No Benefit Found in Plan to Modernize LAX

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Published Wednesday, July 9, 2003, in the Los Angeles Times

No Benefit Found in Plan to Modernize LAX

Mayor's $9-billion renovation would not help economy over the long
term, study finds.

By Jennifer Oldham and Patrick McGreevy

Mayor James K. Hahn's proposal to modernize Los Angeles International
Airport would cost about $9 billion but provide no discernible benefit
for the local economy beyond the short-term jobs created during
construction, according to an economic analysis to be released today.

If the city refurbishes the airport as Hahn has proposed, LAX would
contribute about $64 billion a year to the region's economy in 2015 --
the same amount it would generate if no project were completed, a
review of city documents found.

A remodeled airport would account for about 350,000 jobs in the region
-- the same number that would directly result from airport operations
in 2015 if nothing were done to improve the 75-year-old facility,
economic studies show.

In the short term, Hahn's plan would create nearly 50,000 construction
jobs. The wages paid to those workers would increase the spending
power of local businesses and households, economists say, but only
during the dozen years the airport is under construction.

The economic analysis is only one part of the long-awaited
environmental studies for Hahn's plan that are to be released
today. The voluminous studies, expected to come in at 5,323 pages and
10 volumes, will provide plenty of information for policymakers to
consider, including details on how the project would affect airport
security, traffic, noise, schools and other matters.

Two Plans

Although the report will include economic findings for Hahn's plan, it
is not expected to provide a detailed comparison with alternatives
proposed by the mayor's predecessor, Richard J. Riordan. Environmental
studies completed for Riordan's expansion plans showed that limiting
the airport to 78.9 million annual passengers, as Hahn proposes, would
have the same economic impact as leaving the airport unchanged.

The mayor's plan, the 33rd modernization proposal in eight years,
would dramatically alter the airport by demolishing Terminals 1, 2 and
3, and by replacing parking structures with a new terminal
complex. Private vehicles would be rerouted to a new check-in facility
a mile east of the airport.

The mayor hopes to discourage growth at the airport beyond 78.9
million passengers a year by decreasing the number of gates where
airlines can park jets -- to 153 from the current 163 -- and by
spreading air traffic among other airports in the region.

Limiting the number of travelers who use the facility could slow the
engine that powers about one-tenth of Southern California's economy,
experts say.

"It's going to be a drag on our economic growth," said Jack Kyser,
chief economist of the Los Angeles County Economic Development
Corp. "You have so many industries that depend on good air service. If
the airport isn't generating more traffic to service these industries,
that's a concern."

If the airport isn't able to grow, other industries that prop up
Southern California's economy, such as tourism, apparel and furniture,
would also suffer, he added.

Hahn declined to comment on the economic analysis of his modernization
plan before today's official release, but his office issued a prepared
statement saying the mayor is "delivering on his pledge to make Los
Angeles International Airport the safest and most secure airport in
America."

As the world's fifth-busiest airport, LAX served 56.2 million
passengers and 1.9 million tons of cargo last year. At its peak in
2000, when the airport handled 67.3 million passengers and 2.3 million
tons of cargo, it generated $65 billion in direct economic output and
425,000 jobs, according to city documents.

The airport employs everyone from airline mechanics to caterers to
concessionaires and skycaps. And within 20 miles of the facility,
where 78% of the jobs generated by the airport are located, the
facility supports hotels, rental car companies and hundreds of customs
brokers, freight forwarders and packagers, according to economic
studies for Riordan's airport plan.

At Los Angeles City Hall, the economic findings are adding to growing
doubts among City Council members about Hahn's proposal.

"When you are finished spending $9 billion and 12 years of
reconstruction and the end result is you are not enhancing the
economic engine, then you really have to evaluate what does that mean
for the city other than spending $9 billion in construction costs,"
Councilman Bernard C. Parks said.

The council will ultimately be asked to choose among five alternatives
to revamp the airport. They are: Hahn's plan, which the mayor says
emphasizes security and safety; three expansion alternatives devised
by Riordan; and a no-project option, effectively leaving the airport
as it is.

Riordan's plans would allow the number of airport passengers to grow
substantially, and would therefore generate a significant benefit to
the economy, according to an analysis released in 2001. For example,
Riordan's Alternative C, which would allow the airport to accommodate
89 million passengers a year, would contribute $82 billion in direct
economic activity annually to Southern California, city documents
show.

With Hahn's plan, "we're getting a master plan piggybacked on the
Riordan master plan," said Steven Erie, a UC San Diego political
science professor. "And we're getting considerably less bang for our
buck in terms of the region's economy."

More Study Urged

Local business leaders expressed concern Tuesday about the economic
projections, calling for further studies on how Hahn's plan might
affect their operations.

"No one wants to spend a huge amount of money to not be able to have
future growth," said Nelson Zager, managing director of the Crowne
Plaza Hotel on Century Boulevard near the airport.

The airport is a mixed blessing for surrounding cities, which benefit
economically, but would suffer most of the negative impact generated
by any modernization plan. The Westchester-Playa del Rey area, for
instance, has at least 2,700 residents employed at the airport, but
also must deal with noise and traffic.

"It is a difficult issue for us because in our case we get the good
and the bad," said David Voss, president of the Westchester/LAX-Marina
del Rey Chamber of Commerce.

About 5,000 Inglewood residents are employed at the airport, according
to Inglewood City Manager Mark Weinberg, but he said residents of
Inglewood do not want economic benefits "at the expense of a great
deal of negative environmental impacts."

The airport's airlines, which would be asked to shoulder half the
plan's cost through higher landing fees and terminal rents, have
expressed concern about the cost of Hahn's proposal and its effect on
the economy.

The mayor's plan to limit the number of passengers using the airport
by decreasing the number of gates could cause low-fare carriers that
operate smaller jets to leave the airport, experts say.

"The effect of constraining LAX will very likely be to shift it to
larger aircraft, which will force out some of the service that is
currently being provided by smaller aircraft to domestic markets,"
said Dan Kasper, managing director at LECG, a consulting firm that
works with the aviation industry.

In recent weeks, Southwest Airlines, the airport's third-largest
carrier, has sent about 1,000 handouts to elected officials and
business and community leaders that detail the airline's contribution
to Southern California's economy.

The airline's 2.9 million Los Angeles-bound customers spent $2.5
billion locally in 2002, and the carrier employs 650 people in the
area, the handout and an accompanying letter say.


The best slide auction on the net:
http://www.auctiontransportation.com/sites/psa188/
Attend the Newark Airport Airline Collectible Show & Sale:
http://www.freeyellow.com/members/psa188/page1.html

[Index of Archives]         [NTSB]     [NASA KSC]     [Yosemite]     [Steve's Art]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [NTSB]     [STB]     [Share Photos]     [Yosemite Campsites]