Just when everyone was about to count Meigs Field
as down and out, the "Friends of Meigs Field" have gone to court to
seek a Temporary Restraining Order to avert further destruction
of the nation's most embattled airport. ANN was pleased
to be the first to report that the judge not only
granted the TRO but did so without the need for
the Friends of Meig to post a bond demanded by the Parks
Department.
Don't ever let the Friends of Meigs get mad at
you... In the ultimate David and Goliath story
(aviation-wise), the folks who believe that Meigs Field deserves to
remain an airport, have defeated (even if only temporarily), a
powerful and politically cunning enemy, Chicago's Boss of Bosses,
Richard "Dirty Tricks" Daley.
Cook County Circuit Court Judge William O. Maki ordered the
City of Chicago to refrain from "any further demolition of Meigs
Field," pending the outcome of the lawsuit filed by supporters of
Meigs (not to mention a number of others in the offing... including
actions from the politically savvy and increasingly aggressive
AOPA).
After an hour of arguments, Maki ruled in favor of the legal
arguments set forth by the Friends of Meigs Field, the Meigs Action
Coalition, the Illinois Association of Air and Critical Care
Transport, Chicago By Air, and the indefatigable Steven
Whitney and Rachel Goldstein. Maki's "TRO" pretty much freezes
Daley's impetuous plans for turning the airport into some kind of a
park (though critics charge that there are some intriguing land
deals in the offing, to boot...).
Meig's gallant legal team filed their emergency petition in the
Chancery Division of Cook County Circuit Court. They charged that
Daley, the city of Chicago, and the Park District violated the
Illinois Open Meetings Act and the public trust doctrine, and that
their actions also threaten public safety.
Ultimately; the group's suit hopes to get the Judge to rule that
Daley's deceptive destruction of the Meigs runway was
illegal. Following that, they hope for a court
order that will force the city to restore and reopen the
airport ASAP. The next hearing is scheduled for May
16th.
But for now... they came, they argued, they kicked Daley's
ass... ya gotta love it.
Earlier, As The Friends Of Meigs Announced The Impending
Suit...
Background: Friday morning, the Friends of
Meigs Field returned fire in the battle over Meigs Field,
Chicago’s downtown airport. Following the City of
Chicago’s midnight bulldozing raid on Sunday night, the
Friends of Meigs and numerous other plaintiffs filed suit in Cook
County Circuit Court, challenging the legality of the move, seeking
a temporary restraining order against further demolition, and,
ultimately, the reopening of the airport. At today’s press
conference at the Daley Center, presenters also played a recording
of an air traffic control radio conversation that dramatically
illustrated the value of Meigs Field to public safety.

“The City’s actions were not only outrageous and
shocking to all Chicagoans,” said Rachel Goodstein, President
of the Friends of Meigs Field, “they were also illegal. The
community cannot afford to let this pass
unchallenged.”
In December of 2001, Mayor Daley and Governor Ryan announced an
agreement settling the long-standing dispute surrounding Meigs
Field’s fate, agreeing to keep the airport open 24 years,
unless the Illinois Legislature enacted a law earlier (after 2006)
to allow its closure. Yet, on Sunday night, the City of Chicago
used bulldozers to carve up Meigs’ runway without notice to
anyone, including the public, the Governor of Illinois, the FAA,
IDOT, the employees at the airport, or even the pilots of 16
aircraft left stranded on the tarmac. The City cited nonspecific
“homeland security” threats for the closure, even
though the action would not eliminate the purported threat of
aerial attack and actually threatens public safety in numerous
ways.

“The move shocked the nation,” said Goodstein,
“now that we’ve got a chance to catch our breath, we
are moving to stop this travesty.” The suit, asking for an
emergency temporary restraining order, was filed by Stephen Novack,
Karen Levine, and Richard Miller of Novack and Macey, on behalf of
numerous clients, including the Friends of Meigs Field.
Wide Variety of Plaintiffs
The initial Plaintiffs in the suit also include individual
taxpayers, aeromedical transport professionals, air traffic
controllers, and volunteers in the Young Eagles first flight
program at Meigs Field.
Claims include that the closure endangers public safety by
threatening air traffic, critical care medical patients, and
disaster planning for bio-terrorist attacks.
Dramatic Audio Tape of a Life Saved This Week by Meigs
At the press conference announcing the suit, the Friends of
Meigs Field played an audio tape recording of an incident only two
days earlier, in which the air traffic controllers at Meigs Field
played a crucial role in averting a mid-air collision between two
aircraft in the downtown airspace. The dramatic sound track
recounts the exchange between the tower controller and a pilot on a
collision course with an opposite-direction aircraft at the same
altitude.
It is very possible that only a last-second dive commanded by
the radar-equipped controller kept the two aircraft from colliding.
The pilot is heard after the incident thanking the controller for
"saving his life.”
(Note: Neither aircraft took off nor landed at Meigs Field,
whose runway was already bulldozed. These types of flights are
called “overflights” and typically exceed the number of
flights landing at Meigs, particularly on good weather days.
These flights will continue whether Meigs Field exists or not. It
is the role of the Meigs Field control tower to provide traffic
advisories to aircraft within a 9-mile circle of airspace over
downtown Chicago. Eliminating Meigs Field would endanger these
pilots and their passengers needlessly.)
Other Initiatives Under Way to Save Meigs Field
The
Friends of Meigs Field also presented materials documenting a wide
variety of organizations that have been galvanized into action by
the City’s precipitous and illegal closure of the
airport.
- Wednesday, a group of 6 leading national aviation groups,
representing over half a million individuals and 8,000
corporations, joined in a strongly-worded letter to President Bush
asking for federal intervention. (Available online at www.nbaa.org, www.eaa.org, www.aopa.org, www.nataonline.org,
www.generalaviation.org,
and www.rotor.com)
- Thursday, the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association announced
a 12-element plan to fight to reopen Meigs Field, including legal
and legislative initiatives, as well as an advertising campaign in
Chicago media. (see www.aopa.org)
- Thursday, the Illinois Association of Air and Critical Care
Transport, representing aeromedical transport professionals across
the state, issued a strongly worded statement saying it was
“stunned” over the “implications on critical
patient transport” to area hospitals.
- Thursday, the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club had
published in the Chicago Tribune an op-ed article decrying the
Mayor’s reneging on the 2001 agreement with Gov. Ryan to
expand airport capacity, and saying that the Mayor’s decision
“does severe harm” to the relations between the
business community and local government.
Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association In Chicago
On Friday,
Phil Boyer, President of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots
Association, the world’s largest civil aviation organization
with more than 390,000 members was in Chicago making media
appearances in defense of Meigs Field and presenting AOPA’s
airport defense plan. [ANN thanks AOPA's irrepressible Warren
Morningstar for his (as usual) invaluable help in
preparing this story. You rock, Warren].