Residents ask, ‘whose flight is it anyway?’
Lolita Harper
As Costa Mesa residents look to the sky and find more and more
planes traveling over their homes, various aviation administrators,
city leaders and airport officials are looking to each other as the
cause.
Federal Aviation Administration officials say changes in airspace
have allowed airline pilots to take different departure and approach
routes to local airports, depending on specific circumstances.
“The whole purpose of making these changes is to give controllers
and pilots more latitude in rerouting aircraft to deal with traffic
and weather conditions,†said Jerry Snyder, the public affairs
officer for FAA Western Pacific Region. “They are now over areas
where they haven’t been before.â€
Snyder said there is no way for his regional office to determine
exactly which flights, from which airports, have contributed to the
increase in air traffic over Costa Mesa, leaving local airport
officials to defend themselves.
Justin McCusker, a spokesman for John Wayne Airport, said he is
confident the flights aren’t coming from the Orange County
transportation hub.
“We’ve been contacted by [Costa Mesa] city officials and asked to
look into this,†he said. “Our tracking technology has allowed us to
determine that the increase in flights is not ours.â€
Not surprisingly, the spokeswoman for Long Beach Airport, Sharon
Diggs-Jackson, said much the same thing.
Diggs-Jackson said the Long Beach Airport is being unfairly blamed
for the increase in flights above portions of the city.
The small Long Beach-based airport is an easy target because there
has been talk of growth there but the size of the airport is very
small in comparison to other area airports, she said.
“People need to start looking toward John Wayne and LAX because
that’s what is flying over your house,†Diggs-Jackson said. “I know
that they have way more flights coming over those areas.â€
She confirmed that Jet Blue flights coming into the Long Beach
Airport from the east travel over portions of Mesa Verde and the
Westside but said there are less than 10 flights with that route.
“If people are noticing a difference recently it’s not us, because
Jet Blue has been flying the same route since it started with us more
than a year ago,†Diggs-Jackson said.
Councilman Gary Monahan said he is not buying Long Beach Airport
officials’ arguments and places the blame squarely on the Long Beach
Airport.
It is not the flight paths that are the basis of the problem but
the increase in flights on those routes, he said.
A federal court decision resulting from a 12-year lawsuit over a
noise ordinance allows Long Beach to operate 41 daily commercial
flights, officials said. Flights have jumped from 12 to an
anticipated 24 for next month and will climb to a peak of 41 by
October.
Diggs-Jackson said the added flights will not be routed over Mesa
Verde or the Westside.
A Jet Blue media release contradicts her statement.
According to the release, the airline will add service to Las
Vegas, Salt Lake City and New York from its West Coast base in Long
Beach starting Oct. 10. Six daily flights will travel to Las Vegas,
one daily flight to Salt Lake City and fifth daily flight to New
York, the report reads.
All three flights would come from the east and subsequently travel
over Costa Mesa.
Daily flights from Las Vegas are scheduled to arrive in Long Beach
between 7:20 a.m. (except Sundays) and 9:55 p.m. (except Saturdays),
the Jet Blue release outlines. The daily flight from Salt Lake City
will arrive at 7:20 a.m.
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