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Thu, Sep 06, 2007

FAA Issues Final Decision On North East Airspace Redesign

Says Plan Will Reduce Delays, Cut Noise For Half A Million Residents

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) announced Wednesday it has issued a final decision for redesigning the New York, New Jersey, and Philadelphia metropolitan area airspace -- a move the agency asserts will reduce delays, fuel consumption, aircraft emissions and noise.

"This new concept in airspace design will help us handle the rapidly growing number of flights in the Northeast in a much more efficient way," said FAA Administrator Marion C. Blakey. "This airspace was first designed in the 1960s and has become much more complex. We now need to look at creative new ways to avoid delays."

The formal Record of Decision (ROD) for the Airspace Redesign Study supports the FAA's preferred alternative.

The FAA says it did extensive analysis and held more than 120 public meetings in five states throughout the environmental process. The airspace redesign involved a 31,000-square-mile area over New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware and Connecticut with a population of 29 million residents. Twenty-one airports were included in the study.

The plan is extremely unpopular with many residents of areas expected to be impacted by the changes. As ANN reported last month, residents of Rockland County, NY have hired a law firm to investigate possible legal action against the FAA in overturning the environmental review process for its Integrated Airspace Alternative.

The agency feels it has covered its legal bases with the change. In December 2006, the FAA notes, it released its Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) on the study. In March 2007, the agency identified the Integrated Airspace Alternative as its preferred alternative. On August 3, 2007, notice of the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) was published in the Federal Register.

The FAA says its studies show this alternative will reduce delays, complexity of the current air traffic system, fuel consumption and carbon emissions and aircraft noise. Benefits, in the form of reduced delays, are estimated to reach 20 percent by the year 2011 compared to the amount of delays the air traffic system would have without the changes.

Half a million fewer people will be exposed to noise under this alternative, the agency claims, compared to no change.

FMI: www.faa.gov/nynjphl_airspace_redesign

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