Mayor "Not Stable"
Craig Johnson, the mayor of Elk Grove Village (IL)
thinks Mayor Richard Daley's midnight bulldozing of Meigs Field
suggests he is not stable. And so Johnson has told his police
department to beef up patrols on the east side of O'Hare. It's the
latest development in a story that shocked pilots and aviation
enthusiasts nationwide. In the dark of night, without public
hearings, without warning, Chicago Mayor Richard Daley early Monday
sent city bulldozers to wreck the runway at Meigs Field.
Now, Daley is taking plenty of political heat. "It's bad
government and it's a very dangerous exercise of power," said Ald.
Joe Moore, 49th Ward.
"Never should have been done in the night. I mean, he should
have put it before the people," said David Whitehead.
"He just won by a big margin and he said, I'll do what I want.
That's the problem with it," said Tim Stanton.
Others polled said they weren't too worried about the decision
to close Meigs. "I'm sure the mayor had good reasons to do what he
did," said Ald. Ed Smith, 28th Ward.
"I totally have to agree that we have to be careful especially
in this time of war," said Ald. Ray Suarez, 31st Ward.
Outrage From Aviation Community
General aviation associations, the air traffic controllers
union, and even the FAA voiced strong concerns about Daley's
tactics.
But perhaps the strongest condemnations come from the Chicago
papers. Editorials in the Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Sun-Times
attacked Daley for ignoring the democratic process (see below).
Aviation organizations were no less condemnatory.

John Carr of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association
said, "Clearly, the mayor didn't think his policy choices could
either figuratively or literally withstand the light of day. It's
the epitome of arrogance." Ray Gibbons, the president of NATCA's
Chicago local, added, "Meigs' closure adds complex and higher
volumes of traffic to this area's overburdened, understaffed
facilities. At some point in time, the safety of the flying public
will be compromised."
FAA Administrator Marion C. Blakey said, "We at the FAA were
concerned to learn this morning of the decision to close Meigs
Field. Already, we have heard from members of the general aviation
community, and we share their concern. Removing any centrally
located airport such as Meigs from the system only diminishes
capacity and puts added pressure on O'Hare and Midway
airports."

What About Those Left Behind?
Sixteen
planes still sit at Meigs Field, stuck temporarily by the new,
bulldozed X's on the runway. Within the first day after Mayor
Daley destroyed the runway at Merrill C. Meigs Field, fully half of
the owners whose aircraft are stranded turned to AOPA for help in
escaping Daley's snare.
"What we've got to do now is help those 16 prisoners of Daley's
war against Meigs get their aircraft back safely," said AOPA
President Phil Boyer. "At this point, there isn't much hope of
Meigs reopening."
AOPA has worked with the FAA and the city of Chicago to help
spring the imprisoned aircraft. Among other things, AOPA provided
aircraft performance data to help FAA determine if the Meigs
taxiway could be used safely as a runway.
"FAA has signed off on using the taxiway for departures, with
certain stipulations," said Woody Cahall, AOPA's vice president of
Aviation Services. "The FAA's Great Lakes Region will hold a
meeting on Wednesday morning to work out process and procedures for
the stranded aircraft to depart."
Following that meeting, the FAA plans to issue a modified notam
that will define a very narrow window during which the aircraft
already at Meigs may depart. Airport officials will work with the
aircrafts' pilots to figure out what time works best.
"There was also a great deal of confusion earlier today," said
Cahall. "But AOPA has now established good working relationships
with all the parties involved in the departure process and is
ensuring the smooth flow of information."
Condemnation From The Chicago Media
Ken Zorn, Chicago Tribune: At a time when
several hundred thousand of our men and women are halfway around
the world ostensibly fighting for freedom and democracy, Chicago's
mayor treated his citizens to an exercise in autocracy so brazen
that it was downright amusing.
A midnight demolition raid on the city's own airport! Operation
Tick-Tack-Toe pulled off without warning and under police guard;
excavators digging up numerous large X's all in a row down the main
runway to render it unusable. By the dawn's early light it was
clear that the fitful 55-year history of Merrill C. Meigs Field was
over.
"To do this any other way would have been needlessly
contentious," the mayor explained at a news conference Monday
morning.
The public can be so pesky! Hearings. Compromise proposals.
Impact studies. That whole messy governmental process thing that's
really just a formality in Chicago these days anyway.
Staff Editorial, Chicago Sun-Times: When Mayor
Daley was re-elected Feb. 25 with 78.5 percent of the vote, we
praised his "record of effort and accomplishment'' that had "earned
the trust of a broad spectrum of this city.'' That record was
tarnished and that trust broken late Sunday as, without any advance
notice or public discussion, the city vandalized its lakefront
jewel, Meigs Field.

The mayor has long opposed the small airport at Meigs. He would
like to put a park there. Others--ourselves included--argued that
the city had miles of underutilized lakefront park, and that a new
park at Meigs would be superfluous and out-of-the-way. Making this
issue more complex was that Meigs became a point of longtime
dispute between Daley and whatever Republican governor was in
Springfield, though just over a year ago it seemed that Daley
struck a deal with then-Gov. George Ryan--25 more years of Meigs in
return for his support for federal action pushing through expansion
at O'Hare Airport. The issue seemed settled, and the new governor,
Rod Blagojevich, supported it. Just two weeks ago, the mayor was
claiming that the future of Meigs was up to the Federal Aviation
Administration.
Then, late Sunday, the years of debate and compromise were
mocked when the city sent backhoes to rip up the runway at Meigs
while police kept the media away. Even though there was no specific
threat, Daley claimed public safety demanded this rash action. That
is ludicrous. Closing Meigs does not prevent a terrorist from
commandeering a plane and crashing it into a building. What it does
is send more private aircraft to already crowded Midway and O'Hare
airports while eliminating a unique feature of downtown
Chicago.