SFGate: Officials Hope to Ease LaGuardia Clogs

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Monday, January 8, 2007 (AP)
Officials Hope to Ease LaGuardia Clogs
By DAVID B. CARUSO, Associated Press Writer


   (01-08) 04:51 PST New York (AP) --

   Jet airplanes may be able to defy gravity, but even the most powerful
craft can't escape the cruel physics that governs LaGuardia Airport.

   Squeezed onto a peninsula at the edge of Queens, the 67-year-old airport
has long been among the most congested and constrained in the country. In
ideal weather, its two 7,000-foot runways can handle a maximum of around
75 planes an hour, or about one every 48 seconds, according to the Federal
Aviation Administration.

   That may sound like plenty, but it doesn't come close to meeting demand,
and LaGuardia is out of space, making expansion impossible.

   Still, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the
airport, believes it may be possible to move an additional 8 million
passengers a year.

   The secret, officials think, is pressuring airlines to fly bigger planes.
"We need to move to larger aircraft," said Port Authority spokesman
Pasquale DiFulco.

   Since the summer, the FAA and Port Authority have been discussing
competing proposals that would each make LaGuardia the first U.S. airport
to threaten airlines with revocation of precious flight slots if they
don't fly bigger jets.

   The Port Authority favors setting minimum plane sizes on a gate-by-gate
basis, based on how many passengers each can handle. Airlines that persist
in flying smaller planes into gates capable of receiving bigger craft
could lose their lease.

   The FAA, on the other hand, has a plan that would require most airlines =
to
meet an average aircraft-size target, probably 105 to 122 seats per
flight.

   Both plans have run into opposition.

   The Air Transport Association, which represents the major U.S. airlines,
formally objected to the FAA's proposal this month, calling it
"governmental micromanagement."

   "This is a market-driven economy, and the market should dictate the size
and frequency of planes that a carrier can operate," said association
spokesman David Castelveter.

   He warned that service to smaller destinations from LaGuardia could be
compromised if the airlines are forced to fly bigger planes.

   At the same time, the FAA has proposed tackling the sticky issue of
encouraging more competition for scarce flight slots at LaGuardia.

   For nearly four decades, flights at the airport were controlled by a
rationing system that limited congestion, but also made it nearly
impossible for new air carriers to get access to the gates.

   Congress decided in the spring of 2000 to encourage competition by
decreeing that the old rationing system for LaGuardia and other
high-density airports would expire by 2007. It also ordered transportation
officials to immediately begin issuing new flight slots to airlines that
had been shut out.

   The result was temporary chaos. Flights into LaGuardia surged, and it
quickly became overwhelmed. The average delay time for arrivals
skyrocketed 144 percent.

   Worse yet, the backups began rippling across the country. By September
2000, gridlock at LaGuardia was responsible for 25 percent of all flight
delays nationwide.

   Alarmed, the FAA intervened. Just months after the experiment began, it
restored a cap on flights and began distributing the few available new
slots by lottery. The old slot rationing system expired on schedule on
Jan. 1.

   Now, the agency has proposed a new system that would continue capping
flights at about 75 per hour but encourage competition by yanking 10
percent of the available slots each year from incumbent airlines and
opening them up to new bidders.

   The proposal has been assailed by some airlines, which say the constant
threat of losing their slots will make investing in the airport needlessly
risky, but applauded by other carriers, which have been fighting to expand
in the New York market.

   "This is the first opportunity we've seen for increased competition at
LaGuardia," said Ed Faberman, spokesman for Orlando-based AirTran.
"Obviously the larger carriers are trying to do everything they can to try
and put this on the shelf."

   The Port Authority has expressed some concern about the proposal, warning
in its formal comments to the FAA that such a large turnover of gates
could cause "unnecessarily roiling" for the airlines "without any
commensurate benefit."

   New York City officials praised the FAA's goals, but said the new rules
were too complicated and endorsed the Port Authority's "gate management"
approach.

   FAA officials temporarily put in place a new set of operating rules that
will extend the status quo through the summer. The agency hopes to have a
final plan in place by then.

   ___

   On the Net:

   www.panynj.gov ---------------------------------------------------------=
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Copyright 2007 AP

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