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FLAV8R
March 13th 07, 10:21 PM
I was searching for an airport I flew out of (9A7) back around the early
90's and when I found the area on Google maps it had been converted to a
prison.
But if you use Live Search their images are about 10 years older and you can
clearly see where the airport was.
This was a little mom and pop airfield in Jonesboro, Georgia that only have
a few planes in the pattern per week.
But many of the local residents complained about the noise those nasty
little planes were making and so the County of Clayton consolidated the
airport further south closer to the
Atlanta Motor Speedway.
I hope the residents are happy that the little airfield is gone replaced by
the sirens of escaping prisoners.


Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ... Sorry, I just can't help myself.

David

Marco Leon
March 14th 07, 07:40 PM
Sounds like something AOPA might want to put in their presentations on
airport closures. If you're a member, you should drop them a note.

Marco



"FLAV8R" > wrote in message
...
>I was searching for an airport I flew out of (9A7) back around the early
>90's and when I found the area on Google maps it had been converted to a
>prison.
> But if you use Live Search their images are about 10 years older and you
> can clearly see where the airport was.
> This was a little mom and pop airfield in Jonesboro, Georgia that only
> have a few planes in the pattern per week.
> But many of the local residents complained about the noise those nasty
> little planes were making and so the County of Clayton consolidated the
> airport further south closer to the
> Atlanta Motor Speedway.
> I hope the residents are happy that the little airfield is gone replaced
> by the sirens of escaping prisoners.
>
>
> Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ... Sorry, I just can't help myself.
>
> David
>

FLAV8R
March 14th 07, 10:42 PM
"Marco Leon" > wrote in message ...
> Sounds like something AOPA might want to put in their presentations on
> airport closures. If you're a member, you should drop them a note.
>
> Marco
>
You might be right...
Here's a link from Live Search that shows what the area looked like back in
the mid 90's:
http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=2&cp=33.506168~-84.359009&style=h&lvl=17&tilt=-90&dir=0&alt=-1000&scene=7184144

Here's a link to Google maps and what the area looks like now.
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=Jonesboro,+GA&layer=&ie=UTF8&z=17&ll=33.505045,-84.357512&spn=0.005216,0.015213&t=k&om=1

You can clearly see the new prison in place of the old airport and also
displaced
is an aviation maintenance school.

David

Sylvain
March 15th 07, 12:13 AM
FLAV8R wrote:
> You can clearly see the new prison in place of the old airport and also
> displaced

out of curiosity, what is the impact on a neighborhood of having a
prison nearby? I mean, (i) it is not as if the new residents are seen
too often; (ii) there might be some positive downfall for the community,
such as new taxes (iii) and (I have no idea what I am talking about here,
bear with me) there might be some political advantage to having a larger
headcount without much of a downside (in addition to not being seen,
they won't be voting or having any influence on how said community is
run).

--Sylvain

FLAV8R
March 15th 07, 01:26 AM
"Sylvain" > wrote in message ...
> FLAV8R wrote:
>> You can clearly see the new prison in place of the old airport and also
>> displaced
>
> out of curiosity, what is the impact on a neighborhood of having a
> prison nearby?
> --Sylvain
>
If I was in the market for a new home I would not pick one so close
to a prison.
But if you told me there was an airstrip near by I might pay more for
the house than I'd otherwise would.
So I guess the house close to a prison would be worth less than one
next to a small airstrip to most Americans.

David

Morgans[_2_]
March 15th 07, 01:27 AM
> out of curiosity, what is the impact on a neighborhood of having a
> prison nearby? I mean, (i) it is not as if the new residents are seen
> too often; (ii) there might be some positive downfall for the community,
> such as new taxes (iii) and (I have no idea what I am talking about here,
> bear with me) there might be some political advantage to having a larger
> headcount without much of a downside (in addition to not being seen,
> they won't be voting or having any influence on how said community is
> run).


I see no downsides, if all of the prisoners stay put. That is the big if.

If they do get out, they are looking to steal a car, and get out of town.
You hope you are not in the way of that happening.

I work near a max security federal prison. It brings a lot of jobs to the
area. Residents do not seem to be overly concerned about it being in the
area.
--
Jim in NC

Marco Leon
March 15th 07, 03:03 PM
If you go to the live.com site, just click on the "Bird's Eye View" icon on
the legend to the left. Great view of the prison. Also, it looks like it
went up pretty quickly because there are about six aircraft still "stranded"
at a hangar! Could this be one of Chicago's King Daley's side projects??

And yes, I know these aircraft are probably not flyable...

Marco



"FLAV8R" > wrote in message
...
> "Marco Leon" > wrote in message ...
>> Sounds like something AOPA might want to put in their presentations on
>> airport closures. If you're a member, you should drop them a note.
>>
>> Marco
>>
> You might be right...
> Here's a link from Live Search that shows what the area looked like back
> in the mid 90's:
> http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=2&cp=33.506168~-84.359009&style=h&lvl=17&tilt=-90&dir=0&alt=-1000&scene=7184144
>
> Here's a link to Google maps and what the area looks like now.
> http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=Jonesboro,+GA&layer=&ie=UTF8&z=17&ll=33.505045,-84.357512&spn=0.005216,0.015213&t=k&om=1
>
> You can clearly see the new prison in place of the old airport and also
> displaced
> is an aviation maintenance school.
>
> David
>

Dana M. Hague
March 15th 07, 11:39 PM
On Wed, 14 Mar 2007 21:26:07 -0400, "FLAV8R" >
wrote:

>But if you told me there was an airstrip near by I might pay more for
>the house than I'd otherwise would.
>So I guess the house close to a prison would be worth less than one
>next to a small airstrip to most Americans.

No, the way it works for most Americans:

1. Buy cheap due to "airport noise".
2. Complain about noise until airport closes.
3. Complain about increased traffic from new shopping mall.

-Dana
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Sylvain
March 16th 07, 12:48 AM
Dana M. Hague <d(dash)m(dash)hague(at)comcast(dot)net> wrote:

> No, the way it works for most Americans:
>
> 1. Buy cheap due to "airport noise".
> 2. Complain about noise until airport closes.
> 3. Complain about increased traffic from new shopping mall.

I thought the idea was:

1. Buy cheap due to "airport noise".
2. Complain about noise until airport closes.
3. Sell house with a profit.
4. repeat...

--Sylvain

Andrew Sarangan
March 16th 07, 04:02 PM
On Mar 14, 8:13 pm, Sylvain > wrote:
> FLAV8R wrote:
> > You can clearly see the new prison in place of the old airport and also
> > displaced
>
> out of curiosity, what is the impact on a neighborhood of having a
> prison nearby? I mean, (i) it is not as if the new residents are seen
> too often; (ii) there might be some positive downfall for the community,
> such as new taxes (iii) and (I have no idea what I am talking about here,
> bear with me) there might be some political advantage to having a larger
> headcount without much of a downside (in addition to not being seen,
> they won't be voting or having any influence on how said community is
> run).
>
> --Sylvain

There are a lots of other things you can do to significantly raise
taxes - garbage dumping sites, nuclear waste disposal, prisons, rehab
facilities, none of which are viewed as a positive thing for a
community.

Nevertheless, this is a very interesting contrast. An airport is a
symbol of freedom, and a prison is just the opposite.

B A R R Y[_2_]
March 17th 07, 12:12 AM
Dana M. Hague wrote:
>
> No, the way it works for most Americans:
>
> 1. Buy cheap due to "airport noise".
> 2. Complain about noise until airport closes.
> 3. Complain about increased traffic from new shopping mall.

Real estate agent's advertising translation:

1.) Close to transportation.

2.) Up and coming redevelopment zone.

3.) Close to shopping.

Margy Natalie
March 20th 07, 09:07 PM
Sylvain wrote:
> FLAV8R wrote:
>
>>You can clearly see the new prison in place of the old airport and also
>>displaced
>
>
> out of curiosity, what is the impact on a neighborhood of having a
> prison nearby? I mean, (i) it is not as if the new residents are seen
> too often; (ii) there might be some positive downfall for the community,
> such as new taxes (iii) and (I have no idea what I am talking about here,
> bear with me) there might be some political advantage to having a larger
> headcount without much of a downside (in addition to not being seen,
> they won't be voting or having any influence on how said community is
> run).
>
> --Sylvain
>
Usually prisons as government entities do not pay taxes. Property
values drop way down near prisons.

Margy

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