Flood-Ravaged Field Gets $6 Million To Fight Flood Damage
Photos By Rich Stowell
Limited runway operations could get underway as early as Monday
at flood-ravaged Santa Paula Airport in California, where the Santa
Clara River, swollen beyond its banks by torrential rains, has
eroded a huge portion of the strip.

As ANN reported last week, the rains washed away about 155 feet
of the 2,650-foot long runway. But it could have been much worse.
Master CFI Rich Stowell, who runs a flight training operation at
Santa Paula, said, if not for the heroic efforts of emergency
workers and volunteers last week, the runway would have been much
more severely damaged. When he arrived at the airport on Tuesday
morning, Stowell told ANN he found the Santa Clara River was within
six feet of the runway itself.
"Shock and disbelief," he said, describing his first reaction to
the sight. "Everybody left [Monday night] and everything was status
quo. We came out [Tuesday morning] and lost a huge chunk of the
airport. While we were standing there that Tuesday morning, we
watched one of the windsocks slide down the hill and wash down the
river."
Crews worked 24 hours straight, trying to shore up the crumbling
riverbank before it could do more damage to the runway, which had
already lost 40 or so feet to storms in January.

Remarkably, none of the aircraft parked at Santa Paula --
including a number of vintage birds -- was damaged in the flooding.
"They had moved all those airplanes along that south bank, where a
number of transient airplanes were tied down, two or three times
this season, based on the weather." Sounds like it's become old hat
at Santa Paula.
Stowell, along with Santa Paula town officials, was worried
about whether the airport could ever bounce back. It's a
privately-owned field, making government assistance a dubious
proposition. But on Friday, the US Natural Resources Conservation
Service announced it would send $6 million to Santa Paula for
airport repairs and to shore up the river bank to reduce
erosion.
"This is all very good news," said Rowena Mason, president of
the Santa Paula Airport Association, in Saturday's Ventura County
Star. "Businesses (at the airport) keep asking us whether they need
to move. The flight school has temporarily left for Oxnard Airport.
This has been devastating."
Given the erosion and threats that more runway could be washed
into the river, airport executives and the FAA have decided to
allow operations along only 1,220 feet of the Santa Paula runway.
Flights will reportedly be restricted to local pilots and "special
circumstances."

"That's not a safe situation for landing," said Caltrans safety
officer Kurt Haukohl. "I would anticipate a lot more of the airport
is going to fall as the water recedes. They're going to find
themselves 30 feet above the river's height."
While $6 million federal grant will help with repairs to the
eroded riverbank and create a new channel for the Santa Clara away
from the runway, it will not address repairs to the crumbling
runway itself. The private-ownership issue complicates that issue
even further, leading Santa Paula City Manager Wally Bobkiewicz to
tell the Star the city will help the airport look for "creative
ways to get funding."
In the meantime, as long as it's closed, Santa Paula Airport is
losing about $16,000 a day. Last week, airport officials were
racing against Mother Nature. This week, they'll be racing against
time.