SFGate: FAA head says Chicago could need new airport

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This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
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Thursday, September 18, 2008 (AP)
FAA head says Chicago could need new airport
By MICHAEL TARM, Associated Press Writer


   (09-18) 02:06 PDT Chicago (AP) --
   A new Chicago airport or a vast expansion of one of the city's existing
airports will be necessary to keep pace with booming demand for air travel
in the coming decades, the head of the Federal Aviation Administration
said.
   That's in addition to an ongoing $15 billion expansion of O'Hare
International Airport, Robert Sturgell, the FAA's acting administrator,
told The Associated Press on Wednesday.
   Chicago plays too vital a role as an aviation hub not to further upgrade
airport capacity, Sturgell said, adding that he appreciated the fierce
resistance such projects can generate, including from residents worried
about noise and air pollution.
   "It takes a lot of local political will to move new runways and airports
forward," he said in a telephone interview from Washington, D.C.
   Other cities like New York and Atlanta will also need new airports or
ambitious expansion projects, he said.
   More than a dozen new runways have opened in the United States since 200=
0,
with three more opening this November, including at O'Hare.
   But Sturgell said that won't suffice over the long run.
   Despite a drop in flights this year as high fuel prices cut into airline
profits, the number of air travelers could double to 1 billion annually
over the next decade, Sturgell said. And since newer, streamlined planes
will carry fewer passengers, the total number of planes flying in and out
of airports could increase at an even faster rate, he said.
   In a 2007 report, the FAA noted that just two major airports have opened
in the last 40 years — Dallas- Fort Worth and Denver International.
As many as four would have to be built over the next 20 to 30 years,
Sturgell said.
   New airports and runway expansions would have to happen in conjunction
with implementation of a new satellite-guided air traffic system, dubbed
NextGen, Sturgell said. That would replace the current, radar-based
system, which deploys 1950s-era radar technology. -------------------------=
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Copyright 2008 AP

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