What a wonderful world
this would be if all things could be viewed through the rose-colored glasses of
the proponents of the Peotone Airport.
News continues to be
manufactured by the Illinois Department of Transportation in its push for
Peotone, or South Suburban Airport, (SSA). Funny, it is always positive.
Imagine that! Since I began studying this proposal in 1988, ‘spinning’ the news
has been IDOT’s long held practice.
Take IDOT’s latest
press release, dated Nov. 10, touting the approval of its Facility Requirements
Report of the SSA Master Plan.
“Approval of the
Facility Requirements Report is a critical step in the SSA Master Plan
process,” says Susan Shea, director of the Illinois Division of Aeronautics.
Shea continued, “FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) has now agreed to what should be built at SSA and this
further demonstrates FAA’s continued support of the South Suburban Airport.”
That is like saying
finding your car keys is a critical step in driving your car. But to hear IDOT
tell the story, it would be as if this one document was the precursor to a
Record of Decision on Peotone. Nothing could be farther from the truth. IDOT
never tells the whole story, but rather their hand-picked version to showcase
their project in the best possible light.
For example the
Facilities Requirements Report, which outlines the basics of the facility is
just one of so many documents needed to develop a master plan. I recall the
talk about a master plan in 1987 when the first airport study was approved. It
is all a part of a process that must occur before the FAA can determine whether
or not Peotone is worth doing or not. The latest submission doesn’t even
include the airport’s official layout.
The reality is that
IDOT is playing catch-up in readying for its new and improved airport layout
plan, which is yet to be submitted. I wonder how many different plans IDOT has
submitted to the FAA over all these years.
In this instance, it
seems they finally hit on something the FAA can agree with. Honestly, this is like
an annoying kid who accompanies his mother to the grocery store. You know that
kid. He kicks his hands and feet from his perch in the grocery cart. He
screams, causes a real ruckus and embarrasses his mother. He wants candy. She
finally gives in just to shut him up.
Mundane or not, this
submission results in another glowing press release by IDOT. It was apparently
enough to inspire yet another over-zealous editorial by the Southtown
Star, Tuesday, Nov. 29, a long time advocate for a new airport at Peotone. The
paper quoted IDOT spokesman Guy Tridgell, a former editorial writer for
the Southtown Star before he was recruited by IDOT, who called
the FAA approval “a huge step.”
The latest approval by
IDOT is not really that big of a deal, since it is required to be submitted
before the airport layout plan, which has yet to be submitted, let alone
approved.
Remember the last time
IDOT submitted an airport layout plan in 2008—well actually two plans. IDOT
officials thought they were being clever trying to entice the FAA into doing
its dirty work. IDOT expected the agency to solve the bickering between
Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. and Will County officials in their dueling
airport plans. Each had a different idea about how the airport should be
designed and run. So, IDOT submitted both plans to the agency.
Apparently the FAA’s
purview doesn’t include solving petty political squabbles, so they returned the
documents to IDOT telling them to submit just one preferred plan.
But that isn’t all.
Another example of IDOT’s ‘spin’ came earlier this year with the FAA’s approval
of airport activity forecasts. In March, IDOT issued a press release stating
the FAA approved its aeronautical forecasts. Using the same crystal ball that
IDOT has been carrying around since the late 1980’s IDOT’s numbers finally fit
the margin of acceptance for the FAA.
“This is truly a
significant accomplishment,” says Susan Shea…”FAA’s approval of our forecasts
validates the need to develop airport facilities that will serve the south
suburban greater Chicagoland area.”
Oh please, the reality
of the FAA’s position was outlined in a letter to Susan Shea, dated March 23,
2011.
In the letter signed
by James G. Keefer, Manager of the Chicago Airports District Office, Keefer
wrote, “We believe these levels project passenger, cargo and general aviation
demand and aviation activity at reasonable levels and outline the risk
associated with a proposed new airport such as SSA.”
Keefer referred to the
following levels of operations:
--Low-case for
passenger operations
--Low-case for cargo
operations
--High-case for
general aviation operations.
It has been stated, but is
worth reiterating that Bult Field, a privately operated general aviation
facility which IDOT initially tried to prevent from becoming operational, must
be incorporated into SSA to make it viable.
If passenger and cargo
operations at SSA are projected to be low, general aviation operations are
projected to be high, and Bult Field already handles general aviation—isn’t
that further evidence that another new airport is simply not needed?
It seems to me that
Bult Field is not for sale, and if it were, could IDOT afford it?
I guess that too would
depend on IDOT’s ‘spin.’