http://www.voiceofsandiego.org/site/apps/nl/content2.asp?c=euLTJbMUKvH&b=412
359&ct=2371819

There is Another Side to the Story

By THELLA BOWENS
Thursday, May 4, 2006

The San Diego County Regional Airport Authority is pleased to see your
innovative online publication covering the San Diego region's airport site
selection process. However, it is important for the region to understand the
full picture when considering the opinion piece by San Diego County
Taxpayers Association Treasurer Harvey Goodfriend in your April 11 edition.

Mr. Goodfriend gave the airport authority low marks for several elements of
its Airport Site Selection Program. In fact, the program has been successful
in involving residents throughout the San Diego region in a robust dialogue
about what kind of air transportation system we want to leave our children
and future generations. The program has won national and local awards for
the quality, openness and inclusiveness of its public outreach efforts.

Much as the voiceofsandiego.org presents journalism with a fresh new,
online-only approach, the airport authority has also sought new, balanced
and innovative ways, along with more traditional approaches, to engage the
public in this important issue. Our efforts have included:

-- Online dialogues involving hundreds of regional residents
-- Community town hall meetings throughout the county
-- An interactive Web site at www.san.org/siteselection
-- A series of aviation education forums
-- Public meetings of the airport authority board
-- A Public Working Group composed of diverse stakeholders whose meetings
are open to the public
-- Informational print and video materials
-- Public outreach at street fairs and other community gatherings
county-wide

Regarding the six "principles" for which Goodfriend offered low marks, it
will ultimately be up to county voters to decide how effective the airport
authority has been in these areas. But there is another side to the story.

Principle 1: Maximize Use of All Existing Airports
A multi-airport solution -- using San Diego International Airport (SDIA) in
concert with a supplemental airport -- has indeed been given serious
consideration by the airport authority. This idea was discussed, debated and
explored by the Public Working Group as well as by airport authority staff,
consultants and the airport authority board. However, after considerable
analysis, discussion and debate, the board voted not to pursue the concept
of a supplemental site in North County.

Why is this concept viewed as unworkable for the San Diego region? Unlike
Washington, D.C., Chicago and New York, San Diego is not an air
transportation hub. We are an origin-and-destination market, with very few
connecting flights -- and the additional air service they might generate.
Also, costs for airlines to use a new supplemental airport would be steeper
than using Lindbergh Field because of the debt required to build it. Why
then would airlines be motivated to serve the new facility? Forcing airlines
to a new facility is difficult, if not impossible, as exhibited by the
failed experience at Montreal's old Mirabel Airport after that city's new
airport was built.

Principle 2: Optimize Lindbergh Field
The airport authority and others before it have looked at numerous ways the
current airport could be expanded and reconfigured to satisfy increased
demand. But geography -- steeply rising terrain on approach and takeoff --
works against SDIA. Studies make it abundantly clear that adding a
non-parallel runway (the "open V") would only increase SDIA's capacity by
some 15 percent 20 percent. So while it might increase airport capacity in
the short term, it would be at great cost -- $1.5 billion to $2 billion --
and buy us only a few additional years. Is that a wise investment?

The state law creating the airport authority says a viable long-term
solution will need to serve some 35 million airline passengers a year. An
airport solution designed to accommodate that number would likely serve our
region for 100 years or more. That is the kind of long-range planning to
which communities interested in long-term viability commit themselves.

Our region will grow regardless of what we do about the airport -- the
question is, will it grow stronger? We must also ask: Is it fair to leave
this issue for future generations to solve? We should take responsibility
and seize the chance to solve this problem for the long-term.now. After all,
that is one of the chief reasons state law created the airport authority in
the first place.

The airport authority has studied how to optimize Lindbergh Field to the
fullest extent possible, by adding a second parallel runway that would allow
simultaneous landings and takeoffs and indeed meet the region's long-term
needs. During the summer of 2005, six dual runway scenarios were evaluated,
and one of these, known as

"Concept 6," was moved forward into analysis by the board. The analysis
revealed something equally unimaginable: Concept 6 would have displaced
nearly 18,000 residents and wiped out large business and residential
sections of the city's historic Point Loma area. The board voted not to move
the concept forward.

Principle 3: Disclose External Infrastructure Costs
The airport authority has studied and disclosed the external infrastructure
costs for transportation improvements that would be needed for passengers to
reach the two civilian sites undergoing detailed analysis. Last December, a
study presented to the board reported that a maglev train line, highway
improvements and water and fuel lines could add some $10.3 billion to the
cost of an airport in Boulevard and some $13.2 billion to the cost of an
airport in the Imperial County desert. This was covered in a lengthy article
in The San Diego Union-Tribune on Dec. 13.

Similar calculations are now being done for the three military sites
undergoing further analysis. These numbers will be presented publicly and to
the airport authority board by the end of May.

Principle 4: Provide Voters with Airport Financing Plan
Comprehensive financial feasibility plans are being developed for all five
sites undergoing detailed analysis (two civilian and three military) and
will be made public by the end of May. These plans will detail the financial
implications mentioned by Mr. Goodfriend, including how construction of an
airport at each site would be financed and the projected costs to passengers
and the airlines. We agree this is key information for voters to know. Cost
and financing are important considerations as the airport authority board
evaluates the choices before it.

Mr. Goodfriend stated, "what's not being said so far, at least not very
loudly, is that it will be those who use the airport who will pay for the
cost of any move." Maybe it is not being said very loudly.because it is not
entirely true.

In this country, construction of new airport infrastructure is funded
through a variety of sources, the biggest one being airport revenue bonds.
The revenue bonds are backed and paid by funds generated on the airport by
concessions, parking revenues, landing fees, etc. History shows that airport
revenue bonds funded some 75 percent of the cost of building Denver
International Airport and approximately 87 percent of the cost of building
Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. Other funding sources include the
Federal Aviation Administration's Airport Improvement Program and passenger
facility charges.
No local tax dollars are used for actual airport construction, although some
of the ground transportation infrastructure required to support a new
airport -- like access roads, exit ramps, a new highway or a high-speed rail
line -- would be paid for by a combination of federal, state and local
transportation funding programs.

What Mr. Goodfriend fails to disclose is that the cost to passengers will go
up even more if the region is stuck with a highly constrained airport
facility. Since airline fares are market-based, airlines often charge more
where air service is at a premium - namely, at airports where passenger
demand exceeds seat capacity. One only needs to look north to John Wayne
International Airport in Orange County, which operates under a legal cap of
10.8 million annual passengers. Far more passengers would like to use that
airport, but legally it can't accommodate them. The result? It is one of the
most expensive major airports in California to fly into or out of.

So, while some fees may increase to help pay for a long-term airport
solution, they will not compare with the higher airfares passengers would
face in the long run by staying at a constrained facility.

Principle 5: The Viability of Joint Use
State law requires the airport authority to study "use of current military
installations that may become available for civilian or mix-use.to address
future airport needs." The airport authority takes this responsibility
seriously and owes the region a thorough analysis of whether or not joint
use could work at any of the three military sites undergoing further
analysis -- North Island, Miramar and Pendleton.

Military representatives have been part of the Public Working Group since
day one, and the airport authority board has often stated its solid support
of the military's vital role in both national defense and the regional
economy.

The time has come to provide an answer this region has long deserved: what
is the best long-term air transportation for the San Diego region, and does
it involve a military site or not? We look forward to continuing our work
with the military as we analyze the feasibility of joint use. This analysis
is nearly complete, and the results will be released publicly by mid-May.

Principle 6: Economic Impact Study
The 2001 economic impact study for the SDIA is currently being updated and
will be released publicly in the coming weeks. However, the 2001 study
reinforced what most economists already know about major airports in any
community: they generate impressive economic activity which benefits the
surrounding region. The 2001 study showed that tiny, constrained Lindbergh
Field contributes some $4.5 billion annually to the regional economy, with
every job at the airport supporting some 15 other jobs off the airport.

All the aforementioned principles have been important parts of the airport
authority's ongoing commitment to address the San Diego region's long-term
air transportation needs. And they will continue to play an integral role as
the airport authority board arrives at a long-term solution to place before
county voters in November 2006.

Thella F. Bowens is president and CEO of the San Diego County Regional
Airport Authority.
-----------------------

Rane Panel, Churchill Alemao et al should take serious note of how one can
really do justice to 'site appraisal'.

_____________________________________________
Do not post admin requests to the list.
Goanet mailing list      (Goanet@goanet.org)

Reply via email to