MOM

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Environmental Assessment For Southern California Airspace Improvements

GET INVOLVED:
The U.S. Department of Transportation/Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is seeking public comment on the Draft Environmental Assessment (Draft EA) for the Southern California Metroplex project, a comprehensive proposal to improve the flow of air traffic into and out of Southern California by making the airspace safer and more efficient.

The project proposes to replace dozens of existing conventional air traffic procedures with new satellite-based procedures, which are a key component of the FAA’s Next Generation Air Transportation System (NextGen). The Metroplex proposal encompasses most of Southern California and includes six major airports.

The FAA issued the project’s Draft EA today for public review and comment for 30 days. The FAA will hold 11 public workshops between June 16 and July 1, 2015, where people can learn about the proposal and how to submit comments on it. After evaluating and responding to all substantive public comments, the FAA could adopt the entire proposal, adopt portions of it, or modify it.

“Public engagement and participation in the Southern California Metroplex process is critical,” said FAA Administrator Michael Huerta. “We take public input very seriously, and we strongly encourage people, agencies and officials to learn about, and weigh in on, this proposal.”

Michael Huerta on the Draft Environmental Assessment (Draft EA) for the Southern California Metroplex project

About the FAA’s Southern California Metroplex Initiative:

A Metroplex is a region with multiple airports serving major metropolitan areas where heavy airport activity and environmental constraints combine to hinder the efficient movement of air traffic. Metroplex initiatives are completed, under way or planned in more than a dozen metropolitan areas across the country, including Northern California, Houston, Washington, D.C., Atlanta and Charlotte.

Many of the current air traffic procedures in Southern California are decades old. While they are all safe, some are inefficient because they rely on ground-based navigation aids, which limit available flight paths.

Some procedures are longer than necessary, while others converge and occupy the same airspace. As a result, air traffic controllers issue a series of instructions to pilots to vector aircraft onto more direct routes and to keep aircraft safely separated from each other. Vectoring, in turn, results in irregular and less predictable flight paths and increases pilot-controller communications and workload.

Satellite-based procedures, by contrast, allow for more direct routing with fixed routes, altitudes and speeds. Their precise flight tracks help keep routes automatically separated. This in turn reduces the need for vectoring and reduces controller-pilot communications.

In all, the proposed Southern California Metroplex project includes 109 new satellite-based procedures – 50 departures, 37 arrivals and 22 approach procedures that guide aircraft down until they’re very close to their destination airports. The project also expands the number of entry and exit points into and out of the Southern California airspace, which is like creating more on- and off-ramps in the sky.

The noise modeling that the FAA conducted for the project’s Draft EA calculated noise at more than 175,000 points throughout the study area. It indicates the proposed action would not result in any significant or reportable noise impacts.

The public comment period ends on July 10. The public workshops for the project will take place throughout Southern California between June 16 and July 1. People can submit comments on the project by email (9-ANM-SoCalOAPM@faa.gov), in person at the public workshops, and by writing to:

SoCal Metroplex EA
Federal Aviation Administration
Western Service Center – Operations Support Group
1601 Lind Avenue SW
Renton, WA 98057


The Draft EA is available online at:http://www.metroplexenvironmental.com/socal_metroplex/socal_introduction.html.

Electronic versions of the Draft EA have been sent to 40 libraries and hard copies are available at five libraries. A complete list of libraries with electronic and hard copies is available online.

Additional information on the Metroplex Program can also be found athttp://www.metroplexenvironmental.com/.

The public workshop dates and locations are as follows. The public can attend workshops anytime between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m.

June 16: Santa Ana. McFadden Intermediate School, 2701 S. Raitt St., Santa Ana, CA 92704

June 17: Santa Monica. Santa Monica Public Library – Main Branch, 601 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90401

June 18: Los Angeles. Proud Bird Restaurant, 11022 Aviation Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90045

June 22: San Diego. Logan Heights Library, 567 S. 28th St., San Diego, CA 92113

June 23: Palm Desert. Palm Desert Library, 73-300 Fred Waring Drive, Palm Desert, CA 92260

June 24: Torrance. Ken Miller Auditorium, 3341 Torrance Blvd., Torrance, CA 90503

June 25: Long Beach. Beach High School, 3701 E. Willow St., Long Beach, CA 90815

June 26: Ontario. Ontario International Airport Administration Building, 1923 East Avion Street, Ontario, CA 91761

June 29: Ventura. E.P. Foster Library, 651 E. Main St., Ventura, CA 93001

June 30: Santa Barbara. The Westside Neighborhood Center, 423 W. Victoria St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101

July 1: Burbank. Burbank Community Services Building, 150 N 3rd St., Burbank, CA 91502

2 comments:

  1. The best way to make sure you don't hear airplane noise and the best protection from keeping a airplane from landing on top of your house happens to be the same solution. Don't live next to a airport.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No Kidding!! And I'm thinking we don't even need a study and data for that advice.

      Delete

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