March 5, 2010 - Aviation and Airport Development Updates

March 5, 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.

 

Senate to Revive Long-Stalled FAA Bill to Modernize Air Traffic System. --- Dave Michaels, The Dallas Morning News, February 24, 2010
The Senate will soon bring up the long-stalled Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization bill. The bill would create thousands of jobs and is additionally loaded with elements that affect the oversight of airlines, background checks for pilots, and protections for passengers stranded on tarmacs. It also contains a provision that would require air-traffic system modernization by 2018, instead of the previous target date of 2025.
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Flight Attendant Leaders Push for Progress on FAA Reauthorization. --- PRNewswire, February 26, 2010
Leaders from the Association of Flight Attendants and the Association of Professional Flight Attendants met with the offices of several Senators to promote moving forward with the Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization bill, which includes many key provisions for flight attendants. The bill includes fatigue study information and workplace safety and health protections, cabin air quality provisions that would identify the equipment and technologies available to detect and filter highly toxic contaminants in the air supply, English language standards for flight attendants, and a “Return to the Cabin” program that would allow flight attendants an opportunity for rehabilitation after testing positive for drug or alcohol abuse.
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AAAE Urges Airport Provisions in FAA Bill. --- Aviation News Today, February 26, 2010
The American Association of Airport Executives is calling on Senate leaders to endorse a number of airport-related provisions in the upcoming Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization bill. The provisions would enhance aviation safety, increase capacity, improve small community air service, and save or create much-needed jobs.
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Runway Improvements Planned for PalomarAirport. --- SanDiego6.com, February 24, 2010
McClellan-Palomar Airport in Carlsbad, California will close alternating weeks starting April 25, when work will begin to replace the 5,000-foot-long runway. Testing found that the supporting soils under the existing runway and the pavement surface are deteriorating. The $7.9 million cost of the project will be covered by Federal Aviation Administration funds.
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Airport Leaders Describe Plan to Allow For More Private Jets. --- Stephen Baxter, Community Neighborhoods, February 24, 2010
Airport officials at Mineta San Jose International Airport in California plan to ask the San Jose City Council to change the airport’s master plan and allow for the transformation of more space for private jets. Residents who live near the flight path express concern about noise, but private planes are often quieter than commercial jets, and certain loud activities could be restricted to specific operating hours.
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Somerset Windmills Would Not be Aviation Hazard, Feds Say. --- Don Hopey, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 25, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration issued a “determination of no hazard” January 21, 2010 for the proposed Gamesa Energy USA wind energy project that would put 30 windmills atop an ecologically sensitive ridge on Shaffer Mountain in Somerset County, Pennsylvania. Studies found the structures would not exceed obstruction standards or adversely impact air space and flight routes above the ridge. Local groups oppose the project because its proposed location places it in the watershed of two of the state’s highest quality native trout streams and on a major bat and bird migratory route.
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FAA Approves Wind Farm. --- Kathy Mellott, The Tribune-Democrat, February 25, 2010
Two months after voicing concerns that the proposed Shaffer Mountain Wind Farm would potentially create problems for local airports, the Federal Aviation Administration is giving its OK to the project. The only conditions set forth by the agency are that the proposed turbines must be marked and lit in accordance with FAA requirements, including white paint and synchronized red lights. The project has been delayed at the state level as the Gamesa, the energy company behind the plans, is seeking approval from the Department of Environmental Protection for a National Pollution Discharge Elimination System permit. Ray Jennings, manager of nearby single-runway Bedford County Airport, is also frustrated because he says the location of some of the turbines could force aircraft taking off from the airport to fly 400 to 500 feet higher than at present.
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U.S. Airline Pilots Skipping Sleep Targeted in FAA Data Search. --- John Hughes, Bloomberg, February 25, 2010
After last year’s plane crash near Buffalo, New York raised fatigue concerns, the Federal Aviation Administration will ask carriers to examine voluntary safety reports by flight crews to see how often pilots skip sleep the night before a flight. The agency has already asked the industry to restrict pilot commutes, because the risk of fatigue may be boosted by major carriers’ increasing use of regional jets with low-paid pilots who can’t afford motel rooms.
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AOPA: Why the User Fees Battle Isn’t Over. --- Glenn Pew, AVweb, February 25, 2010
The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association says the user fees battle isn’t over, because the country’s fiscal woes and the Federal Aviation Administration’s shrinking general fund could lead legislators to seek alternate forms of funding, like user fees. The FAA reauthorization bill has not made it past the Senate, either, and user fees could be incorporated into that bill or through other legislative means.
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Airport to Seek Appropriation for Terminal. --- David Still, The Barnstable Patriot, February 26, 2010
Barnstable Airport in Massachusetts hopes to see its over-$21 million appropriation order for a new terminal on the docket for its March 4 meeting with the Barnstable Town Council. Airport Manager Bud Breault says the airport can show completion or progress on each of the 19 conditions placed by the town council in September 2007 that had to be satisfied before any funding request would be recommended. The Barnstable Municipal Airport Commission is planning to cover the cost through expected state funds, airport reserve money, a town-backed general obligation bond, and stimulus funds, and even has surplus land that it could sell if necessary.
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Expiration of Funds Leads to Rush on Runway. --- Christine Cullen, OceanCity Today, February 26, 2010
Ocean City in Maryland is rushing to reconfigure a runway at Ocean City Municipal Airport, to prevent losing $2.8 million from an account dedicated to airport improvements. The city will have to remit that money to the federal treasury if it is not used by December 2011.
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Court Rules Against Long-Term Protection of Aircraft Tail Numbers. --- Mike Mitchell, AvStop.com, February 28, 2010
A United States District Court judge has ruled that a list of private aircraft, whose aircraft tail numbers are blocked from the public view, must be released under the Freedom of Information Act. The National Business Aviation Association sued the Federal Aviation Administration to prevent it from releasing a blocked list to ProPublica, Inc., an independent, nonprofit organization that produces investigative journalism in the public interest. Anyone can go to the FAA website and look up an aircraft registration, but there are a select few who wish to keep their aircraft tail numbers anonymous, like corporations.
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Court Upholds Release of Corporate Jets List Sought by ProPublica. --- Michael Grabell, Herald de Paris, February 27, 2010
ProPublica will be able to obtain a list of which companies have been seeking to block their planes after a federal district judge ruled that the list should be made available under the Freedom of Information Act. Companies sometimes request that their flights and tail numbers be kept secret to protect the security of their executives and to prevent disclosure of business trips that could affect stock prices or give competitors an edge about potential deals. ProPublica has been seeking the list ever since the CEOs of the “Big 3" automakers flew to Washington, D.C. on corporate jets to ask Congress for financial help.
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Aviation Industry Jobs Entail More than Just Airlines. --- Nathan Phelps, The Northwestern, February 28, 2010
One of the biggest misconceptions about the aviation industry is that everyone must work for an airline. The industry extends well beyond the cockpit and hands-on jobs with aircraft to a number of other specialties like human resources, accounting, information systems, and marketing. The aviation industry is a business, and a compelling one at that, accounting for more than $1.2 trillion in economic activity in the U.S. in 2008, as well as being a much “bigger world” than just becoming a pilot or just working for an airline.
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Dassault Falcon Jet Joins EPA Partnership, Pledges Mercury and Lead Reduction. --- Environmental Protection Agency, March 1, 2010
Dassault Falcon Jet has partnered with the Environmental Protection Agency National Partnership for Environmental Priorities to set goals to eliminate mercury containing devices throughout its Completion and Service operations. The company is also in the process of identifying a viable replacement for lead plate utilized as ballast during initial “ferry” flight operations of Falcon business jets between France and the U.S. The NPEP is a voluntary program with 266 members from private and public organizations committed to the reduction, reuse, or recycling of 31 priority chemicals, long-lasting substances that can build up in the food chain and cause harm to humans and the environment.
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D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals Sends Pasternack v. NTSB and FAA Back to Agency. --- Leagle, February 26, 2010
The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals granted Fred Pasternack’s petition and remanded it to the National Transportation Safety Board for further proceedings. The Federal Aviation Administration revoked Mr. Pasternack’s airman certificates because he refused to take a mandatory drug test, and the NTSB upheld the revocation order, but the Court vacated the Board’s decision on the ground that a key finding on which the Board relied was not supported by substantial evidence.
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Taxes and Fees Grow for Air Travelers. --- Susan Stellin, The New York Times, March 1, 2010
Governments are increasingly turning to travelers to raise revenue in lean times, and there is little oversight over how the money is spent. Taxes and fees are small individually but can add up to a significant share of the price of a ticket. Carriers have been lobbying against proposals to increase these fees, but international travelers will likely feel the pinch most as governments around the world have increased passenger fees to pay for security, airport improvements, customs inspections, tourism promotions, and environmental concerns.
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TradeWind Energy Approved to Install 100-Meter Met Tower in Indiana. --- North American Windpower, March 2, 2010
Kentucky-based TradeWind Energy has received approval from local authorities to build a 100-meter meteorological tower in Pleasant Township, Indiana. The tower would be the fourth such tower erected by the project developer at project sites under development in the Midwest. Because of its height, however, it will require a Federal Aviation Administration permit.
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Hartsfield Airspace Plan Adjusted, More Changes Possible. --- April Hunt, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, March 2, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration adjusted its proposal for how planes come in and out of Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta, Georgia, by changing the airspace above nearby Covington Municipal Airport. The proposed change removes the airspace above the Covington Airport from its Class B proposal, meaning an aircraft flying in and out of that airport would not be required to contact air traffic control. The change comes after concerns that pilots would abandon Covington because of the new restrictions, but the region’s smaller airports will be impacted with their planes being forced to fly lower and for longer.
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Wind Farm Proposed for PoorMountain in RoanokeCounty. --- WDBJ7.com, March 2, 2010
Invenergy, a private company, announced that it wants to build an electricity-generating wind farm on Poor Mountain in Roanoke County, Virginia. The project would set 15 turbines on about 2,000 acres of land and produce enough electricity to power approximately 8,000 households. The company says it will begin the permitting process soon by filing a hazard evaluation report with the Federal Aviation Administration, and the project will also have to be cleared by the State Corporation Commission and Roanoke County.
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Senator Grassley Announces FAA Grant for Sioux Gateway. --- Lynn Zerschling, Sioux City Journal, March 2, 2010
Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa announced that Sioux Gateway Airport will receive nearly $395,000 from the Federal Aviation Administration to help pay to install guidance signs, which will improve safety and efficiency of the airport. Sioux Gateway is one of six Iowa airports to be awarded $2.32 million in federal funds.
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South Bend, LaPorte Airports Among Federal Grant Recipients. --- South Bend Tribune, March 2, 2010
Seven Indiana airports, including South Bend Regional Airport, LaPorte Municipal Airport, and Starke County Airport, will receive Federal Aviation Administration grants totaling over $5 million.
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FAA Plans to Move Radar From WillardAirport in 2014. --- Michael Maione, Daily Illini, March 3, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration plans to move the radar control rooms in the air traffic control tower at Willard Airport in Champaign, Illinois to its facilities in Elgin, Illinois, by 2014. The FAA cited the need for an updated tower as the impetus as the change, and said that putting the radar in one centralized location can save taxpayer money. The air traffic controllers union, the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, and even pilots have presented objections or concerns about the plan.
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Kid Directs Traffic at NY’s JFK Airport. --- CBS News, March 3, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating how a child was allowed to direct air traffic at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport. The first incident being investigated occurred February 16, when a boy was allowed to make at least five transmissions to commercial jets. The same air traffic controller also brought a different child, presumably his own, into the tower the following night.
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AA Flight Attendant Talks Continue Around the Clock. --- Scott Friedman, NBC DallasFort Worth, March 3, 2010
The union that represents American Airlines flight attendants continued around-the-clock meetings with airline management and federal mediators in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, the last day of scheduled negotiations. If an agreement is not reached this week, the union has said it may ask to be released from federal mediation, a move that would trigger a 30-day cooling-off period and could lead to a strike.
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AA, Flight Attendants End Talks With No Deal, Talk of Strike. --- Scott Gordon and Scott Friedman, NBC DallasFort Worth, March 4, 2010
Leaders of the Association of Professional Flight Attendants accused American Airlines of “walking out” of the contract negotiations talks in Washington on Wednesday and said they would discuss setting a strike vote this weekend. Airline managers countered that they did not walk out of the talks and concluded them at the end of business on Wednesday as scheduled, and said the airline looks forward to continuing to bargain when the federal mediators establish the next round of dates. The union announced that it would seek to be released from mediation.
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FAA Tells Dartmouth to Lower Height of South Turbine by 5 Feet. --- Curt Brown, SouthCoast Today, March 5, 2010
The Federal Aviation Administration has ordered the town of Dartmouth, Massachusetts to lower the height of its 462-foot south turbine by 5 feet, saying its proposed height presents a hazard to aviation at New Bedford Regional Airport. The agency said the maximum allowable height for the south turbine is 457 feet, and in an earlier decision found the town’s planned north turbine was also a hazard to aviation and set its tallest allowable height at 417 feet. The chairman of the town’s Alternative Energy Committee said the town’s engineers will conduct ground surveys and file new applications with the FAA for both the north and south turbines.
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It is Official! The FAA Rescinds Slot Auction Rule

 

The Federal Aviation Administration has officially rescinded its controversial plan to enact mandatory slot auctions on LaGuardia, JFK, and Newark airports.  See 74 Fed. Reg. 52,132 (Oct. 9, 2009) (LaGuardia) and 74 Fed. Reg. 52,134 (Oct. 9, 2009) (JFK and Newark). 

Both the final rule "Congestion Management Rule for LaGuardia Airport" and "Congestion Management Rule for John F. Kennedy International Airport and Newark liberty International Airport" were published in the Federal Register on October 10, 2008 (73 Fed.Reg. 60544 and 60574).  These final rules established procedures to address congestion in the New York City area by assigning slots at the airports, assigning to existing operators the majority of slots at the airports, and creating a market by annually auctioning off a limited number of slots in each of the first five years of the rule.

The rules have been the subject of litigation and much controversy ever since the Bush Administration first proposed them.  The D.C. Circuit ruled last year that the slot auctions could not take place pending the outcome of the litigation.  They have also been the subject of two Law Review articles:  Benjamin D. Williams's Comment, Playing the Slots: The FAA Gambles with Its Controversial Congestion Management Plan for New York's Busiest Airports, 74 J. Air L. & Com. 437 (2009), offers a detailed discussion of the law and policy implications of the FAA's proposed slot auction rule; and Professor Michael Levine's article Airport Congestion: When Theory Meets Reality, 26 Yale J. on Reg. 37 (2009) which presents an improved proposal for slot auctions--one which accounts for market realities and provides airlines holding slots to see the full opportunity costs of retaining (and possibly hoarding) their slots

Then the administration changed and on May 14, 2009, the FAA published a notice proposing to rescind the 2008 final rules citing the impact of the Omnibus Appropriations Act on the rules and the state of the economy in general.  And for those reasons, the FAA states that it "has decided to rescind the 2008 final rule effective immediately."

Other blog posts on this topic:

FAA Issues Notice of Order to Show Cause Regarding Extension of Limitation of Arrivals at JFK and Newark Airports The FAA, on June 5, 2009, issued two Notices of Order to Show Cause requesting "the views of interested persons on the FAA's tentative determination to extend through October 30, 2010, the January 15, 2008, order limiting the number of...

 

FAA Proposes Rescission of Congestion Management Rules for JFK, LaGuardia and Newark The Federal Aviation Administration today proposed to rescind the congestion management rules for JFK, LaGuardia and Newark that would have created auctions for slots at those airports. (Click here for the JFK and Newark proposal, click here for the LaGuardia...

FAA Amends Its December 12, 2006 Order Regarding Operating Limitations at LaGuardia The FAA today issued a Notice of Amendment to Order indicating that it is amending its December 12, 2006 Order, which temporarily capped the scheduled operations at New York's LaGuardia Airport. The FAA published a final rule instituting longer-term regulation...

D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals Stays Slot Auctions at JFK, LaGuardia and Newark The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit granted a stay of the slot auctions that were scheduled to take place on January 12, 2009, pending arguments on whether the FAA has the legal authority to auction...

Legal Analysis of the FAA's Slot Auction Rule for JFK and Newark Part 2 Analysis of Legal Issues Regarding Slot Auctions, Part Two. Having established previously that the FAA does not have specific authority to lease or otherwise dispose of slots, FAA turns to its general power to dispose of property in order to...

Legal Analysis of the FAA's Slot Auction Rule for JFK and Newark Part 1 Pt. 1: Setting The Stage When the FAA adopted its slot auction rules for LaGuardia, JFK and Newark Airports, it did so despite the fact that the GAO had issued a legal opinion stating that it believed that the FAA...

Despite GAO Ruling FAA Issues Congestion Management Rules for JFK, Newark and LaGuardia In a gutsy move that is sure to draw the ire of Congressional leaders as well as the Air Transport Association, the FAA announced last Friday, October 10, 2008, that it had promulgated two "congestion management" rules: one for LaGuardia...

GAO Declares FAA Does Not Have Legal Authority to Auction Slots The GAO, in a legal opinion issued September 30, 2008, declared that "FAA currently lacks the authority to auction arrival and departure slots, and thus also lacks authority to retain and use auction proceeds." This legal opinion came as a...

FAA Suspends Auction of Flight Slot at Newark Airport It is being reported by several news outlets that the FAA has suspended its auction of flight slots at Newark Airport. The auction was slated for September 3, 2008. According to Bloomberg News the Order, issued by FAA Chief Counsel,...

FAA Issues Order Limiting Scheduled Operations at Newark Liberty The FAA first proposed limiting scheduled operations at Newark Liberty in a proposed order that was published in March 18, 2008, Federal Register. The FAA has now, on May 21, 2008, issued its Order limiting scheduled operations at Newark Liberty...

FAA Proposes Congestion Management Rule for JFK and Newark Liberty In the May 21, 2008, issue of the Federal Register, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) proposed a new rule affecting two airports that are a part of the East Coast Airspace Redesign. The FAA proposes to establish procedures to address...

 

October 7, 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.

General Aviation Supporters Cite Benefits of Funding Small Airports. --- D.R. Stewart, Tulsa World, September 30, 2009
Critics of general aviation airports believe that the airports receive too much federal funding that should instead go to 400 infrastructure-constrained commercial airports. In response, supporters contend that the general aviation airports are indispensable because they relieve aircraft traffic at commercial airports, provide an economic lifeline for small communities, and serve as training and medical evacuation centers. Through the 28-year-old Airport Improvement Program Congress has appropriated $15 billion to 2,834 general aviation airports, with the majority of the funding being paid by U.S. airline passengers through a tax on each ticket and a fee for each flight.
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NTSB Recommends Several Revisions on Bird Strike, Operations Regulations. --- The Aero-News Network, September 30, 2009
The National Transportation Safety Board has issued a list of recommendations for changes in Federal Aviation Regulations that should enhance bird strike prevention, as well as safety, for charter operators. The recommendations include revisions to existing regulations, as well as more stringent requirements. The NTSB has also called on the Federal Aviation Administration to assess why its current policies, procedures, and practices have resulted in a failure to detect certain noncompliant operations, and to develop additional methods, measures, or procedures for performing inspections on or following up on complaints about noncompliant charter operations.
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Cockpit Chatter Cited in Six Cases. --- Alan Levin, USA Today, October 1, 2009
Federal law prohibits airline pilots from chatting or joking during critical phases of flight, but the National Transportation Safety Board has cited six violations of the “sterile cockpit rule” in six crashes since 2004. Additionally, more than half of the cockpit recording transcripts released in serious accidents in the last decade contain evidence of violations. While safety advocates and even the Federal Aviation Administration Administrator Randy Babbitt acknowledge that pilots need to improve their discipline and too many of the slips are occurring, Professor Edwin Hutchins of the University of California, San Diego cautions that most violations are minor and research has not shown that they are a threat to safety.
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Angry Residents Confront Port of Seattle and FAA Officials About Airport Noise. --- Ralph Nicols, The B-Town Blog, October 1, 2009
During a two-hour community meeting in Burien, Washington, hundreds of angry residents complained about the additional noise generated by commercial jets using Sea-Tac International Airport’s third runway. The citizens said that the Port of Seattle lied to the public about the use of the third runway, and there was even a suggestion that the runway should be shut down, to save the Port millions of dollars in future lawsuits over noise and noise mitigation. Stan Shepard, manager of Sea-Tac noise programs, replied that the Port would not consider shutting down the runway, and another problem exists in that though the runway was planned and built by the Port of Seattle, which operates the airport, it is the Federal Aviation Administration that directs air traffic, including which runways will be used for each landing and take-off. FAA representatives were also present at the meeting, but gave no indication that the residents’ concerns would have an impact on the FAA’s use of the third runway. Use of the third runway may be reduced in future, however, as the complete rebuilding of the longest runway, which is closest to the terminal, is now complete.
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Air Safety Initiatives Run Into Opposition. --- Sholnn Freeman, The Washington Post, October 1, 2009
A number of air safety proposals have been filed in Congress this year following the February 12, 2009 crash of Continental Connection Flight 3407 outside of Buffalo, New York. The National Transportation Safety Board revealed several aviation safety issues in preliminary hearings and reports, and lawmakers demanded action in response. U.S. aviation colleges have emerged as major opponents to some provisions of the proposed House legislation, fighting the provision that would require all airline pilots to obtain airline transport pilot certificates from the Federal Aviation Administration which would substantially boost the flight time of entry-level pilots and likely force the aviation college graduates to spend an additional year or more acquiring the required hours. In the Senate key lawmakers have been more concerned with grappling with healthcare reform, forcing aviation safety legislation into the back seat.
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Coalition of Aviation Industry says FAA Reauthorization “Critically Overdue.” --- September 25, 2009
In a letter to members of the U.S. Senate, a coalition of aviation industry groups stressed the importance of passing a multi-year reauthorization of the Federal Aviation Administration. The group stated that the reauthorization would provide “desperately needed” funding for airport and airway system improvements, and the extensions that have been passed in the last two years are hampering the necessary investments for national airspace infrastructure. The groups urged both legislative chambers to advance the bill and complete the reauthorization process.
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FAA to Overhaul Process of Tracking Whistle-Blower Reports. --- Sholn Freeman, The Washington Post, September 17, 2009
The Federal Aviation Administration plans to overhaul the way it processes whistle-blower reports, saying that it will create an Office of Audit and Evaluation to accept, track, and coordinate action on such reports. Congressional and Department of Transportation probes into safety lapses by American Airlines and Southwest Airlines found that some of the lapses had been brought to light by FAA whistle-blowers, and both Congress and the DOT slammed the FAA for mishandling safety complaints.
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FAA Administrator Babbitt: Major Carriers Reinforce Commitment to Safety. --- Statement by FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt, FAA Press Release, October 2, 2009
In a public statement, Federal Aviation Administration Administrator Randy Babbitt released a list of respondents and non-respondents to the FAA’s Call to Action, which asked air carriers for written commitments to implement “best practices” and adhere to high professional standards. Administrator Babbitt noted that most of the U.S. air carriers had responded and several who did not are already using the key safety programs the FAA had asked for, while some others may have been too small to have certain programs in place. He reiterated the FAA’s goal to ensure all carriers are operating at the highest levels of safety, and released the list of operator and labor organization non-respondents to show them that the American public, and not just the FAA, would “ultimately judge” their reluctance to adopt proven safety practices.
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More Gary Airport Hurdles Crop Up. --- FlyInsider, October 2, 2009
Gary/Chicago International Airport continues to face hurdles in its expansion plans, with the latest being a scrap yard that will have to make way for a railroad relocation. The airport’s plan to move railroad tracks that sit at the end of the airport’s main runway means the tracks will have to run through the property of a scrap company, and the airport would have to pay for some or all of the scrap yard’s land, and possibly the moving of the business as well. The airport authority is also facing opposition from the Gary Community School Corporation, after the corporation rebuffed an offer from the authority to buy 40 acres of the school corporation’s land that are needed for the expansion.
Click Here for Full Article

New York Flight Caps Extended for LaGuardia, Kennedy, Newark. --- John Hughes, Bloomberg.com, October 5, 2009
The Federal Aviation Administration extended hourly flight limits at LaGuardia, Kennedy, and Newark Liberty airports by two years, to October 29, 2011, to hold down flight delays. The FAA will consequently have more time to craft long-term solutions for holdups at the airports. Newark, LaGuardia, and Kennedy lead the are the three worst airports in the nation, respectively, in delays.
Click Here for Full Article

Airports Get Aid for Device to See Debris. --- Matthew Wald, The New York Times, October 5, 2009
In an advisory circular published September 30, 2009, the Federal Aviation Administration is allowing airports to apply for grants to buy systems that will spot dangerous debris on runways. The systems must meet certain specifications, but can use cameras or radars, and can be fixed or mobile. The first systems should hopefully be in place next year.
Click Here for Full Article

United Airlines Chief Calls For More Investment in Developing the Alternative Jet Fuels Market. --- GreenAirOnline.com, October 5, 2009
Glenn Tilton, Chairman of United Airlines and the Air Transport Association of America, called on the government, investors, and producers to develop aviation biofuels, because airlines need alternative jet fuels to help limit price volatility, increase security of supply, and reduce environmental impact. He said that the airline industry is actively seeking funding for the development but needs the government’s commitment, and that the government should focus on investing in alternative fuels that would decrease emissions, instead of “punitive” economic measures addressing climate change. He cited the airlines’ initiative in putting in “intellectual capital and resources,” but stressed the need for leadership from the government to make the investment attractive.
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FAA Requires New Forecast Numbers Before Agreeing to Runway Extension at T.F. Green Airport. --- John Howell, Warwick Beacon, October 6, 2009
The Federal Aviation Administration is requiring Rhode Island’s T.F. Green Airport to update air traffic forecasts, which would push back the completion of the draft environmental impact statement. A revised study is needed because the FAA believes traffic forecasts should be lower, which would affect the determination of future noise contours. FAA spokesman James Peters said the new analysis will not change the purpose and need of the proposed improvements at T.F. Green, but the administration has found at least 10 major issues with the airport plan. 
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Aspen Runway Extension Pitched as Economic Boost. --- Scott Condon, The Aspen Times, October 7, 2009
Pitkin County, Colorado officials believe that the county’s plan to extend Aspen’s Sardy Field airport’s runway will pump millions of dollars into the economy each year by filling more seats on existing flights, though the extension will not attract larger aircraft. The county is working on a proposal to the Federal Aviation Administration to lengthen the runway by 1,000 feet and is seeking an FAA grant for the $15 million project. The runway would have the same weight limits that exist now, but the extension would allow more efficient use of existing flights, easing challenges presented by weight restrictions. Based on studies conducted, consultant Ryk Dunkelberg says that the demand on flights that could be met by the extended runway would add between $20 to $40 million annually to the Aspen-Snowmass economy without increasing the need for tourist accommodations and services.
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FAA Stimulus Recipients Got Low Priority Ratings. --- Christopher Conkey, The Wall Street Journal, October 7, 2009
The Federal Aviation Administration has directed approximately 25% of the stimulus funds provided to the agency for airport work, over $270 million, to projects that were low-scoring on the agency’s national priority rating system, which it uses to grade potential projects. The FAA typically steers grants to projects scoring above 41 on the 1 to 100 scale, though it raised the threshold to 62 for the stimulus grants. The FAA has awarded $272 million to projects below the 62 threshold, however, and an FAA spokeswoman has said the ratings are not the only criteria the agency uses in awarding grants, and  winning projects with ratings below 62 were justified on other grounds, like safety and security. 
Click Here for Full Article

FAA Issues Notice of Order to Show Cause Regarding Extension of Limitation of Arrivals at JFK and Newark Airports

The FAA, on June 5, 2009, issued two Notices of Order to Show Cause requesting "the views of interested persons on the FAA's tentative determination to extend through October 30, 2010, the January 15, 2008, order limiting the number of scheduled aircraft arrivals at John F. Kennedy International Airport [and Newark Liberty International Airport] during peak hours."

In the Notices, the FAA recites the events that have occurred since it instituted the January, 2008, Order, which include that current proposed rule to rescind its rule regarding slot auctions at both of the airports (74 Fed.Reg. 22714 (May 14, 2009); see also, "FAA Proposes Rescission of Congestion Management Rules for JFK, LaGuardia and Newark," posted May 14, 2009).  As result, the FAA states that it does not believe that it will have an "effective final rule" by the time the January, 2008, Order expires.  Without an extension and without an "effective final rule," the FAA believes that there will be a return to the "congestion-related delays that precipitated the voluntary schedule reductions and adjustments reflected in the January 2008 order."

This extension, then, the FAA claims, is necessary to prevent a recurrence of over-scheduling at the two airports between the date that the January, 2008 Order is slated to expire (October 24, 2009) and the effective date of the the replacement rule.  The Notice extends the January, 2008, Order until October 30, 2010.

To submit comments:

  • Electronically:  go to http://regulations.gov and search for docket number FAA-2007-29320 or click here for the comment submission form.
  • U.S> Mail:  send comments to Docket Operations, U.S. Department of Transportation, M-30, Room W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, D.C. 20590-0001
  • Fax:  fax to (202) 493-2251.

Other Posts on this topic:

 

FAA Proposes Rescission of Congestion Management Rules for JFK, LaGuardia and Newark

The Federal Aviation Administration today proposed to rescind the congestion management rules for JFK, LaGuardia and Newark that would have created auctions for slots at those airports.  (Click here for the JFK and Newark proposal, click here for the LaGuardia proposal)  Those rules were ardently opposed by the airlines as well as by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.  These proposed rules would rescind the previous rules regarding the slot auctions, although it would not rescind the order limiting scheduled operations at the airports to 81 operations per hour.  That order remains in place until October, 2009.

Although the FAA admits that the Congestion Management Rules was "highly controversial," it does not admit that its position with respect to the FAA's intangible property rights to the slots was necessarily wrong.  The FAA states that a series of events led to its decision to rescind the rules.  First, in December, 2008, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued an order staying the rule. Then, the Omnibus Appropriations Act, 2009, passed on March 11, 2009, contained a provision denying any funds to implement the auctions. Those two setbacks coupled with the souring economy, the FAA realized that "the halt in funding for this fiscal year makes it impossible for the rule to have the 10-year life originally contemplated, even without considering the challenging and widespread change in current economic conditions that led to the adoption of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009."  Thus:

 

Because of the complexity of the issues, the uncertainty caused by the Omnibus Appropriations Act, and the possible impact of the significantly changed economic circumstances on the slot auction program, the FAA believes it would be better to rescind the rule rather than propose to extend it.  Rescission would also eliminate the potential for wasting resources of all parties in the pending litigation.

 

Put off for another day, however, is the issue of whether government licenses are property.  The proposed rules simply state that the FAA is "in the process of considering its options with regard to managing congestion at the airport[s] in ways that provide a means for carriers to either commence or expand operations at the airport[s], thereby introducing more competition and service options to benefit the traveling public."  Thus, slot auctions may be off the table for the time being - at least until the the funding restriction of the Omnibus Appropriations Act expires on September 30, 2009 - but the FAA has not yet totally abandoned the idea.

Other Posts on this topic:

 

 

FAA's 2009-2013 Flight Plan Includes 5 More Airports Due for an Airspace Redesign

On October 28, 2008, Acting FAA Administrator Bobby Sturgell rolled out the FAA's 2009-20013 "Flight Plan" at a speech in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.  The "Flight Plan," in which FAA sets goals for itself, is "the strategic plan for the agency, the plan to help [the agency] prepare for the future."  In the past year, for example, as Acting Administrator Sturgell pointed out, the FAA "reached 25 out of 29 goals," with the remaining goals "probably" being achieved by November 20, 2008.  In other words, the goals set in the Flight Plan are projects and issues that the FAA has good reason to believe it can achieve over the stated planning horizon.

Priority one, according to the Flight Plan, is "dealing with congestion and delays . . . both in the air and on the ground.  Toward that end, the FAA plans to "identify and address capacity-constrained airports and metropolitan areas."  The FAA has identified Atlanta, Chicago Midway, Fort Lauderdale, John Wayne Orange County (CA), Las Vegas, Long Beach, Oakland, Phoenix, San Diego and San Francisco as being "capacity constrained" and provided these airports with a "toolbox" which includes "technological, procedural, and infrastructure improvements to be considered for implementation at airports based on additional capacity needs in the future."

In addition, in FY 2009, the FAA plans to "increase aviation capacity and reduce congestion in the 7 metro areas and corridors that most affect total system delay."  Those areas are:  San Francisco, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Chicago, Charlotte, New York and Philadelphia.  Apart from continuing the controversial airspace redesign for the New York/New Jersey/Philadelphia Metropolitan area, and the slot auctions for JFK, Newark and LaGuardia, which all spawned lawsuits, the FAA plans on moving forward with the redesign of the airspace for the remaining 7 metro areas.

 

The FAA notes that are eleven projects in the planning or environmental stage at the largest airports including:

In addition, the FAA states that three airport proprietors have planning studies underway to examine how their metropolitan areas will accommodate future demand for aviation.  They include (1) Chicago, (2) Atlanta, and (3) San Francisco.  Thus, expanding airports play a large role in the FAA's Flight Plan to increase capacity.

The FAA also plans on addressing the environmental issues associated with capacity enhancements.  It targets two issues in this area:  (1) reducing the number of people exposed to significant noise by 4 % through FY 2013, as measured by a three-year moving average; and (2) improve aviation fuel efficiency by another 1% over FY 2008 level through FY 2009, and 1% each subsequent year through FY 2013 to 11%.  While these goals are laudable, the FAA does not offer much in terms of specific programs to reach the goals.  The only specific program it mentions is working with several airports (Los Angeles, San Diego, Louisville, Charleston, and Atlanta) to implement Continuous Descent Arrival for night operations.  The rest of the FAA's initiatives center around research, developing standards, and "implementing management systems."

In the end, FAA is relying heavily on its rollout of the NextGen system to meets its goals, especially with regard to safety.  The FAA believes that NextGen will allow it to transition "from air traffic control to air traffic management."

Other new articles about the FAA's Flight Plan:

 

Despite GAO Ruling FAA Issues Congestion Management Rules for JFK, Newark and LaGuardia

In a gutsy move that is sure to draw the ire of Congressional leaders as well as the Air Transport Association, the FAA announced last Friday, October 10, 2008, that it had promulgated two "congestion management" rules:  one for LaGuardia Airport, and the other for JFK and Newark Airports.  In these rules, the FAA stated that it would proceed with its auctions of slots at the airports despite the GAO Report indicating that it was unlawful to do so. (See, GAO Declares FAA Does Not Have Legal Authority to Auction Slots).

The Rule for JFK and Newark and the Rule for Newark, which both become effective December 9, 2008, establish procedures to address "congestion in the New York City area by assigning slots" at the three airports in a way that the FAA believes will allow "carriers to respond to market forces to drive efficient airline behavior."  The JFK/EWR Rule extends the caps on the operation at the two airports, assigns to existing operators the majority of slots at the airports, while the LGA Rule grandfathers the majority of operations at the airport.  The FAA claims that both Rules will develop a "robust" secondary market by annually auctioning off a limited number of slots in each of the first five years of this rule.  The FAA states that the proceeds of the auction will be used to mitigate congestion and delay in the New York City area.  Finally, the Rule also contains provisions for minimum usage, capping unscheduled operations, and withdrawal for operational need.  Leases obtained in the first auction will start on October 25, 2009.

Most of the Federal Register notice announcing the promulgation of the Rules is spent justifying the Rules in the face of the GAO's report that concluded that the FAA did not have the authority to auction the slots.  The FAA concludes that "the issues involved represent novel legal issues upon which reasonable poeple, and agencies, acting in good faith, have disagreed.  The FAA disagrees with the GAO conclusions and has decided to proceed with the adoption of this final rule."

An analysis of the legal statements will be forthcoming in future blogs.

GAO Declares FAA Does Not Have Legal Authority to Auction Slots

The GAO, in a legal opinion issued September 30, 2008, declared that "FAA currently lacks the authority to auction arrival and departure slots, and thus also lacks authority to retain and use auction proceeds."  This legal opinion came as a result of a Congressional request.

In April and May, 2008, the FAA issued proposed regulations to conduct auctions of the airport arrival and departure slots at LaGuardia, JFK and Newark airports. (See, FAA Proposes Congestion Management Rule for JFK and Newark Liberty).  Since then, the FAA indicated in August that that it was proceeding with an auction of two specific slots at Newark airport on September 3, 2008.  Although that action was administratively stayed (See, FAA Suspends Auction of Flight Slot at Newark Airport), the stay (issued by the FAA's Office of Dispute Resolution for Acquisition) was subsequently lifted on September 30, 2008.  Moreover, the FAA, on September 16, 2008, announced that it "may" auction slots at Newark, LaGuardia and JFK starting on January 12, 2009.

The FAA claimed that the slots are "intangible property" that it "constructs, owns, and may lease" for "adequate compensation under 49 U.S.C. 106(l)(6) and (n) and 40110(a)(2).  The GAO stated:

An examination of those statutes read as a whole, however, makes clear that Congress was using the term "property" to refer to traditional forms of property.  It was not referring to FAA's regulatory authority to assign airspace slots, no matter how valuable those slots may be in the hands of the regulated community.  Related case law confirms our conclusion.

The GAO concluded that if the auctions were to go ahead, and the FAA retained the proceeds that the the GAO "would raise exceptions under its account settlement authority for violations of the 'purpose statute,' 31 U.S.C. 1301(a), and the Antideficiency Act, 31 U.S.C. 1341(a)(1)(A)."

Needless to say the Department of Transportation was not too pleased with the outcome, stating that the GAO did not have time to do a thorough review given the "complexities of aviation law."  If the GAO had the opportunity to reflect, the DOT was "confident that GAO will better understand both the validity and the effectiveness of [the FAA's] approach."

On the other side of the fence, both the Air Transport Association and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey issued press releases applauded the GAO's legal opinion.  Rep. James Oberstar (D-Minn.), the Chairman of the U.S. House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said in a press release that the "FAA should now reconsider its plan to auction slots in light of the GAO finding."

(For my commentary on the situation, see the blog post The "Tragedy of the Commons" and Airport Congestion Management)

GAO Issues Report On The FAA's East Coast Airspace Redesign

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has issued its long awaited "FAA Airspace Redesign:  An Analysis of the New York/New Jersey/Pennsylvania Project."  Although the GAO promised to publish the report by August 1, 2008, it waited until the same day the Petitioners in the Airspace Redesign litigation filed their opening brief to publish the Report.  Although the GAO promised members of Congress to examine "to what extent did FAA follow key legal procedures and requirements in conducting its environmental review" (p.3), it failed to take into two important aspects of the FAA's environmental review of its Airspace Redesign project, namely the Clean Air Act and section 4(f) of the Department of Transportation Act (for a full treatment of these issues, see the Joint Brief filed by the 12 sets of Petitioners in the Airspace Redesign litigation).

The GAO, making several critical assumptions about the Project, found, in general, that the FAA's approach, at least with respect to NEPA, was "reasonable."  First, the GAO found that the statement of the project's purpose and need, which, according to the GAO, was to increase the efficiency and reliability of the airspace while maintaining safety and reducing delays, was reasonable.  Most importantly, the GAO concluded that the FAA "reasonably excluded noise reduction."  Second, the GAO found that the FAA developed a reasonable range of alternatives.  Third, the FAA acted reasonably in not analyzing the indirect environmental effects of potential growth, the GAO said, resulting from the redesign.  Next, the GAO opined that the FAA reasonably involved the public throughout the environmental review process.  Finally, the GAO found that the FAA satisfied environmental justice directives in Executive Order 12898 and implementing CEQ guidance and DOT Order.

The GAO did identify some limitations to the FAA's methodology, but concluded that the FAA was not required by law to address them.  These "limitations" included the fact that because the FAA assumed that traffic demand and flight operations would not increase in response to airspace system improvements, the FAA did not account for the potential effect of the system improvements in its operational analysis.  Second, the FAA did not fully assess the uncertainty associated with each alternative estimated impacts.  And when the purported benefit of the Project is only a 0.8% reduction in fuel burnt, that "limitation" becomes more important.  Finally, the GAO believed that the FAA should have undertaken an analysis of the economic impacts using both an uncertainty analysis and a benefit-cost analysis.

What the GAO Report did not take into account are two important statutory requirements that are outside of NEPA's procedural requirements.  First, the GAO failed to take into account the fact that the FAA did not perform a "conformity applicability analysis" as required by the Clean Air Act, EPA regulations, and FAA orders.  The air quality in the areas around Philadelphia and New York are subject will be affected by the Airspace Redesign and there is no analysis anywhere in the FAA's environmental review regarding air quality.  Second, the GAO did not report on the FAA's failure to properly take section 4(f) of the Department of Transportation Act into account.  Section 4(f) protects federal, state and local natural areas from the environmental effects of Federal transportation projects.  The GAO Report did not mention the FAA's failure to properly identify and account for the environmental effects of the Project on those natural areas.

In the end, then, the GAO failed to answer the first question posed by Congress:  "to what extent did FAA follow key legal procedures and requirements in conducting its environmental review?"  Without a discussion of the Clean Air Act and 4(f), the Report is incomplete.

FAA Proposes Congestion Management Rule for JFK and Newark Liberty

In the May 21, 2008, issue of the Federal Register, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) proposed a new rule affecting two airports that are a part of the East Coast Airspace Redesign.  The FAA proposes to establish procedures to address congestion in the New York City area by assigning slots at JFK and Newark Liberty Airports in a way that allows carriers to respond to market forces to drive efficient airline behavior.

  • The FAA's proposed rule is similar in many respects to its proposal for LaGuardia airport. 
  • This proposal, however, takes into account the fact that both JFK and Newark have a large number of international flights, which implicates FAA's international obligations. 
  • The FAA proposes to
    • extend the caps on the operations at the two airports,
    • assign to existing operators the majority of slots at the airports, and
    • create a market by annually auctioning off a limited number of slots in each of the first five years of this rule.
The proposed rule offers two alternatives in the method of assigning slots at the airport. Under the first alternative:
  • the assignment of slots at JFK and Newark would be conducted through a uniform mechanism.
  • The FAA would auction off a portion of the slots and would use the proceeds to mitigate congestion and delay in the New York City area.
Under the second alternative, the same auction procedure would apply at Newark as under the first alternative but at JFK the auction proceeds would go to the carrier holding the slot rather than to the FAA.

For both alternatives, this proposal also contains:
  • provisions for minimum usage,
  • capping unscheduled operations, and
  • withdrawal for operational need.
The FAA proposes to sunset the rule in ten years. For additional information and coverage about this topic see: