northsouth
Active Member
- Feb 21, 2010
- 111
- 63
I have my ticket for Bramhope on 11th August
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Thats great. I think you will find it very informative. Let us know how it goes.I have my ticket for Bramhope on 11th August
They already hold these flights back until 07:00 when possible.I think one solution which could ease the night slot quota going forward would be for airlines (Jet2 & Ryanair) who are operating flights at 6:50 & 6:55 say, to push them back to 07:00 so they are not using up a night slot, giving them back. We all know the block times both Ryanair and Jet2 use are exaggerated and with it being first wave departure, it wouldn't effect the arrival time / the flights the rest of the day.
The requirement to backtrack for departure reduces the number of movements the airport can accommodate to between 15 and 20 per hour. A 'movement' refers to either an arrival or a departing aircraft. Shifting more departures to after 07:00 could potentially deley other flights beyond 08:00. A parallel taxiway might alleviate this problem somewhat, potentially allowing between 20 and 22 movements per hour or perhaps up to 26 movements with a full-length parallel taxiway and ground movement radar.I think one solution which could ease the night slot quota going forward would be for airlines (Jet2 & Ryanair) who are operating flights at 6:50 & 6:55 say, to push them back to 07:00 so they are not using up a night slot, giving them back. We all know the block times both Ryanair and Jet2 use are exaggerated and with it being first wave departure, it wouldn't effect the arrival time / the flights the rest of the day.
Just back from holiday so maybe missed post.
Have LBA lost the appeal?
Just back from holiday so maybe missed post.
Have LBA lost the appeal?
Well that stinks! 40 year old restriction?Lost 2, won 1. Sadly, the one they won, really doesn't matter. The two they lost, mattered a lot. LBA are now in discussion with the council and considering their next options.
Well that stinks! 40 year old restriction?
No wonder they country is ******
Feel sorry for next generation. Will anyone have any common sense?
It will all be A I
I have already made the point that should the airport re-apply to the council to amend the night time hours to what was previously approved, it would seem very odd if this time, they chose to reject it, particularly given the apparent pro airport government policy. It's the almost inevitable S106 add ons and potentially other restrictions being attached that will concern the airport.A fair enough response if the airport had applied to update the 1993 planning permission through the normal process. But they didn’t. They approached it through this CLUED route and as a result they had to prove they had continuously breached the night flying planning conditions for 10 years. At which point it was nothing really to do with the planning policies of the local council but a legal argument about the interpretation and application of planning law. And the airport- on two separate occasions - failed to win the legal argument.
And when they did apply via the usual planning route, they were successful. Of course they did this as a single planning application tied to the new terminal. So when they abandoned plans for the new terminal and built the extension instead, the extended night flying hours permission went with it.
Yet countries like China continue to prosper… absolutely amazing airports, train links, subways etc and all because they don't put up with all this nonsense, if its needed its built, end of.Well that stinks! 40 year old restriction?
No wonder they country is ******
Feel sorry for next generation. Will anyone have any common sense?
It will all be A I
Couldn't agree more. I suspect a passenger cap would be more likely what LBA really don't want rather than S106 requirements relating to public transport or road improvements. Such schemes get expensive but reflect growth and success. An imposed passenger cap simply prevents growth beyond what the council feel comfortable with. Its the last thing LBA want.True - but is there any airport in the country that doesn’t operate with S106 restrictions? I don’t think anywhere has a blank cheque to operate on an unrestricted basis or without ensuring that they make a contribution to public transport etc.
So I think its about updating them and making sure they make sense for the 2030s and not the 1990s. Night flying restrictions that were designed in an era when DC9s, BAC 1-11s and TU-154s we’re at the airport are probably well overdue a review. There are all sorts of approaches to noise mitigation that could be taken that are far more sophisticated than what we have today
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