More on Meigs Field

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Meigs Goes To Washington
Cause, Effect Dominates FAA Hearing...
They were supposed to be talking about the FAA Reauthorization Bill, but
last Wednesday one after another of aviation's bigwigs reminded Congress's
aviation subcommittee about the destruction of Chicago's Meigs field.
Speakers reminded the committee that aviation services are a federal matter
and the intrusion of local special interests could result in inconsistent
regulations and service availability based on regional political biases.
"Our national air transportation system is far too important to the United
States to allow powerful private enterprises to use their political clout to
create an unjustified, ad hoc patchwork of airspace restrictions," said Ed
Bolen, president of the General Aviation Manufacturers Association. Jack
Olcott, president of the National Business Aviation Association, said
airspace restrictions must be imposed based on a credible threat and not on
the security fears of local jurisdictions. "A temporary flight restriction
(TFR) seems to be the tool of choice for some mayors and governors trying to
address constituent concerns about security," Olcott said. He also told the
committee that the TFR Chicago Mayor Richard Daley practically begged
authorities to impose over his city played a role in his subsequent decision
to destroy the airport runway and he's afraid other mayors might be
watching. "This abominable example of a mayor usurping federal authority in
the name of homeland security has become a consideration, albeit to a lesser
degree so far, across the country."

...Direct Intervention Sought...
AOPA's Phil Boyer, who has been among the most prominent pro-Meigs
combatants, asked for the committee's direct intervention. He even showed
video of Daley shaking hands on a deal to preserve the airport and promising
that he wouldn't use the Chicago TFR as justification to close the field.
Boyer said AOPA is using every legislative and legal means at its disposal
to restore the airport, adding, "We have received a higher volume of e-mails
and phone calls about Meigs than about the closure of the entire National
Airspace System in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks." National Air
Transportation Association President James K. Coyne directly requested
congressional condemnation of Daley for his actions. Coyne added that "In
the aftermath of Meigs' closure, any community with the merest whim to close
their local airport can do so and point to Chicago as their justification."
There are two sides to every story, however, and Daley had a defender in the
committee hearings. AOPA reported that Rep. William Lipinski (D-Ill.), who
sponsored the bill to save Meigs as part of a larger legislative package to
expand O'Hare International, said Daley had every legal right to close the
airport ... and in the manner he saw fit.

BAHA ACUNER - CFI,CFII,MEI

www.bahadiracuner.com
www.acuwings.com

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