Newspaper Articles
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- Feds order new environmental study on Homestead airport project
- Associated Press, 12/24/97
- The federal government has
demanded a new environmental study of a
plan to turn a hurricane-ravaged Air
Force base into a commercial airport
to relieve pressure on Miami Airport 30
miles to the north. An earlier
study didn't consider changes such as
increased cargo flights, which critics
say are smokier and noisier than
passenger flights because the planes tend
to be older.
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- Bay Area economy demands greater transportation options
- Editorial, San Jose Mercury News, 12/18/97
- Moffett Field is logical
site for air cargo flights
- The SJMN complains that "the Sunnyvale
and Mountain View city
councils succumbed to Not-Over-My-Backyard
pressure," when both city
councils declared air cargo to be an
unacceptable use of Moffett Federal
airfield. "The point is," said
the unnamed editorial writer,
"that Moffett, as an airfield, is
precious and irreplaceable."
Responses from readers:
- It's a great site -- just not for an
airport
- Lenny Seigel
HREF="980103-Burks.html">More runways will not solve air transport
problems - William C. Burks
- How would it
look if the Mercury News applied its' typically myopic
brand of
"regionalism" to other Bay Area "resources,"
say to Treasure Island. (parody)
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- Actual curfew violations are infrequent
- Letter to the editor, San Jose Mercury News, 12/15/97
- San Jose Airport's Ralph Tonseth claims that despite popular conceptions,
SJC has few violations of the letter of the airport's curfew regulations.
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- Oakland airport eyes expansion of $600 million
- San Jose Mercury News, 12/13/97
- Officials hope an ambitious $600
million expansion will draw more travelers
and cargo business to Oakland
International Airport, despite threats of
legal action from neighbors in San
Leandro and Alameda. The Port Commission
and city officials are set to
approve an environmental review of the proposal,
designed to triple cargo
traffic and bring 50 percent more passengers to
Oakland within three years.
Residents of Alameda's Bay Farm Island say
noise from the planes is already
a problem and would only get worse with
expansion. They have demanded an end
to night cargo flights, a request
airport officials have refused. San
Leandro also is threatening to challenge
the environmental review in court.
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- U.S. study warns of massive airport congestion
- Reuters, 12/11/97
- U.S. airline passengers are doomed to massive
airport congestion and
more dangerous skies unless the agency that regulates
the aviation industry
gets a radical overhaul, a government study said
Thursday.
- The National Civil Aviation Review Commission asked Congress
and the
White House to increase FAA funding, and partially privatize FAA to
shield
aviation regulation from partisan budget battles, in order to
accomodate
increased air traffic.
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- City takes air cargo off its list of options.
Unanimous council accepts the rest of the CAC report
- The
Sunnyvale Sun, 12/3/97
- The council came out officially against air cargo
as part of a much
broader motion to accept a report from the Community
Advisory Committee--a
group of Sunnyvale and Mountain View residents that
met for more than a
year to develop short-term scenarios to keep Moffett
afloat. The city of
Mountain View adopted essentially the same policy last
week by a vote to
6-1. Los Altos and Los Altos Hills recently passed
resolutions against
air cargo. The city's staff will develop a study plan
for the council by
no later than February that summarizes a course of action
for several possible
uses for the airfield. The scenarios the council will
consider urging NASA
to pursue are: developing a commercial space products
center; expanding
the Ames Technology Commercialization Center; developing
an information
technology institute; building an astrobiology institute;
creating an air
and space center; promoting air shows; encouraging a
research and development
campus and light industrial park; using the land
for a film studio; expanding
the existing space camp; and adding some land
to the San Francisco Bay
Trail.
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- Airport Noise
Challenge Could Backfire
- Editorial, San Jose Mercury News,
11/24/97
- Citizens Against Airport Pollution filed suit against the
proposed
expansion of San Jose Airport. Robert Harmssen says he hopes the
curfew
does hold up in court, but if not, it's better that neighbors find
out
now, not 10 years later when the airport is much busier. The Mercury
favors
the airport expansion.
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- Frankfurt positions
itself as Europe's premier transportation hub
- Associated Press,
11/7/97
- Airport officials hope that improvements at Frankfurt Germany's
airport,
and others planned, will allow the estimated 40 million passengers
passing
through the airport this year to increase to 60 million by 2005. A
recent
cargo facility project also should net Europe's No. 1 air-freight
center
new commercial business. The prospect of more Federal Express jets
has
worried the Commission for Protection Against Flight Noise, a citizen's
group. Chairman Richard Mueller said he's concerned especially about noise
at night, even if modern, quieter jets are used. A plane is only quiet,
said Mueller, ``when it's standing parked at the airport with its engines
off.''
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- Airport official: Dutch carrier may consider
leaving Schiphol
- Associated Press, 11/6/97
- KLM threatened
to leave Amsterdam's airport unless noise regulations
are relaxed to allow
more growth in air traffic.
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- Menlo Park votes to join
S.F. Airport advisory panel
- San Jose Mercury News, 9/25/97
- Since 1995, residents of Peninsula cities have complained that flights
to the airport are increasingly noisy and invasive, especially overnight.
More flights are coming into San Francisco from the Pacific Rim. And newer
airplanes, while quieter, often emit a lower sound frequency that vibrates
more. At the request of the round table, the airport has proposed sending
more flights over the waters of the bay instead of over land. The FAA is
studying that proposal. And a trial program to quiet the early-morning
skies
over Woodside and Atherton has been successful, Ellis said. A handful
of the
earliest flights are now approaching the airport at an altitude
of 7,000
feet instead of 6,000.
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- France opts to expand existing
Paris airport
- Reuter, 9/24/97
- French Prime Minister Prime
Minister Lionel Jospin decided to double
the number of runways from two to
four at Paris' Charles De Gaulle international
airport instead of building a
third Paris airport. Angry residents of the
neighboring Roissy area renewed
protests against the new runways, which
they say will bring greater
pollution, especially noise. Environment 93,
headed by Andre Ridon, is the
leading group opposing airport expansion.
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- Legislators
want USGS to stay. 10 House members send letter to interior
secretary
- San Jose Mercury News, 9/6/97
- Ten Bay Area members of Congress
told Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt
on Friday that they are deeply alarmed
by plans to move the U.S. Geological
Survey out of Menlo Park. If a move is
necessary, they added, the Interior
Department should consider relocating
the USGS to another federal facility
in the Bay Area -- possibly a closed
military base, such as Moffett Federal
Airfield.
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- Airport noise blasted. Peninsula levels said to be rising
- San
Jose Mercury News, 8/15/97
- Residents of southern Peninsula cities told a
special hearing of the
state Senate Transportation Committee on Thursday
that noise from San Francisco
International Airport has become more
disruptive in the past two years,
although officials insist airplanes are
quieter and flight patterns have
not changed. Sen. Quentin Kopp, I-South San
Francisco, who called the hearing,
said he plans to introduce legislation
next year that would give the state
broader oversight of airport noise
policy and increase the amount San Francisco
International spends to
insulate homes against the racket.
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- Kopp lambastes
airport for slow action on noise
- Alameda Newspapers, August 15,
1997
- The roar of airplanes buzzing over San Mateo County -- and the
complaints
of homeowners about the noise -- have reached the ears of state
Sen. Quentin
Kopp, who may introduce legislation
to help dampen the
racket.
- Kopp, I-San Mateo/San Francisco,
held a meeting of the state Senate
Transportation Committee in San Mateo
Thursday, during which he criticized
the airport and the airport community
roundtable for not responding to
citizens' complaints.
- "The
airport points to this measure or that measure they've taken
(to reduce
noise)," he said. "But the essence of the problem
remains. It's a
subject I intend to address with appropriate legislation."
- Airplane
noise problems have plagued the Peninsula almost as long as
the airport has
existed. But many residents are complaining that the volume
has increased
dramatically over the past two years, especially during the
late night and
early morning hours.
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- Kopp Wants to Strengthen Statute
on Airport Noise
- San Francisco Chronicle, 8/15/97
- ``It
appears that the (noise) standards in effect are obsolete,'' said
Kopp
(independent-San Francisco).
- State law requires SFO and other airports
to keep noise in surrounding
communities to 65 decibels averaged over 24
hours, with heavier weight
given to noise in the evening and late at night.
Sixty-five decibels is
about the noise level of a face-to-face conversation.
However, several
airports including SFO have been exempted from some rules
because of safety
considerations. The exemption has displeased many
residents.
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- Real Estate Notebook. How To Get Rid Of A
Nuisance
- San Jose Mercury News, 7/22/97
- A house of
prostitution. A neighbor's barking dog. A noisy airport.
A smelly factory. A
rowdy tavern. A stinking city sewer plant. A trash-filled
vacant lot. An
apartment building where drug dealers congregate. A noisy,
late-night dance
hall. What do these offensive activities have in common?
If you answered
they are all public or private nuisances that were abated,
reduced in
intensity or caused neighbors to be paid damages, you get an
A and go to the
head of the class.
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- NASA Pulls Fleet From Moffett
Field. Research aircraft will go to another
center
- San
Francisco Chronicle, 5/30/97
- Six research aircraft will be moved to
Dryden Flight Research Center
near the Mojave Desert. The transfer, which is
scheduled to begin in mid-June
and be completed by January, will mean the
loss of 80 civil service jobs
and 125 contractor jobs, said Bill Berry,
deputy director at NASA Ames.
The total budget for the aircraft program is
$20 million a year. NASA Ames
total budget is $600 million. Berry insisted
that the transfer does not
mean NASA Ames' role at Moffett Federal Airfield
will be ending anytime
soon.
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- In Pursuit Of Safer
Skies. Group declares war on airport
- San Francisco Chronicle,
1/31/97
- A new neighborhood group, the Green Fliers, organized to draw
attention
to noise and safety issues with the San Carlos Airport.
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- Lawsuit demands a quieter canyon
- San Jose
Mercury News (Reuters), 1/10/97
- The Sierra Club filed suit against the
Interior Department saying the
proposed regulations don't go far enough, and
a group of air tour operators
filed suit saying they go too far.
-
- Limits on Grand Canyon overflights sought
- San
Jose Mercury News (Reuters), 12/27/96
- The Interior Department next week
will announce regulations to limit
commercial overflight tours of the Grand
Canyon, the department said Friday.
``Peace and tranquility are essential
qualities of the experience that
Americans should be able to find in the
natural beauty and vast landscapes
of national parks like the Grand
Canyon,'' Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt
said in a statement.
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- Light-plane
makers have a happy landing
After disastrous decade, business rebounds
- San Jose Mercury News, 10/19/96
- Pilots Association seeks increased general aviation
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- Nagoya floats idea for new airport
- San Jose Mercury News,
9/23/96
- In land-hungry Japan, this central city's airport quandary is
all too
familiar. The existing airport can't be expanded; it's in the middle
of
crowded suburbs. A drained marsh area seems an obvious choice -- but
seems
obviously wrong to nearby residents who fear the noise. So the city,
Japan's
third-largest, has decided it wants a new airport in the middle of
the
sea, a project that would involve 50 million cubic meters of dirt and
something
like $7.5 billion.
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- Air Cargo "on hold"
- San Francisco Chronicle, 20 Aug 1996
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- Area Congress leaders
urge Clinton to locate research
site in state
- San Jose
Mercury News, 8/9/96
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- El Toro Marine Air Station
- AP Wire Service, 8/9/96
-
- El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station
- AP wire service story 8/9/96
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- Area
Congress leaders urge Clinton to locate research
site in state
- NASA/Ames could get flying observatory
- San Jose Mercury News, 8/9/96
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- Concord Ready to Fight Navy
- San Francisco
Chronicle, 8/8/96
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- Letters to the Editor
- San Jose Mercury News, 8/3/96
- Don't
believe false promises: curfews don't work. -- Tricia Schodowski,
San Jose
- The real costs are too high for any business to support without sweetheart
deals and disregard of impact to existing communities.-- John Davis,
Sunnyvale
- Mercury News maintains that business interests must always
take precedence
over the needs of the residents-- Andrew Gach, Cupertino
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- Letter to the Editor, Jeffrey M. Weiss
- Sunnyvale Sun, 8/96
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- Ames Doesn't Need Moffett
- July
29th 1996 San Francisco Chronicle
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- Moffett Air Cargo
Plan on Ballot / Mountain View voters to consider
NASA airfield fate
- San Francisco Chronicle, 8/1/96
- Voters in Mountain View will get a
chance to say if they want air cargo
companies like Federal Express, UPS and
DHL Worldwide Express to use nearby
Moffett Federal Airfield. The City
Council voted 4 to 3 late Tuesday night
to put the question on the November
5 nonbinding advisory ballot. But voters
in Sunnyvale won't have the same
opportunity, at least not on November
5. The City Council there voted 4 to 2
against putting the issue on the
ballot this year. Hundreds of Mountain View
and Sunnyvale residents who
live near Moffett Field attended council
meetings Tuesday night, where
the issue was debated until close to midnight.
-
- Moffett going to ballot in 1 city
- San
Jose Mercury News, 8/1/96
- Despite that difference, the two cities have
agreed to establish a
joint advisory committee of residents to evaluate
options for the airfield.
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- Moffett debate drags on in
2 cities. Residents urge vote on air cargo
plan
- San Jose
Mercury News, 7/31/96
- The continuing debate over allowing commercial
cargo flights at Moffett
Federal Airfield dragged on through late-night
hearings Tuesday in Sunnyvale
and Mountain View, with many residents of both
cities urging officials
to place the matter before voters in November. The
residents, who are opposed
to the flights because of noise, traffic and air
pollution, hope a strong
``no'' vote will result. This, they say, would send
a message to NASA officials,
who run the airfield, that they do not want new
air traffic over their
cities.
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- Residents protest
added air traffic over Skyline Ridge
- San Jose Mercury News,
7/31/96
- For residents who live in the normally quiet enclaves along the
Skyline
Ridge in southern San Mateo County, an increase in flights from the
Pacific
Rim to airports such as San Francisco International has meant more
noise.
And more complaints from residents.
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- NASA's
air cargo plan blasted. Mtn.
View says impact underestimated
- San Jose Mercury News, 7/11/96
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- Voters May Get To Weigh In On Moffett Cargo Flights
- San Jose Mercury News, 7/18/96
- After three hours of impassioned
testimony from its residents, the
Sunnyvale City Council Tuesday opened up
the possibility of putting the
issue of cargo flights at Moffett Federal
Airfield on the Nov. 5 ballot.
A committee will draft tentative language for
consideration at the July
30 council meeting, when members will decide
whether to put it to a vote.
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- FedEx proposal for package sorting facility
unrelated to Moffett
- San Jose Mercury News, 7/6/96
- Letter to the Editor
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- Alliance joins fray at
Moffett
- Cargo planes opposed: Other alternatives sought to stem
noise, pollution.
- San Jose Mercury News, 7/5/96
- [The Alliance
for a New Moffett Field] has organized to oppose the
use of cargo planes at
Moffett Federal Airfield, saying the choice isn't
as clear-cut as National
Aeronautics and Space Administration officials
make out and that there are
other alternatives that government officials
haven't considered.
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- Proposed SFO flight path impacts Pacifica
- Letter to the editor, San Francisco Chronicle, 1/4/96