, were caused because the pilots forgot their first job was to focus on flying the plane. Babbitt has been stressing a need for stronger professionalism among airline pilots, and he has urged veteran pilots to mentor less experienced pilots.
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$3.7 Million to Study O’Hare Terminal Airlines Don’t Want. --- Fran Spielman, Chicago Sun-Times, November 4, 2009.
Consulting firm Landrum & Brown was awarded a $3.7 million contract to plan for a new western terminal project at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago, Illinois that the major airlines are refusing to fund and consider ill-conceived. The Federal Aviation Administration, which provided the funding for the study, believes the Western Terminal Planning Study is an “important and necessary tool” to help the agency coordinate with the state to provide regional and local roadways for western access to O’Hare.
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Airport Weight Debate Goes to Commissioners. --- Kurt Hildebrand, The Record-Courier, November 4, 2009.
Douglas County, Nevada commissioners will look at a proposal analyzing what might happen if Minden-Tahoe Airport loses federal funding. The Federal Aviation Administration has already withheld some funding due to the county’s failure to alter the airport’s entry in federal publications, and the FAA would be less likely to continue to provide funding if the airport does not comply with assurances representatives made that the airport would be maintained. The county is analyzing potential options for maintaining the airport without federal funding if the county is held in non-compliance and does not receive federal funds.
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How to Keep Planes From Colliding with Lasers. --- Physics Today, November 5, 2009.
Researchers have created a radio-tracking device that can detect aircraft entering the vicinity of a laser beamed into the sky, which would greatly aid in the prevention of plane-laser collisions. The current method involves using human observers to watch for planes flying with 25 degrees of the laser beams, but the new device would have none of the potential for human error.
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FAA Investigates Clem’s Airport Lease Deal. --- Alan Gustafson, Statesman Journal, November 6, 2009.
The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating a controversial lease awarded by former aviation director Dan Clem to a developer at Aurora State Airport in Oregon. The inquiry concerns whether the lease complied with federal grant conditions for airports that receive FAA funding for improvements, and the Oregon Department of Justice is conducting its own investigation into Clem’s handling of the lease. Mr. Clem resigned as state aviation director on October 19 of this year.
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MontanaAirport Hopes to Build Control Tower Soon. --- Associated Press, November 6, 2009.
Missoula International Airport, Montana airport administrators hope to begin building a new control tower in spring, after the Federal Aviation Administration approved about $6.7 million in funding for the tower. The new tower will likely be about 120 feet tall, approximately double the height of the current tower, which was built in the early 1960s.
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Noise Pollution Control. --- Save the Earth!, November 6, 2009.
Noise pollution is displeasing human-, animal-, or machine-created sounds, damaging to physiological and psychological health. In the early 1970s the Environmental Protection Agency developed federal noise-emission standards, and the Federal Aviation Administration adopted Ldn (day-night equivalent level) as the noise descriptor in assessing land-use compatibility with various levels of aircraft noise. The EPA, FAA, and other government agencies work to identify major noise sources in the United States and craft measures to curb noise pollution.
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Notice of Availability of a Record of Decision for Streamlining the Process of Experimental Permit Applications. --- Federal Register, November 6, 2009.
The Federal Aviation Administration announced the availability of a Record of Decision for streamlining the environmental review of experimental permit applications for the launch and/or reentry of reusable suborbital rockets. The ROD provides a description of the Proposed Action—the FAA’s Preferred Alternative and the environmentally preferable alternative—and includes a discussion of environmental impacts associated with the Proposed Action for each resource area.
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ExhaustConeFalls Off Jet Onto NY Home’s Lawn. --- David B. Caruso, Associated Press, November 6, 2009.
An engine tailcone fell off a Delta Air Lines Boeing 777 and landed on a lawn in a Long Island, New York residential neighborhood, though neither pilots nor anyone on the ground immediately noticed the mishap. The aircraft does not need the part to fly, and carried on safely to its destination in Tokyo, where Delta personnel reported the engine part missing following an inspection after the plane landed. Delta is conducting an investigation to determine what went wrong.
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FAA Streamlines Experimental Space Flight Access. --- Michael Cooney, Network World, November 6, 2009.
The Federal Aviation Administration says it will streamline the environmental review part of permit applications for the launch and/or reentry of reusable suborbital rockets to help bolster a young commercial space market. The Processing of Experimental Permit Applications (PEIS) is the central and important document of the ruling, because it presents information and analysis common to reusable, suborbital rockets and effectively focuses on environmental impacts specific to an applicant’s proposed experimental operations.
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Van Nuys Would Like To Be Paid Back For All That Soundproofing. --- Curbed LA, November 6, 2009.
The Van Nuys Airport Citizens Advisory Council is seeking reimbursement from the City of Los Angeles for the cost of installing insulation in homes near Van Nuys Airport in California, after the Federal Aviation Administration rejected plans to enforce a curfew at Burbank’s Bob Hope Airport which would have resulted in the diversion of planes to airports like Van Nuys. The figure is in the $10 million range, but will likely increase when the cost of noise consultants is factored in.
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NBAA Welcomes FAA Ruling Against Curfew Proposal. --- Charter X News, November 7, 2009.
The National Business Aviation Association applauded the Federal Aviation Administration’s decision to deny a proposed ban on nighttime operations at Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, California. The NBAA had submitted an extensive legal filing in opposition to the curfew proposal, one of the documents cited by the FAA in support of its decision.
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Buzzing of Santa Monica Pier Leads to Questions About Aviation Safety. --- Dan Weikel, Los Angeles Times, November 8, 2009.
A November 2008 incident at Santa Monica Pier involving a low-flying military jet has focused attention on the use of high-performance military jets by civilian pilots and the hazard they can pose to people in the air and on the ground. In the Western Pacific region of California, Nevada, Arizona, and Hawaii there are about 5,600 experimental exhibition planes that are restricted by the government to air shows, flight demonstrations, or training flights over sparsely populated areas, but there is little to stop those who own or operate those planes from using them in unapproved and dangerous ways. David G. Riggs, the pilot and owner of the jet involved in the Santa Monica Pier incident, may have illegally sold rides in such unapproved planes and may even have failed to adhere to proper maintenance standards for the planes.
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FAA Gives Hope to Cargo. --- Aircargo Asia Pacific, November 9, 2009.
The air cargo industry praised the Federal Aviation Administration’s decision to reject BobHopeAirport’s request for a ban on nighttime operations at the Burbank, California airport. Daniel Fernandez, director of the International Air Cargo Association, said that the decision sends a clear message to other airports that may have been considering similar restrictive actions.
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City Council Committee Approves Delta-Airport Lease. --- Kelly Yamanouchi, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, November 9, 2009.
The Atlanta, Georgia city council transportation committee approved the proposed lease between Hartsfield-JacksonInternationalAirport and Delta Air Lines after the Federal Aviation Administration wrote in a memo that most of its concerns about the deal had been addressed. Key issues involved potentially anti-competitive provisions in the lease, including the restriction of gate usage—a representative for American, Continental, US Airways, and United told the transportation committee that the agreement will restrict those carriers because they will lose five of their gates. The full council will take up the measure at its November 16, 2009 meeting.
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Aircraft Owner Group spent $770,000 Lobbying in 3Q. --- Associated Press, November 9, 2009.
The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, representative of private pilots, spent $770,000 lobbying on issues related to small aircraft, security, and airport fees, in the third quarter. The group lobbied for legislation that would require the Homeland Security secretary to go through a negotiated rulemaking process before issuing rules aimed at general aviation aircraft, as well as issues like greenhouse emissions, fuel, reauthorization for the Federal Aviation Administration, and authorization for the Transportation Security Administration.
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US Airways Spent $410K Lobbying Government in 3Q. --- Associated Press, November 9, 2009.
US Airways Group Inc. spent $410,000 lobbying in the third quarter. The carrier lobbied on the cap-and-trade energy proposal and aviation regulation issues, and on bills aimed at curbing speculation in the energy markets. US Airways also lobbied on reauthorization for the Federal Aviation Administration and air cargo security issues, aircraft engineering, flight operations, and maintenance issues.
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Senators Call for Passage of FAA Bill. --- Aviation News Today, November 9, 2009.
A group of lawmakers called on Senate leaders to pass the Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization bill. The Senate Commerce Committee approved the FAA Air Transportation and Modernization Act of 2009, S. 1451 on July 21, 2009, but the bill has stalled in the Finance Committee, which has yet to consider the tax portion of the bill.
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Airbus A319 Drops Parts on Dallas. --- Associated Press, November 10, 2009.
A left overwing emergency slide and the door over the compartment in which the slide was stowed fell from an Airbus A319 jet making a test flight in Dallas, Texas. The jet was undergoing maintenance when the incident occurred, and no injuries were reported and the plane was able to land safely.
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