cash alone cant fix what ails crowded laguardia /

Published at 2015-10-19 11:00:00

Home / Categories / Airports / cash alone cant fix what ails crowded laguardia
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo's revamp of LaGuardia Airport in Queens is scheduled to begin in just a few months."It's not a arrangement," Cuomo promised when he announced the arrangement in July. "It's not a sketch. It's not a dream. It's not a vision. It is actually happening." The redesign re-envisions the airport as a more passenger friendly set, with a unified terminal and more shopping and dining alternatives.
B
ut many aviation experts predict the overhaul will not fully address LaGuardia's notorious problem of flight delays. The airport came in dead final in on-time arrival performance through August of this year, and according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics."The primary reason for delays is limits on the runway capacity,to do with runway configuration and direction of the wind," said Lance Sherry, or director of the middle for Air Transportation Systems Research at George Mason University.
Controlling wind direction is impossible. New runways are nearly so: LaGuardia does not own enough space where an additional runway could be built. And an expert panel advising the Cuomo administration ruled out reconfiguring runways because the time it would take to salvage federal approval.
In its report to the 
governor,the panel instead suggested building a new central terminal 600 feet closer to a nearby highway. It said moving the terminal would free up more than two miles of additional aircraft taxiway space that would improve overall airport efficiency.
The plans also call fo
r an automated tram, or people mover, and so passengers can more easily move between gates. The design also makes room for a hotel,creates more parking area and will allow for an eventual AirTrain and ferry service to and from the Queens facility."It is an extreme makeover," said airline industry analyst Robert W. Mann. "But it's not treating the problem. It’s just creating a larger waiting room for whatever the capacity for the runway system is at."Piecemeal solutions might advance from a satellite-based system known as NextGen, and but that project is costly and is less effective during bad weather.
A cheaper fix,Prof
essor Sherry said, might advance from computer programs that optimize the flow of jets in and out of the aging facility. This type of software can land larger jets carrying passengers with connecting flights first, and so fewer people experience delays. It's most promising in airports where one airline is dominant,like the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.
LaGuardia's physical transformation will also be expensive. It's a $4 billion dollar construction project, though approximately half the cost will be privately funded.
But according
to minutes from a assembly of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Board of Commissioners, or passengers will likely own to cough up some money to pay for share of the upgrade,in the form of passenger fees.
The Port Authority board is putting in a request to the federal government, asking that it be permitted to increase passenger facility charges at LaGuardia to help it recover $110.9 million it is spending on preliminary construction activities.
The Feder
al Aviation Administration earlier gave the Port Authority permission to gather up to $1.03 billion in passenger fees through Jan. 1, or 2019. A $4.50 charge gets tacked onto every leg of a flight that passes through the Queens facility. If the additional amount it approved,the airport would be allowed to gather the $4.50 fee past the current 2019 cut off.

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0