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#1
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After hurricanes and earthquakes, it appears that often the airports
become operable before highways and railroads for emergency supplies. It seems to me that a reasonable (required?) part of ANY community planning for emergencies in areas subject to these kinds of disasters should be thoughtful location of a small airport with 1 runway and plenty of area for parking while unloading. Perhaps "thoughtful" combined with political action is an oxymoron, however. |
#2
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Not for Katrina, the FAA had to truck in equipment before opening some
of the airports. The relief types have said that nothing beats the bandwidth of 18 wheelers which go directly where needed such as the Superdome where despite what was reported in the media FEMA delivered food and water Monday afternoon. can be a "Paul kgyy" wrote in message ups.com... After hurricanes and earthquakes, it appears that often the airports become operable before highways and railroads for emergency supplies. It seems to me that a reasonable (required?) part of ANY community planning for emergencies in areas subject to these kinds of disasters should be thoughtful location of a small airport with 1 runway and plenty of area for parking while unloading. Perhaps "thoughtful" combined with political action is an oxymoron, however. |
#3
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Except for when the 18 wheelers go to Ft Lauderdale and run out of fuel. No
electricity means no working gas pumps. "sfb" wrote in message news:P67af.8809$N73.5346@trnddc04... Not for Katrina, the FAA had to truck in equipment before opening some of the airports. The relief types have said that nothing beats the bandwidth of 18 wheelers which go directly where needed such as the Superdome where despite what was reported in the media FEMA delivered food and water Monday afternoon. can be a "Paul kgyy" wrote in message ups.com... After hurricanes and earthquakes, it appears that often the airports become operable before highways and railroads for emergency supplies. It seems to me that a reasonable (required?) part of ANY community planning for emergencies in areas subject to these kinds of disasters should be thoughtful location of a small airport with 1 runway and plenty of area for parking while unloading. Perhaps "thoughtful" combined with political action is an oxymoron, however. |
#4
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 Paul kgyy wrote: After hurricanes and earthquakes, it appears that often the airports become operable before highways and railroads for emergency supplies. It seems to me that a reasonable (required?) part of ANY community planning for emergencies in areas subject to these kinds of disasters should be thoughtful location of a small airport with 1 runway and plenty of area for parking while unloading. Perhaps "thoughtful" combined with political action is an oxymoron, however. On a side note to this, I really like what Paul Freeman has been doing in charting/finding all the old abandoned/unused airfields and showing them on his site. He has the mindset that outside the history of the field in question, if he is ever in a bind and needs to land and can't make it to the closest active field, he could put down at one that has been abandoned or not used anymore, and consider it no small sacrifice. Granted, there would be investigations and such with it, but hey, he could land, and walk away with his life, which is good. His site is at http://www.airfields-freeman.com . It's a pretty good read, and he keeps it rather updated. Perhaps those communities in the planning stages that happen to be in/around an old airfield may take this into consideration. BL. - -- Brad Littlejohn | Email: Unix Systems Administrator, | Web + NewsMaster, BOFH.. Smeghead! ![]() PGP: 1024D/E319F0BF 6980 AAD6 7329 E9E6 D569 F620 C819 199A E319 F0BF -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.2 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFDaQWqyBkZmuMZ8L8RAplBAKCVgFYSMu/ZCI5ojP3E+tK5dwRKwACeP+kt DkoBr3mrDiKi76j32SHuJyU= =IcsD -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#5
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If mankind lets a failure stop progress, the wheel would yet to be
invented. "Steve Foley" wrote in message news:li7af.2592$Ar5.367@trndny01... Except for when the 18 wheelers go to Ft Lauderdale and run out of fuel. No electricity means no working gas pumps. "sfb" wrote in message news:P67af.8809$N73.5346@trnddc04... Not for Katrina, the FAA had to truck in equipment before opening some of the airports. The relief types have said that nothing beats the bandwidth of 18 wheelers which go directly where needed such as the Superdome where despite what was reported in the media FEMA delivered food and water Monday afternoon. can be a "Paul kgyy" wrote in message ups.com... After hurricanes and earthquakes, it appears that often the airports become operable before highways and railroads for emergency supplies. It seems to me that a reasonable (required?) part of ANY community planning for emergencies in areas subject to these kinds of disasters should be thoughtful location of a small airport with 1 runway and plenty of area for parking while unloading. Perhaps "thoughtful" combined with political action is an oxymoron, however. |
#6
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I think I need to know your definition of a GA airport. Your earlier post
regarding GA security was clearly at an air carrier airport. Now you're talking about turbo props and jets. My idea of a GA airport is a 1900 foot strip with a gas pump. "Skylune" wrote in message lkaboutaviation.com... This whole argument again demonstrates the schizophrenia affecting the industry. On the one hand, GA airports don't need security or ADIZs because of the limited payload of the planes (AOPA BS of course, since jets and turbo props are GA planes). On the other hand, more airports s/b built to move supplies in the event of national emegency. Outstanding! How much good did light GA do after Katrina (yeah, some one off stories about Angel Flights are easy enough to Google, but what about real relief to thousands? Light aircraft are useless. Trucks, large cargo transport planes, or military HELICOPTERs are the way to go here. Small planes are mostly for training, amusement, or crop dusting in most of the lower 48. I can see such an argument for very remote areas such as Alaska. Of course, my tax $ are going to build a bridge in Ketchikan, so maybe... |
#7
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"Skylune" wrote in
lkaboutaviation.com: by A Guy Called Tyketto Nov 2, 2005 at 06:30 PM -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Paul kgyy wrote: After hurricanes and earthquakes, it appears that often the airports become operable before highways and railroads for emergency supplies. Snipola I don't know what you use to post your messages with, but there is nothing in your messages delineating quoted messages and your own content. As you can see by my own post, the newsreader automatically puts in '' symbols to indicate what is a quote. You're messages are difficult to read due to that lack of this. One has to scan the whole message trying to find where the previous quote ends and your new message begins. If someone reads your message without having read the previous one that you quoted, they will have no way to know what text is yours or not. People may erroneously attribute text to you that you did not write. Brian -- http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? Supernews sucks - blocking google, usenet.com & newsfeeds.com posts |
#8
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by "Steve Foley" Nov 2, 2005 at 08:01 PM
I think I need to know your definition of a GA airport. Your earlier post regarding GA security was clearly at an air carrier airport. Now you're talking about turbo props and jets. My idea of a GA airport is a 1900 foot strip with a gas pump." Steve: I like your definition much better than the FAAs! Huge budget savings would result from a simple redefinition of GA airports (those with short grass strips). That would help the FAA budget tremendously, and maybe would eliminate the argument for FAA user fees! |
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