Major revamp of LAX is stuck at the gate

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http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-lax10jun10,0,1135852.story?coll=la-tot-callocal

Major revamp of LAX is stuck at the gate
By Jennifer Oldham, Times Staff Writer
June 10, 2007 

Except for periodic face-lifts in several of its nine
terminals, Los Angeles International Airport hasn't
changed much since shoulder pads, leggings and
feathered hair were all the rage. 

Today, the airport that ushered the country into the
jet age in the 1960s and set the standard for
international service in the 1980s is ill-prepared for
the new planes that are expected to revolutionize air
travel. 

Fed up with its cramped ticket lobbies and waiting
rooms, gridlocked access roads and outdated airfield,
passengers and airlines are increasingly taking their
business elsewhere. 

"It is the Rip Van Winkle of American airports," said
Steve Erie, a UC San Diego political science professor
who has written extensively about Southern
California's infrastructure. 

Officials are reaping what they sowed on a former bean
field near Santa Monica Bay that became the world's
fifth-busiest airport. 

Lack of cohesive political leadership, a history of
mistrust between the city's airport agency and nearby
communities, grandiose visions for expanding the
facility and an incredibly complex planning process
have combined to leave officials without a blueprint
to modernize LAX. And time is running out. 

"We need to strike a deal," said Kelly McDowell, mayor
of El Segundo, a town on the airport's southern
boundary. "As I've said for months and months: We've
got the right people, in the right place, at the right
time."

An effort to devise a modernization plan ? which has
spanned 15 years and cost Los Angeles about $150
million ? is on hold while the new executive director
of the city's airport agency, Gina Marie Lindsey,
becomes acquainted with boxes and boxes of documents. 

Waiting anxiously in the wings are airline
representatives and residents who want to win over
Lindsey to their sometimes-conflicting views on how
the airport can best be fixed. 

Lindsey says Antonio Villaraigosa, the fourth mayor in
20 years to attempt to renovate the airport, has made
it clear that "he wants to get modernization at LAX
well underway sooner rather than later." The mayor
also has called repeatedly for spreading air traffic
among the region's airports to ease crowding at the
seaside facility. 

"What we need to be sure we're taking care of here at
LAX is international traffic and the requisite
domestic traffic that will feed it," added Lindsey,
who started her job Monday and who is credited with
implementing a controversial $4.1-billion plan to
renovate Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.

"Ontario and Palmdale are ready and able to step into
providing facilities for some of the shorter-haul
traffic," she said.

The director said she plans to meet with Villaraigosa
this summer to present her vision of what should be
done at LAX. 

When he took office in 2005, Villaraigosa ordered his
then-airport director, Lydia Kennard, to work with
LAX's neighbors to settle lawsuits challenging his
predecessor's modernization plan. Several months
later, they reached a compromise that allowed the
agency to build agreed-on projects and put
more-controversial ones on hold. 

Today, construction is taking place at LAX for the
first time since the upper-level roadway and the Tom
Bradley International Terminal were built in time for
the 1984 Olympics. 

Contractors have moved the southernmost runway 55 feet
and are building a center taxiway between it and a
parallel runway as part of a $330-million plan to make
the south part of the airport safer. Officials also
began a $723.5-million upgrade of the Bradley
terminal. 

But that is far from enough to ensure that LAX retains
its status as the gateway to the Pacific Rim.
Carriers, who since 2000 have taken 12% of their seats
on lucrative weekly international departures to other
airports with gleaming new facilities, say they will
not bring new large aircraft ? including the Airbus
A380 ? to LAX if there are not enough places for them
to park. 

In addition, officials deferred terminal upgrades and
maintenance projects while lawmakers fought over
modernization plans, prompting passengers to rank LAX
facilities below average in a recent survey of the
nation's busiest airports. 

Unlike other major airports around the country, LAX
faces a unique set of challenges that have stymied its
ability to keep pace with the ever-changing aviation
industry. Over the last decade, as Boeing and Airbus
designed and built new aircraft with wider wing spans,
requiring more room to maneuver on the ground, three
Los Angeles mayors proposed wildly differing
modernization plans. 

They discussed, variously, expanding LAX to
accommodate 103 million passengers annually (it
currently handles about 61 million a year), building
two runways in Santa Monica Bay, using nearby
Hawthorne Municipal Airport for commuter traffic and
adding a large terminal on the airport's western end
that would have required a new access road. 

Each proposal was met with distrust and anger by
surrounding communities, including Westchester, which
lost one-third of the land it occupied when the city
razed 4,500 homes and displaced 14,000 residents in
the 1970s. Visitors to Dockweiler Beach can see
remnants of these neighborhoods today in asphalt
streets lining the dunes on the airport's western
edge. 

"We ran roughshod over the neighboring communities
from late 1960s through the 1970s," said Erie, the UC
San Diego professor. "Now it's payback time. They're
like border vigilantes who want to light up the
airport."

Deep-seated animosity between officials and residents
resurfaced this month when the airport agency said it
planned to study moving LAX's northernmost runway 340
feet to improve safety and efficiency. That could
expand the airport's northern boundary and endanger
homes and businesses in adjacent Westchester and Playa
del Rey. 

After Villaraigosa took office, "the community had a
brief moment of relief," said David Coffin, a board
member on the Westchester/Playa del Rey Neighborhood
Council. 

"But 13 or 14 months later they were floored by the
'new' proposals," he added. "There didn't appear to be
any effort to develop the plans with the community as
an active partner."

An attempt by airport officials and residents to hash
out new modernization projects ? including an updated
road system to alleviate traffic, a terminal with new
parking spots for aircraft and a plan to rework the
northern part of the airport ? has stalled. 

Exacerbating the situation is LAX' s cramped
3,500-acre layout. Newer airports elsewhere have the
luxury of space, and more runways. Dallas-Fort Worth
International Airport, for example, sits on 18,000
acres, and Denver International has 34,000 acres ? 53
square miles. 

Officials agree that to get a modernization effort off
the ground, planners may have to settle for a slate of
individual projects instead of a comprehensive plan
that costs a lot and needs a broad consensus.

"We spent a lot of time analyzing a lot of options; we
were looking at least at coming up with a plan to
resolve the demands on that airport for six
lifetimes," said Jack Driscoll, a consultant who ran
the city's airport agency from 1992 to 1999.

"In today's environment," he added, "I think the best
you can do in a lot of cases is an incremental move
every so often."

jennifer.oldham@xxxxxxxxxxx



       
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