Supervisors
back regional airport growth
This
story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press January 31, 2001
By
LISA WAHLA
Valley Press
Staff Writer
LOS
ANGELES - Restoring passenger service at Palmdale Regional Airport garnered even
more support Tuesday from county supervisors who oppose a major expansion of Los
Angeles International Airport.
Supervisors
who support expanding regional air passenger service say a Los Angeles World
Airports $12 billion master plan, unveiled Jan. 18, overlooks the benefits of
regional airport expansion while increasing congestion and pollution for LAX's
neighbors.
Because
of her support of regional air service, Supervisor Yvonne Brathwaite Burke, who
represents the 2nd District, offered a motion for supervisors to formally reject
Los Angeles World Airports' master plan.
That
motion opened the door for more of the ongoing debate about what is better for
the region - LAX expansion or regional air service around the Southland.
Los
Angeles World Airports owns and operates LAX, Palmdale, Ontario and Van Nuys
airports, and if expansion plans materialize, LAX will serve 89 million air
travelers a year in an airport redesigned in 1984 to handle 40 million
passengers a year; LAX now serves about 65 million passengers a year.
Estimates
project that by 2020, regional air travel demand will reach 157 million
passengers a year.
Palmdale
Regional Airport's last commercial passenger flight took off in April 1998. The
airport was cited by several supervisors as a possible key to easing congestion
at LAX.
Supervisor
Michael D. Antonovich, whose 5th District includes Palmdale, has suggested city
of Palmdale officials use eminent domain to take over Palmdale Airport, which
Los Angeles World Airports has owned since the 1960s.
"There
are 2 million people, close to 3 million, in the Antelope Valley surrounding
area that could be utilizing an airport in the Antelope Valley," Antonovich
said Tuesday.
And,
he added, Palmdale Airport's owners have "failed to market" it
adequately.
"They
are not moving aggressively forward as their report pointed out in addressing
the Antelope Valley for another 20 years," Antonovich said. "Well,
they've had nearly 40 years to address that problem and they've failed to do
it."
In
the recent past, Los Angeles World Airports officials have stated their
commitment to their regional airports and hired a firm to market Palmdale's
Airport to airlines.
Supervisor
Brathwaite Burke said regional airports should be better utilized because of
LAX's negative effects on its surrounding residents.
"Airport
officials have conceded that expansion will cause many problems in the
surrounding communities, communities which are (made up) mostly of minority
neighborhoods which have endured a disproportionate amount of environmental
hazards," Burke said in a motion to formally oppose the master plan.
"Any
expansion will displace residents and businesses, and traffic congestion,
aircraft noise and pollution will increase."
Supervisors
on Tuesday delayed voting on Burke's motion for 90 days - to give time to a
countyhired consultant to report back on the plan's possible effects.
Los
Angeles Airport Commission President John J. Agoglia said Tuesday he was glad
the county supervisors delayed voting on their opposition measure and was
"surprised" that the motion was considered at the beginning of the
public comment period.
"Waiting
for all comments and responses before a vote would be, in our view, an
appropriate action," Agoglia said in a prepared statement.
Brathwaite
Burke said she supports modernizing and enhancing LAX, but increasing the
passenger capacity must be looked at "from a regional perspective."
Then
Supervisor Don Knabe, whose 4th District includes LAX, said there are plans to
resurrect the Southern California Regional Airport Authority, which will meet in
March to discuss the master plan.
Knabe
said the regional perspective will be the main issue the Regional Airport
Authority will discuss when it meets. He has pushed for that airport authority's
resurrection for months and said the "timing is perfect" for the
15year-old group to reconvene.
The
organization, dormant since 1992, consists of Los Angeles, Riverside, San
Bernardino and Orange counties, the city of Los Angeles and the Southern
California Association of Governments.
While
the airport authority can review the LAX plan and make suggestions, each voting
member - one from each of the four counties and one from the city of Los Angeles
- has veto power over issues in their own jurisdiction.
L.A.
Mayor Richard Riordan, who backs the LAX expansion plan, would choose the L.A.
city representative, Knabe said.
"It
gives us the opportunity to push Palmdale," Knabe said. "Ontario wants
more air business and Palmdale wants an airport. To me it's ludicrous ... to not
look at those other options."
Los
Angeles World Airports' 12,000-page draft master plan is available for public
comment for six months. A revised plan will be submitted to various
decision-making bodies in 2002 for approval.