Thursday, August 14, 2014

Canandaigua Airport (D38) officials seek public comment

Flight Instructor Roger Tones of M&S Air Service speaks at a resident forum at the airport to discuss concerns with a new airport expansion plan.


Canandaigua officials invited Canandaigua residents to gather on their local airstrip Thursday to field questions and concerns about a future airport expansion.

The Canandaigua airport supports business jets, local recreational traffic and the occasional military aircraft. Its runway was expanded a year ago to accommodate larger airplanes that bring commerce opportunities to the area, but residents living around the airport are increasingly concerned about noisy aircraft flying over their houses on weekends and in the dead of night.

A master plan for an expanded airport that can handle more traffic is in the works for 2015, said Ontario County Industrial Development Agency Economic Developer Mike Manikowski. But before that plan takes off, he and airport officials wanted to hear from the community, he said.

“We want to create a dialogue and an open forum around this,” Manikowski said in front of about 25 residents sitting outside next to a row of small aircraft at the airport on Brickyard Road. He emphasized the value of including points of public concern in the airport’s new plans, but said that having a larger airport will help the area keep the business attraction it currently holds.

“How do we stay competitive? We need aviation,” he said. “This helps maintain the businesses we already have here.”

The airport will not support passenger airliners — those will stay at the Greater Rochester International Airport, said McFarland Johnson airport planner Zachary Staff. “This will relieve some congestion at the Rochester airport so that smaller aircraft don’t hog that airspace,” Staff said.

Residents’ main concern was the noise of aircraft in the area — “it’s just very pesky,” said resident Charles Ron Evans, who lives on New Michigan Road, two miles north of the airport. Evans said planes buzzing back and forth over his house cause constant irritation.

“Where I live, it just keeps getting worse,” he said. “I can’t use my property because of the way (Canandaigua officials) choose to use their property.”

Other neighbors, like Canandaigua National Bank CEO George Hamlin, said that the Canandaigua airport offers convenience to local aviators.

“Instead of driving an hour to Rochester and waiting in that airport, we can use this airport and get to two, three places a day,” Hamlin said. Small aircraft are also less noisy than other forms of recreational transportation, he said. “These aren’t nearly as loud as one single car down at the motorsports park,” he said.

Ander and Janene Sweet are new residents on Yerkes Road in Canandaigua, which is about a mile away from the airport. While they had concerns about moving close to an airfield, “the airplanes have been pretty quiet,” Ander Sweet said. “The Army choppers were the loudest I’ve heard it, but that was the only real issue.”

Earlier this year, Manikowski got calls about the racket of several Black Hawk military helicopters using the airport for training, he said. They are based in Rochester but come out to Canandaigua occasionally on “reverse cycles,” when they practice flying at night, said McFarland Johnson project manager James Dolan. While these helicopters are noisy, several residents agreed that they were happy the military was practicing in this area, in case a natural disaster or other emergency were to occur locally.

Aircraft flying over Canandaigua from other smaller airports like Penn Yan and Sodus may be adding to the area’s noise, Dolan said. He said he spoke to the airport personnel at those locations to see what can be done about noise control.

The airport currently supports about 28,000 “operations,” or takeoffs and landings, per year, Staff said. Taxpayers do not fund the airport and will not fund the expansion, Manikowski said; it is funded completely through the Federal Aviation Administration. Plans for new hangars would be included in the new master plan, so that businesses could base their aircraft in Canandaigua, Manikowski said.

“To grow, we have to have more services to bring their aircraft and business to this area,” he said. “Having a fully equipped airport, which we hope to get to, will help keep that business going in this community.”


- Source:  http://www.democratandchronicle.com

No comments:

Post a Comment