Meeting on Monday to launch discussion

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Posted: Sunday, November 29, 2009 2:00 am | Updated: 5:24 pm, Mon Nov 30, 2009.

All sides of a Kalispell City Airport controversy that has been stewing in recent months will have a turn at the microphone on Monday night.

The Kalispell City Council will host a public scoping session at 7 p.m. in the Glacier Room at the Hilton Garden Inn, located at 1840 U.S. 93 South.

Lex Blood, a former Flathead Valley Community College professor and a longtime player in Flathead Valley environmental and nonprofit arenas, will facilitate the session.

Blood will field and clarify questions, while the City Council will be on hand to listen.

All comments that night and all letters submitted in advance or at the meeting will be entered into a permanent record.

The purpose of the session is to provide background information on the airport and register concerns and questions from the public. City Manager Jane Howington said a second scoping session is expected in January to provide answers and take further comment.

“The goal is to get information for the council to begin a dialog on how they begin to move forward when they feel they have enough information,” Howington said. There is no deadline to meet, she added.

At its Nov. 16 meeting, the council tabled a decision on qualifying Stelling Engineers as the new airport consultants. Stelling, the same firm that designed the U.S. 93 Alternate Route around Kalispell, has offices in Great Falls and Helena, and a new office in Kalispell.

Opponents say the city intends to expand the airport without regard to neighborhood concerns for noise and safety. Proponents point out a decision is yet to be made on a plan they hope will update the small general aviation airport and capitalize on its economic benefits to the city.

Kalispell City Airport, with its 43,000 operations a year, runs neck-and-neck with Hamilton’s municipal airport as the two busiest general-aviation airports in the state.

Kalispell Airport Manager Fred Leistiko has prepared a timeline for Monday’s session, outlining actions taken since the city bought 135 acres to establish the airport in 1928. It now stands at 75 acres, as land was sold over the years for business development.

The timeline shows that a 1979 Mini Master Plan presented an engineering firm’s recommendations — buy 8.8 aces of land, put a 2-inch asphalt overlay on the runway, build taxiways and lighted parking aprons, install a perimeter fence, extend the runway 800 feet, develop regulations and hire a manager.

In 1986 one of those was done — the asphalt overlay.

Six years later another study prompted the city to establish an Airport Neighborhood Plan and reiterate the Mini Master Plan recommendations.

A 1996 Kalispell City Airport Athletic Complex Redevelopment Plan Analysis focused on urban renewal and the need to move youth soccer and ball fields off airport property. More land was sold to fund Kidsports along U.S. 93 North, leaving 75 acres for the airport.

Robert Peccia and Associates was hired in 1996 to draw up the first-ever airport layout plan to meet safety requirements and do noise abatement. Federal Aviation Administration officials approved it and pledged 95 percent funding if the city carried out the steps.

An Airport Tax Increment Finance district was established in 1997 to pay for the work. That year the FAA also recommended hiring consulting engineers to do a feasibility and master plan study. Morrison Maierle engineers completed that study in 1999 and in November the city adopted the airport master plan.

The city then hired Peccia again for a site selection study, completed in July 2001. Five sites passed muster — avoiding mountains, Glacier Park International, wetlands, bird sanctuaries, and being accessible for utilities, police and fire protection. The city accepted 90 percent FAA funding for the $160,000 study and an environmental assessment.

In October 2002 public hearings were held and in December the assessment was completed and signed by the FAA. On the same day the government made a finding of no significant impact on the environment.

It approved buying 72 acres; building a 4,700-foot runway in separate stages; building a tie-down apron, parallel taxiways, connector taxiways and hangar access taxiways; installing runway lighting, beacons, wind indicators and a precision approach indicator for pilots to gauge their angle when landing; installing perimeter security fencing and access road; and removing or relocating the KGEZ Radio towers.

Following the assessment the city took a number of actions.

In 2003 it increased the fee structure at the airport. In 2004 it bought two parcels of land at the south end, changed terms of airport land leases to encourage hangar construction, and authorized the use of TIF funds to prepare a new ramp area.

In 2005 it issued $2 million in urban renewal airport tax increment revenue bonds. It proceeded with the first phase, upgrading the west side of the airport land and buying Red Eagle Aviation property on the east. Red Eagle now leases it back from the city.

But in 2008 the environmental assessment “ran out,” Leistiko explained, because the city had not taken action in some time and it didn’t appear it could make progress on relocating the KGEZ Radio towers.

Monday night’s session will formally launch the process of where to go from here. Howington said CDs will be available of the information presented.

More Coverage

  • ARTICLE: ‘Common man’s airport’
  • ARTICLE: Council delays vote on airport study
  • ARTICLE: Kalispell considers consultants for airport
  • ARTICLE: City airport action not imminent
  • Welcome to the discussion.

    4 comments:

    • maxwell

      maxwell Posts: 19

      How Barzaar, I THENK the noise of that big airport did affect you. But stupid is what stupid does. Are you sure you didn't move here when it was dark? Ha Ha

       
    • dragunwurk

      dragunwurk Posts: 2

      This airport, like so many other small airports, is facing the same problem. The airport needs to expand and yet in all the years it has been there the surrounding city has grown. At one time I lived in the flight path of a large airport but didn't complain. You may ask why I didn't complain? It's easy really I DIDN'T MOVE THERE WHEN IT WAS DARK !!!!!!!!!!! The airport was there long before almost all of the people who are now complaining about the noise. Didn't one of them realize it was there? Didn't they think that someday it might just have to expand? I think they moved there because the housing prices in these areas are generally lower! Yep go ahead and complain you knew where you were living and complaining because you made a bad choice and blaming the airport just shows either how stupid you are or how stupid you thenk everyone else is!!!

       
    • maxwell

      maxwell Posts: 19

      Correction: Kalispell City Airport Controversy has been going on for years, not just a few months.
      Correction: The Environmental Assessment only has a shelf life of three years, it "Ran Out " in 2005, you had three years after that to do a update. You did not!, You now have to start from Square one, and that includes Public Comment meetings and a New E.A.. Prove me wrong Monday, bring the F.A.A. Rules and Regs.
      Correction: There are not 43,000 seprate operations per year out there, I asked for proof of that, they don't have any. Bring it Monday!
      According to this artical, the Mayor and City Counsil have gone ahead with this expansion with out following the Rules and Guide Line of the F.A.A. F.A.A. said: Midagate the Towers and purchase the land first. You haven't even asked the owners of the land if they want to sale.

       
    • maxwell

      maxwell Posts: 19

      Correction: The Kalispell City Controversy has been stewing for YEARS, not months.
      Correction: There's not 43,000 diffrant operations out there. I asked for a proof of that, they didn't have any. Bring the proof Monday!
      Correction: The Environmental Assessment only has a three year shelf life, it "Ran Out" in 2005. You had three years to do an update, you did not! Now you have to start from square one, That's starting a whole New E.A. and that includes Public Comment. Bring the proof that I'm wrong Monday! F.A.A. Rules and Regs.
      According to this artical the Mayor and the City Council Members has been pushing this project through with out following the F.A.A. guide lines, first midagate the towers and purchase the land. Remember they haven't asked the land owners if they wanted to sell there land for this project.

       
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