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"Carlsbad, Calif., residents campaign to lower airport noise"



Friday, September 17, 2004

Carlsbad, Calif., residents campaign to lower airport noise
The North County (CA) Times


CARLSBAD, Calif. -- About two dozen residents who live near
McClellan-Palomar Airport lobbied an airport advisory board Thursday for
more controls on plane traffic, saying the noise problem is so bad it sounds
like jets are landing in their bedrooms.

As the residents campaigned for air traffic improvements, the advisory board
struggled with another controversy -- whether to send a message to the
county Board of Supervisors saying a planned airport remodeling effort ought
to be delayed until a complaint against the project is resolved. 

Palomar Airport Advisory Committee board member Robert Fuselier put a motion
before the group, saying the county shouldn't let the developer proceed with
the $30 million remodeling project until the complaint filed last month with
the Federal Aviation Administration is resolved. 

The complaint was filed by a group of pilots who face eviction because of
the construction project.

Fuselier's motion failed to win passage. Chairwoman Ramona Finnila said the
board shouldn't even talk about the issue because the project is the subject
of legal action.

After Fuselier's motion failed, people supporting the pilots approached the
residents with the noise concerns, telling them that if the construction
project proceeds there will be more jets and more noise at Palomar. County
officials hotly contested that claim.

The residents said they hadn't come to Wednesday's meeting to fight with
airport officials, stressing that they just wanted the airport to do a
better job of keeping the noise down.

"We're not here to be negative, we're here to be positive," said one of the
group's unofficial leaders, Gail Carroll, as she started reading a list of
recommendations to improve the situation. "If the pilots would just follow
what the recommended (flight) pattern is ... we wouldn't be here tonight."

Changes they sought included:

   --Upgrading the signs and the automated radio messages that tell pilots
how to take off from Palomar.

   --Installing radar to monitor plane speeds and altitudes.

   --Mandating pilots follow prescribed departure paths.

Finnila told the residents they were raising issues that come up every few
years and urged them to do their homework. The FAA won't allow Palomar to
install a nighttime curfew; the airport is already studying noise issues;
and there are rules about where the planes can fly, she said.

A pilot who uses the airport, Paul Breed of Solana Beach, said pilots try to
stick to the advised flight routes around the airport, but the place gets so
much air traffic on weekends that air traffic controllers send approaching
and departing planes over residential neighborhoods.

He said the residents' request to have planes climb rapidly during take-offs
could increase noise problems.

"Be careful that what you ask for doesn't make it worse," he told the
residents.


   Post your opinion on this story in the CAA General Aviation Forum
http://www.californiaaviation.org/dcfp/dcboard.php

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