SFGate: Midway Layout Said Limits Runway Options

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Wednesday, December 14, 2005 (AP)
Midway Layout Said Limits Runway Options
By MIKE COLIAS, Associated Press Writer


   (12-14) 01:24 PST Chicago (AP) --

   Houses and businesses surrounding Midway International Airport severely
limit the options for creating buffer zones or other safety measures to
prevent accidents like last week's fatal runway skid, a city aviation
official said.

   There is no known remedy for the airport's lack of a 1,000-foot buffer
zone at the end of runways, Erin O'Donnell, the city's deputy aviation
commissioner and Midway manager, said Tuesday. The Federal Aviation
Administration recommends the buffer zones for all commercial airports.

   Studies by the city and the FAA in recent years determined that there is
not enough room at the end of Midway's airstrips to install beds of
crushable concrete that can slow an aircraft if it slides off the end of a
runway, O'Donnell said.

   Some safety experts have said the runway enhancement — known as
Engineered Material Arresting Systems — might have prevented the
accident.

   A Southwest Airlines plane trying to land in a snowstorm Dec. 8 slid off
the end of the 6,500-foot runway, plowed through a fence and struck two
vehicles near a busy intersection. A 6-year-old boy in one of the vehicles
was killed and 10 people, most on the ground, were injured. The boy's
funeral is scheduled for Wednesday.

   Only 82 feet separated the end of the runway and the fence. The National
Transportation Safety Board is investigating the accident.

   The one-square-mile airport was built in 1923 during the propeller era a=
nd
has shorter runways than most major airports, with no room to expand.
Midway is among nearly 300 U.S. commercial airports without the
recommended runway buffers, according to the FAA.

   A recent federal law seeks to encourage more airports to build EMAS
systems or extend their runway barriers by requiring them to do one or the
other by 2015.

   "We're hopeful that with new legislation, there will be investment in
research and development of new technology to address this issue of runway
safety," O'Donnell said.

   Planes began using the runway again Tuesday evening, FAA spokeswoman
Elizabeth Isham Cory said. It had been closed since the accident as
workers repaired damaged navigation gear on the airfield.

   The FAA asked city aviation officials 18 months ago to revise a 2004
report they submitted on recommendations for runway safety zones at
Midway, Isham Cory said. The request did not indicate the FAA believed the
runways were unsafe, she added.

   "Part of the normal back and forth is that they're supposed to be coming
up with a few solutions, and I think they are really trying," she said.
"But they are short on space."

   Also Tuesday, an attorney for the parents of the boy killed in the
accident said he planned to file a lawsuit, although he declined to
provide details. ----------------------------------------------------------=
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Copyright 2005 AP

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