Window
of opportunity opens up for AV airport
This
story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press March 8, 2001.
By DENNIS ANDERSON
Valley Press Editor
LANCASTER
- A window of opportunity to get airline service up and running at Air Force
Plant 42 before the end of the year is opening, a first step to develop Palmdale
Regional Airport, a consultant told Valley leaders Wednesday.
Fred
Davis, the chief of Long Beach-based Tri-Star Marketing, said the window is
opening because major airlines are acquiring commuter jets in the 50- to 70-seat
range.
Davis
spoke to a group of dozens of community leaders at a meeting called by the
county mayor, Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich, whose 5th District includes the
Antelope and Santa Clarita valleys.
A
Palmdale Airport meeting in Lancaster? It happened at Los Angeles County Fire
Station 129, expanding on the theme that Valley airport service is a regional
problem with a regional solution.
"Tri-Star
skillfully pointed out a demand for air service originating from the Antelope
Valley that would serve the Valley, Santa Clarita and other parts of the
county," Antonovich said.
Antonovich
predicts the right marketing program could lure an airline to the Valley
"as fast as the fall."
"If
the city of Los Angeles doesn't want to move forward, the county should join
with the cities up here," Antonovich said.
Tri-Star
chief Davis expounded on conclusions his company reached in a recent consulting
report that was unanimously approved by the Los Angeles County Board of
Supervisors.
Briefly,
Tri-Star's report concluded the Antelope Valley can support regular airline
service now with a potential of bringing $65 million in revenue to the Valley in
jobs and services. Such an airport arrangement would draw commuters from a
population base of 1 million people up the hill from the Santa Clarita Valley
and other areas in the region.
Representatives
hearing the presentation came from area chambers of commerce, airport interest
groups and town councils.
R.
Gregg Anderson, who heads the Rancho Vista Development Co., also leads an area
committee convened by Antonovich. He said the group believes Tri-Star would make
an excellent consultant and marketing promoter for Los Angeles World Airports,
the Los Angeles city organization that owns 17,000 acres near Air Force Plant
42.
Under
an agreement with the Air Force, Plant 42 can be the host to up to 50 commercial
flights a day. Filling the Plant 42 quota would pave the way for getting a true
Palmdale Regional Airport going on the Los Angeles city property, airport
proponents and Antonovich believe.
Filling
up the Plant 42 quota could trigger development of LAWA's acreage.
"That's
what the city of Los Angeles envisioned in the 1960s," Antonovich said.
"Forty years is long enough to wait."
Developer
Anderson said he hoped Tri-Star would win a proposal to represent LAWA as the
market development consultant for Palmdale.
"They
have a lot in their briefcase already, research that wouldn't have to be
duplicated," the developer said.
"I'm
excited," said Palmdale City Councilman Rick Norris, who has devoted keen
interest to the airport project over the years. He said he planned to put the
topic on the next Palmdale City Council agenda.
"We
want the council to discuss it so there is no question about our position,"
he said.
In
the past, the city has been cool to some airport initiatives out of fear of
alienating the LAWA agency or its intentions to support regional development.
During
the 1990s and into the new century, Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan championed
massive expansion of Los Angeles International Airport. That could change with a
new administration in Los Angeles City Hall later this year when Riordan leaves
office.