Surf City to get chance to air flight concerns
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Jenny Marder
Surf City residents irritated by noisy planes soaring overhead to and
from Long Beach Airport will get a chance to vent their frustration
during a community meeting next week.
Officials from the Federal Aviation Administration, Jet Blue
Airlines and the Long Beach Airport will attend the July 31 meeting
to provide information and answer questions about flight patterns,
aircraft altitude levels and air traffic noise.
North Huntington resident Robert Seidel plans to ask whether the
commercial planes could fly at a higher altitude to cut back on
noise. The loud screeching of planes wakes up Seidel’s 3-year-old
daughter, he said, and disturbs her sleep pattern. He also wants to
know whether planes could change their flight path to avoid
residential areas.
“The noise is the biggest problem,” Seidel said. “If they were a
little higher, they might not be as loud.”
Next week’s meeting is a follow-up to an April 21 City Council
study session led by Long Beach Airport officials that triggered a
stream of questions and complaints about noise pollution and
low-flying planes from folks who live underneath the airport’s flight
path.
“After we had the community meeting, there were lots of
questions,” said Sharon Diggs-Jackson, spokeswoman for the Long Beach
Airport. “We made a commitment that we would identify representatives
from FAA and Jet Blue that could come and answer their specific
questions.”
The Long Beach Airport has grown so quickly over the past two
years that it has been dubbed the fastest growing airport in the
country, Long Beach Airport Manager Kris Kunze said at the April
meeting. Airline capacity has more than doubled since 2001, thanks to
the arrival of Jet Blue Airlines, which snatched up all of the
available slots.
Since April, the number of daily commercial flights for planes
exceeding 75,000 pounds has jumped from 37 to 40. The cap is now set
at 41.
“We don’t expect to be at 41 until December,” Diggs-Jackson said.
Nance Neilan, a 16-year resident, is another among those who has
noticed the increasing flight activity, and she, too, wants to find
out from officials if there’s any way to muffle the noise. Even with
double-paned windows, she says, she can hear the planes overhead.
“I love leaving from the Long Beach Airport because it’s so
convenient,” she said. “But if they just weren’t so loud.”
The meeting will be held at 7 p.m. July 31 in rooms C and D of the
Huntington Central Library, at 7111 Talbert Avenue. For more
information, contact Diggs-Jackson at (562) 570-2636.
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