For Immediate Release
Regional Airport Committee Seeks Ideas
On Managing Growing
Bay Area Airport Traffic
Public Workshop Slated for September 19
OAKLAND, Calif., Sept. 12, 2007 . . . Bay
Area officials are inviting input and ideas from the public
on how to address current and future congestion at the region’s
three major airports at a workshop on Wednesday, September
19, 2007, from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Joseph P. Bort
MetroCenter Auditorium, 101 Eighth Street in Oakland (across
from the Lake Merritt BART Station).
Travelers
to and from the Bay Area who use San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose International
airports will face increasing flight delays unless local governments and airport
officials take steps to ease congestion, according to a recently published Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) study. Of the Bay Area's three major commercial
airports, two are projected to have significant runway capacity problems by 2025.
Air traffic at Oakland International Airport will exceed runway capacity by 2015,
while San Francisco International Airport will reach that milestone a decade
later.
The Bay
Area's Regional Airport System Plan is being updated by the
Regional Airport Planning Committee (RAPC), a joint committee
of members from the Association of Bay Area Governments,
the Metropolitan Transportation Commission and the San Francisco
Bay Conservation and Development Commission. RAPC is seeking
to develop consensus on a long-range aviation plan for the
Bay Area that will ensure the mobility of airport travelers
and protect the region's growing economy. During the first
phase of the update, emerging aviation trends and technologies
to improve airport operations were assessed. The findings
of the assessment will be presented at the September 19th
workshop. The FAA has provided a grant of $585,000 to support
the second phase of the update, which will begin with the
workshop. For further information on the workshop or the
Regional Airport System Plan update log on to www.mtc.ca.gov/meetings/workshops/rapc.htm or
call 510.817.5757.
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