Sunshine
Coast Airport
Questions
and Answers
Questions on Notice
put to
the Author of Maroochy Airport Master Plan
at the Public Meeting on 23 February 1999 by Marcoola Residents
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QUESTION 1
1 ECONOMIC BENEFITS TO THE SHIRE (by Alan Padley)
Your Suncoast Airport Master Plan update appears to indicate that even
after the expenditure of considerable funds to upgrade the existing
main
runway and its taxiways, that runway will still have aircraft size,
payload
and safety restrictions. Further to that, your report indicates that a
runway of adequate length and width would eliminate such restrictions
and
in fact create other benefits.
Therefore, we request a summary of ALL benefits derived from the
construction
of a new runway along with estimates of financial "spin-offs" created
by
such benefits.
This, we believe, would assist the community to hold a more rational
debate
on upgrading old versus new.
Answer.
Existing Runway
(1797m
x 30m)
Limits size of aircraft
Limits range of aircraft operations
Complies with Australian standards (Rules and Practices for Aerodrome)
Limits ultimate airport capacity
Future Runway (2,450m x 45m)
Would allow operation by larger (wide
bodied)
aircraft eg., B767 Which are in
domestic airlines fleets and used on high density domestic and regional
international services
Allow longer range services (including New Zealand, Singapore)
Benefits would include:
* airport can market itself to wider
catchment
* increased employment
* reduce noise on existing communities to north and south of airport
* allows airlines fleet utilisation flexibility
* cater for long term growth in traffic
* stimulus to local tourism industry
QUESTION 2
2 SAFETY OF MARCOOLA RESIDENTS (by Debra Blumel)
The safety of Marcoola Beach residents at the ends of the north-south
runway
has already been compromised.
The area is already fully developed with the number of residents living
in the public safety zone exceeding the upper limit recommended by
Department
of Housing, Local Government and Planning (1993) guidelines.
CASA Standards have also been relaxed even though a licence is still
current.
Your report notes (p13) that there are houses located approximately 550
metres from both the northern and southern ends of the existing
runway.
Yet on page 41, you note that safety areas should extend to 1,500
metres
for a preferential take-off runway and 1,000 metres for other
runways.
Safety will of course be further compromised with the increase in air
traffic
planned.
We also note that it is not allowable to park on the roadside at the
southern
end of the current runway because planes are so low. Yet it is proposed
to install traffic lights at Friendship Ave which will cause traffic to
back-up along the same stretch of road.
Why hasn't greater consideration been given to safety issues in the
report,
especially given recent safety incidents and a fatal crash at the
airport
as well as the dangerous practice of pilot-training engine failures
just
metres over peoples' homes?
Answer
Residential
development
does fall within Queensland airports Public Safety Zone(1500m
from runway end, 225m either side of extended centreline),
However, airport has current CASA
operating
licence
It is noted that Queensland Public
Safety
Zone is a state government planning
guideline.
There is no Australia wide public safety zone requirement.
Some 50% increase in aircraft movements forecast in 15 years (RPT
aircraft
movements double, with more jets thus providing capacity for nearly
treble
the
number of passenger movements).
Concede slight increase in riskof
incident due to increased aircraft
movements. However mix includes greater numbers of RPT aircraft which
have excellent safety record.
David Low Way is closer to the runway 36
thresholdthan
laid down in the
Australian Standards (Rules and Practices for Aerodromes).
However, a CASA operations licence is
current
for the airport
Controlled intersection with
Friendship
Avenue would need to be sequenced
to keep traffic clear of zone beyond runway end may dictate earlier
provision
of proposed new Airport access road along western Airport boundary
QUESTION 3
NOISE ( by Reg O'Reilly)
The consultant refers to a noise management study
on page 79, and concludes that aircraft noise
does
not appear to be a major issue even for those living close to the
airport.
It refers to a 'small concentration' of residents
in Marcoola Beach for whom aircraft noise causes annoyance.
Since publication of the report the Marcoola Beach
Neighbourhood Network has commissioned a survey of directly affected
residents
to test the consultant's blinkered acceptance of that earlier report.
The survey achieved an incredible 75% response rate
(approx 80 individual replies) and it indicates that noise
is so significant that residents are demanding curfews, a moratorium on
further development of pilot training, and no further increase in air
traffic
until east-west is built.
This indicates that people are not only
significantly
affected, they are also highly concerned about future growth in
aircraft
numbers over their roofs - so concerned that they want development of
the
east-west runway to be brought forward to five years.
We are not prepared to allow the number of planes
over our roofs to increase three- or four-fold thereby affecting our
quality
of life which will plummet along with safety and real estate values
Why wasn't the consultant able to discover this
for its $75,000 fee
when the Marcoola Beach Neighbourhood Network was
able to discover it in two weeks for no financial outlay?
Answer
Not having seen the report
commissioned
by the Marcoola Beach
Neighbourhood Network, its
objectives,
methodology, results and conclusions,
we are unable to comment on the
findings.
In relation to the
Community
Attitudes Survey undertaken as part of the Noise
Management Study, we are able
to make the following comments:
Among the objectives of
that
survey were the establishment of the relative
position of aircraft noise as
an environmental issue for residents in the vicinity
of the Sunshine Coast Airport
and for those residents that did identify aircraft
noise as an issue, what
aspects
of aircraft noise were particularly annoying.
The survey sample was of 150
respondents of which 74 respondents were
from the north (in the
Marcoola
area).
*(At
the meeting I called for a show of hands of persons who were consulted
and only ONE raised her hand) *
It was a random survey, not
limited to only North Marcoola and not necessarily limited or relying
on
those residents concerned enough to register a response.
The report acknowledges
that
there is a small concentration of residents
north of the Airport for
whom aircraft noise causes an annoyance.
The survey also indicated that
pilot training activities and jet aircraft
movements are those that cause
more annoyance, especially at weekends.
The noise management study also
involved consultations with many resident
groups, including the Marcoola
Progress Association. Among the
suggestions from the Marcoola
Progress
Association were that Council
should purchase houses in the
most
noise affected areas.
The protection for and timing
of the development of an east-west runway as a
noise mitigation measure is
rightfully a local community issue where the
significant financial costs
must be weighed up against the social and
environmental benefits
anticipated,
particularly for communities to the north
and south of the existing main
runway.
QUESTION 4
SHIFT EAST-WEST RUNWAY TO WEST
(by
Bob McMillan)
It is very important that the people of south
Marcoola
and Mudjimba, whose lifestyle and real estate are to be affected by the
east-west runway, be compensated. Wouldn't it cost less to shift the
new
east-west runway slightly deeper into the cane farms to the west to
minimise
the level of property resumptions to the east? Sugar cane and trees are
not affected by noise, but this alternative would be more
people-friendly,
minimising noise problems and safety issues to the east. Surely it
would
also be better for the people of Twin Waters and Pacific Paradise as
planes
would be at a greater altitude. Why wasn't this alternative considered?
Answer
Fixing the location of future
east-west runway was not part of the
brief
for this
study.
This study adopted the
previously
identified location but verified the offset
from the existing terminal.
Issues to be considered include:
Land availability
Location of Sunshine Motorway
(or diversion if necessary)
Terrain to the west with
respect
to flight paths
Effect on houses between
Airport
and coast
Fixed wing aircraft movements
are forecast to increase by some 50% in the next
15 years. This is well within
the capacity of the existing Airport.
QUESTION 5
ALTERNATIVE FINANCIAL PLAN(by
Jeanette van der Heide)
We have looked closely at the short, medium and long
term costings at the back of the report. It appears that construction
of
the east-west runway will cost approximately $25 million (not including
some associated wish-list items which are not essential). However,
upgrades
to the north-south runway will also cost $25 million to enable it to
cope
with the increased demand if the east west runway is not built! We note
that the airport does not cost ratepayer's money, has always serviced
its
debt, and pays council for any services. In the past, profit has been
re-invested
into the airport. This is the first council that has ever creamed-off
profit.
This council wants $1 million profit from the airport per year to be
returned
to the Council for other purposes - it may even be spent on projects to
get Councillors re-elected rather than invested in the airport to
generate
business opportunities. The $25 million needed to build the east-west
runway
could substantially be met by airport profits, especially since
business
would increase. In this way, there would be no additional cost to
rate-payers,
tourism would increase, residents would have certainty, and airport
revenue
would increase due to less restrictions.
Answer
Considerable expenditure is
identified in Master Plan whether the proposed east-
west runway is constructed or
not.
Many facilities require
expansion/upgrading
to meet forecast growth in traffic.
Construction of a new 13/31
runway (2450m long x 45m wide) alone could be in
the order of $25M.
However, should a parallel taxiway, new aprons, new
terminal etc be required, a
considerably larger cost would be involved.
The actual requirements and
cost would be considered in a later detailed study for development of
this
runway.
Development of a future 13/31
runway would be the subject of a cost/benefit
analysis.
If the 13/31 runway was
constructed
within the timeframe of the current Master
Plan (15 years) and Council
resolves to minimise expenditure on the existing
runway, the identified $25.5M
expenditure on the existing facilities could be
reduced to around $16M.