
Quote of the Week: "I attended my first meeting to oppose a third runway back in 1949. This has been going on for 60 years and I'm very pleased to see this today -- anything that brings attention to what the aviation mafia are trying to do." quote from a news story on the week long protests at England's Heathrow Airport
Aviation Conspiracy Newsletter #443.............................................................................August 26, 2007 Past newsletters can be accessed at: http://pages.prodigy.net/rockaway/ACNewsmenu.htm The PASSUR airport flight tracking system at many major U.S. airports http://www.passur.com/sites.htm (you must have Java installed to view it). If you want to get the newsletter sent to you every week, sign up to AviationWatch. Bill Mulcahy rockaway@prodigy.net
FAA Boss Gets Hired By Aviation Lobbyist Firm!!!

As
Bill Sees It (Editorial):
FAA Boss Blakey Rewarded For Service To The Aviation Industry With Lobbyist Job? A
sitting FAA administrator (Marion Blakey) announcing that she was going to work
for the same aviation industry she is charged with regulating and the news media
barely even covered the story!!! Blakely didn't even think it was important
to wait until she was out of office on Sept. 13th to make the annoucement!!! Apparently the news media, which gets nice
full page advertising ads and 60 second commercials from the aviation industry,
has lost their sense of smell. The Associated Press (AP) didn't even
touch the story. This is just another example that shows the close
relationship the FAA regulators
and the industry they are "supposed" to regulate have. The
"public," which has to bear the health and environmental impacts of
the FAA/aviation industry deals, not only doesn't have a seat at the table, we
are not even allowed in the building!!! Official
Corruption Accepted As Business As Usual In Bush
Administration? If what Blakey did isn't illegal it should be. If this
isn't official corruption I don't know what is!!! Have we have come to
accept official corruption as the norm? Of course not one little peep of outrage
by any politician about this. I wonder how much "lobbying" Marion did
for her job while she was allegedly working for the public and regulating her
future employers? Is she now promising future lobbyist jobs to other FAA officials if they play ball with certain corporations she
will soon be (formally) representing? How interesting that she will leave her job 13 days after the northeast Airspace
Redesign Plan gets final FAA approval. Blakey has served her masters well. I
wonder
what hideous female
aviation industry stooge (they apparently love women for this job) President
Polluter will next inflict on the public for the next five years? Anti-Airspace
Redesign Demonstration Today
In Rockland County, New York!!! I hope that there will be
thousands of people protesting the FAA destroying their quality-of-life by
directing increased Newark Airport flights over their homes. I'm glad to see
that they are getting support from New Jersey anti-aviation pollution group CAAN.
If New Jersey communities want to stop the FAA rats from destroying their lives
they need to form a victim's coalition and sue the FAA. As the basis of the
FAA Airspace Redesign plan is political, not scientific routing of aircraft,
there is a abundance of environmental and health impacts that could be used as a
legal basis to have this atrocity stopped. It is good to see that there is
movement towards forming a coalition to do just that. The one that makes the
FAA nervous is many communities uniting to fight them. That is why they devote
so much effort to play one community off another. Maybe someone will take
some home movies and upload them to Youtube so
we can see the demonstration. I would be more than happy to put it the next
newsletter.
ROCKLAND COUNTY NEW YORK CITIZENS TO PROTEST FAA’S RECENTLY-UNCOVERED PLAN TO SEND HUNDREDS OF AIRPLANES DAILY THROUGH THE HEARTS OF THEIR COMMUNITIES
· Rally Begins at NOON Sunday, August 26, 2007.
· Corner of Route 59 and Middletown Road, in Nanuet, Town of Clarkstown, Rockland County, NY.
· Up to 600 flights per day will be routed less than 1 mile above Rockland County communities on their descent to Newark Liberty International Airport.
· Flights would fly over Rockland every 2.5 minutes affecting homes, schools, houses of worship, elder-care facilities, hospitals, playgrounds, parks and villages.
ROCKLAND COUNTY, NY: Concerned Rockland residents will hold a rally Sunday to protest a federal plan to direct up to 600 new flights over the heart of the County, as part of a new flight plan developed by the FAA in concert with commercial airlines.
“Having
uncovered the plan, which was developed in secret, Rockland County citizens en
masse are organizing as quickly as possible to put a stop to this initiative,
which threatens the security and quality of life for the citizens of Rockland
and surrounding counties,” said Tom Sullivan, Spokesman for the
recently-created group.
“We
are seeking volunteers to help us spread the word, contact elected officials,
lobby in Washington, DC, support recently-retained litigation counsel, and
sign paper and online petitions. We must stop the FAA from issuing it’s
‘Record of Decision’ scheduled for early September,” Sullivan continued.
A number of elected officials are scheduled to attend the rally, including:
Hon. Edwin J. Day Rockland County Legislator
Hon. Ellen C. Jaffe New York State Assembly
Hon.
Thom Kleiner
Orangetown Supervisor
Hon.
James F. Kralick
Rockland County Sheriff
Hon. Patrick J. Moroney Rockland County Legislator
Hon. John Murphy Rockland County Legislator
Hon. Patrick Withers Rockland County Legislator
Hon. Kenneth P. Zebrowski New York State Assembly
In addition, representatives from the New Jersey Coalition Against Aircraft Noise (NJCAAN) will be attending, in a show of support to the Rockland County, NY rally organizers.
The rally will run from noon to 2 PM. A brief program is scheduled to being at 12:30, with remarks from elected officials, followed by an open forum for citizens to comment.
More information is available at www.quietrockland.com.
Media
Contact:
Cynthia Artin
845 304 3790

FAA Administrator To Work For Aviation
Industry As Lobbyist!!! WASHINGTON, Aug 21 (Reuters) - The administrator
of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration was named chief executive of the
Aerospace Industries Association on Tuesday, the top lobbying group for
aerospace manufacturers. Marion Blakey's five-year term at FAA ends on Sept. 13.
She will remain with the agency until that time, a spokeswoman said. Blakey will
succeed John Douglass, who has led the trade organization since 1998. Blakey's
successor at FAA has not been named. AIA members include Boeing Co. (BA.N: Quote,
Profile, Research),
General Electric Co. (GE.N: Quote,
Profile, Research),
United Technologies Corp (UTX.N: Quote,
Profile,
Research),
Northrop Grumman Corp. (NOC.N: Quote,
Profile,
Research),
BAE Systems PLC (BA.L: Quote,
Profile, Research)
and Lockheed Martin (LMT.N: Quote,
Profile,
Research).
http://www.reuters.com/article/governmentFilingsNews/idUSN2139515220070821
1
Sen.
Schumer Says Port Authority Should Take it Slow At Stewart Airport: Washington
– US Senator Charles Schumer has some advice for the Port Authority of New
York and New Jersey as it prepares to assume operation of
Stewart
Airport at Newburgh this fall – don’t push anything down the community’s
throat. Schumer told MidHudsonNews.com that it is very important for the Port to
listen to the local people before it makes any changes at the airport. “The
one thing I say to the Port Authority is that you’ve got to work with the
community; you can’t just impose your will,” he said. “And while Stewart
is an important airport to the New York City metropolitan area, it’s also a
vital part of the area around Newburgh and Orange County and they can’t run
roughshod over community wishes. We won’t let them do that.” The Port
Authority expects to take over Stewart in early November. Editor's Note:
It is hard to believe that Sen. Schumer (AKA "Sen. Schemer") is not
just sending out more press releases that will make him sound like he really
cares about the people impacted by Stewart Airport. Chuck has been pushing for
Stewart Airport expansion for a long time as the picture on the upper right shows. Let
Schumer get a night time curfew on takeoffs and landings and I'll believe that
he really isn't behind the secret plan to make Stewart Airport into a giant air cargo
hub!!!
http://www.midhudsonnews.com/News/PA_Schumer-21Aug07.html
England: Week Long Airport Pollution
Protest Ends: The week-long camp that ended yesterday at London’s
Heathrow airport wasn’t your typical summer camp. Sure, as I wandered around
the camp on Friday there was an air of harmony and fun about the place. People
were cooking huge amounts of food, seminars were being held in marquees,
children cycled around on a pedal-powered moving sound system, and an older
resident was dealing most admirably with the compost toilets. The camp is
committed to creating as little carbon as possible all electricity was being
provided by wind turbines and solar panels. Welcome to Climate
Camp, set up last Tuesday north of Heathrow airport in protest against the
construction of a third runway there and the proposed expansion of a 20 other UK
airports. The camp hosted a series of scientific workshops and protests
that ended Sunday with a peaceful demonstration and a blockade of BAA
headquarters (the company that owns Heathrow airport and six other airports in
the country). More than 2,000 protesters were expected to mark out the
3-kilometer stretch of land set aside for a third runway and then surround BAA's
offices near the airport for the next 24 hours, or “as long as possible.”
http://www.plentymag.com/thecurrent/2007/08/grand_finale_at_the_heathrow_c.php
Massachusetts: Who Will Get Logan Airport's
Noise? A new Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) proposal for airplanes departing
to the southwest from Logan International Airport could increase noise and
undermine the possibility of input from affected communities, according to
JP’s representative on the
Logan Airport Community Advisory Council (CAC).
The
proposed plan is to “fan” airplanes departing from runways 27 and 33L. It
would mean pilots would be able to depart from runway 27 at anywhere from
approximately 270 degrees, which would send them flying just north of Boylston
Street heading out of Kenmore Square, to 235 degrees, down the Southwest
Corridor toward Forest Hills Station, said Anastasia Lyman, JP’s
representative on the CAC. The proposal is part of phase two of an overflight
noise abatement study for communities surrounding Logan Airport being undertaken
by the FAA, in consultation with the CAC. Phase two of the study specifically
considers measures that would require environmental impact assessments because
of their potential noise impact. Brian Glasscock, head of the City of Boston’s
Environment Department, said, as he understands it, the FAA will not move
forward with any plan the CAC does not approve. Various city staff members,
including a representative from the Mayor’s Office, are tracking the progress
of the CAC, Glasscock said. http://jamaicaplaingazette.com/node/1798
http://www.thebostonchannel.com/news/13874630/detail.html
Editor's Note: The FAA fairly "fan" planes? That won't happen.
They know the best way is to concentrate flights over selected communities
(usually poor, minority and politically powerless). They love to use phony local
Community Advisory Councils to make routing decisions (which should be based on
health and fairness, not local politics) for them.
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Important Aviation News Stories This Week
Heathrow is already the busiest international airport on earth. The new runway and the terminal and approach roads it needs would demolish around 1,200 homes; one primary school will be flattened; six others will be permanently blighted by noise. Separated from the rest of Heathrow, this would, in effect, be a second airport.
The government hopes to have the new airport built "as soon as practicable" on the grounds that it will "generate the largest direct net economic benefits of any new runway". The Times reveals that BAA has been allowed to influence the tests that will determine whether or not the runway would breach the legal limits for pollution and noise. The government has also given the company the results of its air pollution studies, while withholding them from the public.
It seems pretty obvious that this scheme could go ahead only if the government is prepared to rip up both its agreements with the public and the European Union's pollution laws. When Heathrow's fifth terminal was approved, a planning condition capped the number of flights using the airport at 480,000 a year. The new runway would raise them to 720,000. BAA also wants to end the "alternation agreement" that regulates flights at Heathrow's existing runways: planes leaving the airport currently switch directions at 3pm in order to give the people of west London a break from the noise. If the policy changes, the airport could take a further 72,000 flights a year.
The government has promised that the area of land subject to noise levels that the World Health Organisation defines as causing "serious annoyance" (57 decibels or more) will not increase. But its own forecasts suggest the new runway will expand this zone by at least 12%. This is almost certainly an underestimate, which is perhaps why it has refused to publish maps of the flight paths to and from a third runway. A consortium of local authorities has drawn up its own maps. They show a massive northern expansion of the noise zone, sweeping over much of London and the counties to the west of Heathrow.
The airlines say that they will make their planes quieter in order to meet the government's promise. But they also say they will make them more efficient to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, and the method favoured by some of them is to swap the current engine design for "open rotor" turbines, which are much noisier. They can't have it both ways.
Already the planes and their associated traffic have been breaching the European Union's limits for nitrogen dioxide pollution, which suggests that current airport activities are unlawful (remember that when you hear ministers fulminating about our illegal protest). Now we are expected to believe that air pollutants can be reduced to a level below the legal limits while the number of flights almost doubles. It looks as though our civil servants will be busy with what they call "statistical interpretations of the target". The rest of us call it lying.
Camping in the fields north of the airport over the past week, I found that I fell asleep promptly at 11, when the flights mostly ceased, and woke - despite my wax ear plugs - promptly at six, when they resumed. My throat swelled and my eyes itched, and I am sure that my headache was not just the result of a few too many bottles of Pitfield's Eco Warrior. Even if we were to put climate change to one side, who can honestly claim that new runways, for all their economic benefits, improve the quality of our lives? A pall of skull-scraping misery hangs over the catchment area of every major airport. But the business plan cannot be faulted: the more hellish our lives become, the more we seek to escape from them.
Of course we cannot put climate change to one side. In a previous article I showed that, depending on whether you believe the government's figures or those produced by academic researchers, by 2050 the greenhouse gases produced by the UK's air passengers will equate to between 91% and 258% of the carbon dioxide the government says the whole economy should be producing. Its airport expansion plans, in conjunction with those of other nations, will cause runaway climate change even if we were to spend the rest of our lives shivering in the dark. So much for the economic benefits of new runways.
The people seeking to prevent this expansion know that when the government supports a development, explaining your objections at its public inquiries is about as much use as shaking your fist at the sky. An elaborate theatre of consultation and democracy is designed only to hide the fact that the decision has already been made.
So what else do the critics of direct action expect us to do? How else do they suggest we drag this issue out of the shadows and thrust it to the front of the public mind?
We did not get everything right. The media strategy was hopeless: sympathetic journalists were excluded, while unsympathetic journalists went undercover and stayed in the camp for as long as they wanted. But in other respects it was better organised, more democratic and more disciplined than any I have seen before. It drew on the protests of the 1990s but introduced two new elements: much better logistics and a model of popular democracy imported from Latin America.
All the facilities that 1,500 people would need - including running water, sanitation, hot food twice a day, banks of computers and walkie-talkies, stage lighting, sound systems, even a cinema - were set up in a few hours on unfamiliar ground, in the teeth of police blockades. A system of affinity groups and neighbourhoods, feeding their decisions upwards to general meetings, permitted a genuine participatory democracy of the kind that you will never encounter in British public life. The actions themselves were disciplined and remained non-violent, even when the police got heavy. I left the camp on Sunday evening convinced that a new political movement has been born.
We haven't prevented runaway climate change by camping beside Heathrow and by surrounding the offices of BAA, and nor did we expect to do so. But we have made it harder for Alf Pereira and the other invisible people to be swept aside, and harder for the government to forget that its plan for perpetual growth in corporate utopia is also a plan for the destruction of life on earth.