I have access to al of the mission documents of the Leading Lady, it will take some effort to compile all of it. I will do so if the is an interest from readers. If so please comment.
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Thursday, December 31, 2015
Thursday, May 21, 2015
AUTOPILOT
Looking back at the management decisions of the city in
regards to the airport you have to wonder, what were these clowns thinking?
The results of the actions of the city demonstrate one very
clear point; they cannot do the wrong things in the right way. What are the wrong things? The steady and steep rise in hangar rates that
have led the airport into financial ruin is the most obvious. When AirEvac was going to experience the
same rate increase as the fixed wings, they left. There are five tenants remaining, and the
city is refusing to rent hangars. The
airport could easily be experiencing an income of over $20,000 a year, but it
is more like $10,000 due to the management decisions of the city. This is not difficult to understand, it is on
the level of grades school math. So this
leads to the obvious conclusion that this must be intentional.
One thing is very clear, the airport would be better off,
and so would the city, if no one was managing the airport. It would be costing the city less money to
just let it go on by itself.
The city has needlessly created a financial burden on the taxpayers;
will this just be considered part of the cost of closing it? The city claims that it is responsible to the
taxpayers of St. Clair and there for are justified in its management
practices. The results of the city
actions, demonstrates the lack of aviation knowledge, lack of understanding of
the law, and the lack knowledge of just plain common sense and good business
practices. This may not be so much a
lack of knowledge, but just an intentional disregard for them, to justify an
end result.
The St. Clair Airport has received national attention due to
these management practices. This blog is
being read by eight FAA offices from Maine to California, the Department of Transportation
in DC, and the DOJ in DC.
The fact that the city would deliberately break the law to
close the airport is not surprising, but what is surprising, and should be
disturbing to the taxpayers of St. Clair, is that they probably thought that no
one would notice.
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
WHO IS GOING TO BUY IT?
All this has been said by the city, the mayor, or the local
news publication at some time in the past.
It kind of started out like this.
I have a developer standing by to develop the airport.
The city will make 2 million a year in sales taxes.
The airport will clear the way for much needed retail development
in St. Clair.
When asked, what is plan “b” if plan “a” does not work? Plan “b” is to make plan “a” work.
We are going to sell the airport.
We are going to market the airport.
One thing is certain, if the city had a buyer, everyone
would know about it.
The tenants at the airport have been accused of holding the
city hostage, this ludicrous propaganda, when in reality, the economic facts of
the retail economy is holding the city hostage.
But look at Chesterfield! The
cold hard fact is, St. Clair is not Chesterfield. The city can try and make plan “a” work, as
much as it wants too, but the question still needs to be answered, what happens
if the city cannot sell the airport?
The passing of the St. Clair Airport closure law does not
guarantee the closure. But it does bring
the question to the front of the issue.
Where is your buyer? After almost
ten years of trying to find a developer, one has to start to think that a
shopping center in today’s retail climate is not going to happen.
Thursday, May 7, 2015
EXISTING TENANTS
(3) Existing
Tenants. The City is responsible to develop a plan for the relocation of
existing airport tenants to surrounding airports.
Let’s look at this. From 5190.6b page 1-3 and 4.
The airport system envisioned in
the first National Airport Plan, issued in 1946, has been
developed and nurtured by close
cooperation between federal, state, and local agencies. The
general principles guiding
federal involvement2
have
remained largely unchanged for the
National Plan of Integrated
Airport Systems (NPIAS); the airport system should have the
following attributes to meet the
demand for air transportation:
The airport system should be extensive,
providing as many people as possible with convenient access to air transportation,
typically not more than 20 miles of travel to the nearest NPIAS airport.
I don’t think the FAA
will accept a plan from the city that states the existing tenants will have
thirty days to vacate. What will an
acceptable plan consist of? Let’s look
at the Washington Airport. They recently
built as many hangars as they could, due to real-estate restrictions, and they
also have a waiting list. Will the
existing tenants at St. Clair be given preference over the people on that
waiting list? If not and there are five people
on that list, will Washington need to build enough hangars for the waiting list
and the existing tenants at St. Clair?
Washington probably has a capital improvement plan for the future, does
that plan include new hangars for the St. Clair tenants? Where will the real-estate for the hangars
come from? Will the Washington Airport
have to amend its capital improvement plan? How will St. Clair interact with the
Washington Capital Improvement Plan?
What will the process entail for the Washington Airport to purchase more
land, amend its future plans, and form a contract with St. Clair. Will St. Clair have to provide funding for
this process before the sale of the airport property? Will St. Clair have to provide proof that it
has the funds to carry out such a plan? Will
the placement of the St. Clair tenants take place after the capital improvement
plan in place at Washington has been completed?
How long will that take? Will the city receive enough from the sale of
the airport to fund this kind of plan?
If they don’t receive enough, where will the money come from, the City
of St. Clair? Will the city be able to
fund an acceptable FAA plan without having a buyer for the airport? Even if the city does come up with a buyer,
how will NEPA play out?
Does the city of St.
Clair have an understanding of the complex nature of this kind of situation?
THIRTY DAYS TO VACATE
A letter dated April 7th, signed by Jim Johnson
of the Central Region Airports Office in Kansas City was sent to the city of
St. Clair. This letter describes the
conditions under which the FAA will grant a closure. What is surprising is that there has been
nothing reported on this in any of the local news publications. You would think that this would be published
as “BREAKING NEWS”. The long awaited
documentation from the FAA has arrived, and no mention of this by the
city. Maybe the newspaper does not know about
it. After reading the latest article in
the local news publication, one would think that the city is still waiting for the
Federal Aviation Administration to provide the closure process. The article also makes one to believe that
when the letter does arrive, the tenants will have thirty days to vacate the
property. This is the second time this has been
published, and raises the question, why does this seem to be important enough
to be repeated?
Let’s look
at this situation from another view, like what the FAA states in the April 7th
letter.
In furtherance of the Public Law, I
am writing to identify the final steps that the City must take before the
Federal Aviation Administration can execute a release from Federal obligations
for the Airport. MoDOT, as FAA's representative in the State of Missouri, will
be responsible for managing the Implementation Plan discussed below.
(3) Existing
Tenants. The City is responsible to develop a plan for the relocation of
existing airport tenants to surrounding airports.
It appears here that the tenants will
be relocated to another airport, before the FAA authorizes closure, and there
will be no one left at the St. Clair Regional Airport to give thirty days
notice to vacate the premises.
NO HANGAR FOR YOU
The city seems to be a little reluctant to rent hangars at
the airport, claiming that proof of ownership must be provided before a hangar
can be rented. The following paragraph
from the hangar lease describes the conditions for the use of a hangar.
2. Lessee shall utilize the
Premises for the sole purpose of storage of the aircraft identified
above, or any aircraft that
Lessee has control of, or in Lessee's possession. The Lessee will have
the right to conduct any non-commercial aeronautical
activity as defined by the FAA.
An aircraft does not have a title, when an individual
purchases an aircraft, they receive a signed bill of sale from the previous owner,
and the bill of sale is sent to Oklahoma City with a registration application. The
registration process can take ten days to several weeks at the least. If the aircraft has never been registered, or
is an ultralight aircraft without an N-number there will be no record of the
aircraft in the FAA database.
The key phrase here is, or any aircraft that
Lessee has control of, or in Lessee's possession. Proof of ownership is not
required. So what is the city doing
here? Is the city trying to keep
potential tenants off the airport? Is
the city trying to keep the airport from collecting more revenue? This would not make any sense after the city
complains that the airport is losing money.
Why would the city take steps to keep the airport from being more self
sustaining?
Did the city investigate the ownership of any other aircraft
stored on the airport in the past? Has
anyone else been told that they must provide proof of ownership in the past
before they can occupy a hangar?
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