TAXIWAY EXTENSION CONSIDERED PROPOSAL WOULD IMPROVE BOB HOPE AIRPORT SAFETY.Byline: Alex Dobuzinskis Staff Writer BURBANK - Extending a taxiway taxiway: see airport. at the Bob Hope Airport Bob Hope Airport (IATA: BUR, ICAO: KBUR, FAA LID: BUR) is a regional and national airport located in Burbank, California, United States. It was formerly known as United Airport (1930-1934); Union Air Terminal (1934-1940); as part of a proposed agreement with Burbank would make the airport safer but not allow for more flights, a report to be released today says. The extended taxiway would allow general-aviation aircraft to quickly get off the runway runway: see airport. , instead of taxiing back along a segment of it and potentially blocking other planes from landing. ``It's primarily a safety improvement. It really does Warren Trotter, better known as Really Doe, is an American rapper from Chicago, Illinois. He is affiliated with Kanye West and his G.O.O.D. Music family and label. Discography Songs
The report was prepared by the airport authority in cooperation with the city. It is required by the California Environmental Quality Act The California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) is a California law (California Public Resources Code section 21000 et seq.) passed in 1970, shortly after the Federal Government passed the National Environmental Policy Act. . The report evaluates other proposed changes at the airport, such as the acquisition and rearrangement re·ar·range tr.v. re·ar·ranged, re·ar·rang·ing, re·ar·rang·es To change the arrangement of. re of parking lots, that would be undertaken if a proposed agreement with the city is adopted. Because of concerns about airport expansion, the authority was barred for the past two years from doing significant improvements, such as extending a taxiway, without Burbank City Council approval. That moratorium A suspension of activity or an authorized period of delay or waiting. A moratorium is sometimes agreed upon by the interested parties, or it may be authorized or imposed by operation of law. expired ex·pire v. ex·pired, ex·pir·ing, ex·pires v.intr. 1. To come to an end; terminate: My membership in the club has expired. 2. last month, and Burbank and the airport are working on an agreement that would replace it. The agreement would prevent a new terminal from being built there for 10 years but allow the airport, at least temporarily, to retain land intended for its construction. The extended taxiway would be built along the east-west runway at the airport. It would cost between $3 million and $4 million, Feger said. To extend the taxiway, the airport would need to move a parking lot, which would cost another $3 million. ``The 1,650-foot-long section of taxiway would result in a safer and more efficient operation of the airfield at the airport,'' the report states. But Feger said that even if the airport becomes more efficient because of the addition, it will not increase its capacity to receive flights. Flights are spaced out enough to allow enough time for planes, if nothing goes wrong, to backtrack on the runway before another plane lands. Among the other changes at the airport outlined in the report are the proposed $42 million acquisition of Star Park, a privately owned parking lot near the terminal. An underpass would be built to allow for the movement of cars under a terminal loop road, allowing valet drivers to take cars to what is now the Star Park lot. The report also looks at a project to realign re·a·lign tr.v. re·a·ligned, re·a·lign·ing, re·a·ligns 1. To put back into proper order or alignment. 2. To make new groupings of or working arrangements between. the intersection intersection /in·ter·sec·tion/ (-sek´shun) a site at which one structure crosses another. intersection a site at which one structure crosses another. of Hollywood Way and Thornton Avenue to make the entrance safer. That project would take up to a 1 1/2 years to complete, and the airport initially proposed to pay for $300,000 of the project. The exact cost of the project is undetermined. Airport officials contend that the acquisition of the Star Park lot will eliminate the need for valet drivers to take cars between the terminal and a lot several blocks north on Hollywood Way, cutting down on air pollution. But City Councilman Todd Campbell said the airport should not have been allowed to do that anyway. ``It hasn't been enforced. At least to the extent where I think it should be,'' Campbell said, adding that ``to say that there's a benefit because you're not using something you're not supposed to be using is questionable in my mind.'' The public will have until Oct. 18 to comment on the report. Alex Dobuzinskis, (818) 546-3304 alex.dobuzinskis(at)dailynews.com |
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