Newport facing twists and turns of airplane rules
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June Casagrande
What little difference a year makes. As recently as last summer,
City Council members, staff and representatives from neighboring
cities were scouring the fine print of federal aviation laws, looking
for ways they could reduce the annoyance of banner-towing airplanes
above the beaches.
Then, earlier this month, they were applauding a decision by
federal authorities to ban the flights. But just a few weeks later,
another turn of events has reinstated some pilots’ rights to fly
banner-towing planes over stadiums and other public gatherings.
It remains unclear what this means for the planes that fly by
local beaches, but this latest move could cause the rebirth of a
problem that residents of Newport Beach and neighboring coastal
cities have complained of for years.
“Those planes are a terrible nuisance,” Mayor Tod Ridgeway said
Monday.
At Tuesday’s council meeting, Ridgeway had lauded the
Transportation Security Administration’s decision to stop the flights
due to post-Sept. 11 security concerns. But, as evidenced by ad
planes flying over the World Series games, the administration has
reversed that decision, possibly putting locals back in the same
situation as they were in the summer of 2001.
Before the Sept. 11 attacks, city officials were looking for legal
ways to control the problem. One option, though potentially not
legal, was to create an ordinance similar to one passed in Huntington
Beach recently. It’s likely such an ordinance would not have
withstood a legal challenge because federal rules prohibit cities
from regulating aircraft in most cases.
After the Sept. 11 attacks, federal authorities grounded
banner-towing planes, but later reauthorized about 700 pilots
nationwide. Last month, however, the federal government rescinded all
the waivers.
As of last summer, there were five companies operating
banner-towing planes in Newport Beach, all of them based at Long
Beach Airport. It is not known how many flights take place over
Newport Beach’s coastline.
City staff are not working on the issue right now.
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