TheLocalYokel
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- Jan 14, 2009
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Re: Infrastructure Developments
[textarea]Meeting to decide on £150m Bristol International Airport expansion plans
A decision on £150-million expansion plans for Bristol International Airport will be made at a special council meeting in March.
North Somerset Council's North Area committee is holding a one-off meeting to decide on the proposals on Wednesday, March 3, at its Weston offices.
The ambitious scheme includes a multi-storey car park, expanded terminal, improved transport links and new administration offices.
The airport claims that 3,500 direct and indirect jobs will be created by its expansion proposals.
Last month, the Post revealed the airport is spending £10m on changes to its plans.
They include a new flyer bus service from Weston and increased funding for the £48m Bristol bendy-bus scheme and the £47m South Bristol Link road.
It is also reducing planned increases to night flights in response to feedback from councillors and public consultation.
The airport originally claimed it needed to expand to cope with annual passenger numbers which will reach 10m by 2015. But the recession has seen Lulsgate change its prediction to 2020 – five years later than forecast.
The airport admitted a 10 per cent drop in passenger numbers in 2009, down from 6.2m to 5.5m.
Anti-expansion campaigners believe the dropping passenger numbers negate the need to expand the airport.
Jeremy Birch, of Stop Bristol Airport Expansion, said: "The passenger total for the last 12 months has dropped by 10 per cent, and is even below the total for 2006. Why does the airport need to expand when it is now attracting a smaller number of passengers?"
Neighbouring Bristol City Council and Bath and North East Somerset Council have both objected to the scheme as consulted parties.
Both authorities claim that concerns over climate change are behind the objections.[/textarea]
http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/news/Mee ... ticle.html
The tenor of the Evening Post article is, as usual, hostile towards the airport.
Everything the airport puts forward are 'claims' whereas the spokesman for the antis is quoted as if it's the gospel truth.
I've tackled this apology for a local newspaper (it's not even printed in Bristol any more and has long since abandoned any pretence of local ownership) several times this year on its gleeful insistence of carrying a headlined article each month to point out the latest fall in passenger figures.
It never did this when passenger figures were rising month after month and year after year. Neither does it, in its one-sided and biased 'reports', attempt to put matters in context by pointing out how much better Bristol has done in the recession than many UK airports.
You have to laugh when you read that local councils are worried that an expansion of Bristol Airport will affect climate change. Do these muppets believe that people won't travel from other airports which will also involve extra journeys by road or rail to get to the more distant airports? And what about the expansion of giant airports such as Frankfurt and the many new airports planned for China? Bristol is so tiny in comparison that an extra four million passengers would be as nothing.
Bristol has a bit of breathing space. Apart from the diminishing passenger numbers, which it is anticipated will begin to climb this year, the £7 million western walkway, due for completion in late spring, will give much-needed extra space within the terminal area though it is not supposed to because it is general permitted development.
The airport reckons its current facilities could, at a pinch, handle about 8 mppa. It would be very busy in the terminal building at times and not a great experience but it is apparently feasible.
Whatever the North Somerset Council decides almost certainly won't be the end of the matter as appeals or legal challenges seem certain. The whole thing could yet be called in for a public enquiry.
[textarea]Meeting to decide on £150m Bristol International Airport expansion plans
A decision on £150-million expansion plans for Bristol International Airport will be made at a special council meeting in March.
North Somerset Council's North Area committee is holding a one-off meeting to decide on the proposals on Wednesday, March 3, at its Weston offices.
The ambitious scheme includes a multi-storey car park, expanded terminal, improved transport links and new administration offices.
The airport claims that 3,500 direct and indirect jobs will be created by its expansion proposals.
Last month, the Post revealed the airport is spending £10m on changes to its plans.
They include a new flyer bus service from Weston and increased funding for the £48m Bristol bendy-bus scheme and the £47m South Bristol Link road.
It is also reducing planned increases to night flights in response to feedback from councillors and public consultation.
The airport originally claimed it needed to expand to cope with annual passenger numbers which will reach 10m by 2015. But the recession has seen Lulsgate change its prediction to 2020 – five years later than forecast.
The airport admitted a 10 per cent drop in passenger numbers in 2009, down from 6.2m to 5.5m.
Anti-expansion campaigners believe the dropping passenger numbers negate the need to expand the airport.
Jeremy Birch, of Stop Bristol Airport Expansion, said: "The passenger total for the last 12 months has dropped by 10 per cent, and is even below the total for 2006. Why does the airport need to expand when it is now attracting a smaller number of passengers?"
Neighbouring Bristol City Council and Bath and North East Somerset Council have both objected to the scheme as consulted parties.
Both authorities claim that concerns over climate change are behind the objections.[/textarea]
http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/news/Mee ... ticle.html
The tenor of the Evening Post article is, as usual, hostile towards the airport.
Everything the airport puts forward are 'claims' whereas the spokesman for the antis is quoted as if it's the gospel truth.
I've tackled this apology for a local newspaper (it's not even printed in Bristol any more and has long since abandoned any pretence of local ownership) several times this year on its gleeful insistence of carrying a headlined article each month to point out the latest fall in passenger figures.
It never did this when passenger figures were rising month after month and year after year. Neither does it, in its one-sided and biased 'reports', attempt to put matters in context by pointing out how much better Bristol has done in the recession than many UK airports.
You have to laugh when you read that local councils are worried that an expansion of Bristol Airport will affect climate change. Do these muppets believe that people won't travel from other airports which will also involve extra journeys by road or rail to get to the more distant airports? And what about the expansion of giant airports such as Frankfurt and the many new airports planned for China? Bristol is so tiny in comparison that an extra four million passengers would be as nothing.
Bristol has a bit of breathing space. Apart from the diminishing passenger numbers, which it is anticipated will begin to climb this year, the £7 million western walkway, due for completion in late spring, will give much-needed extra space within the terminal area though it is not supposed to because it is general permitted development.
The airport reckons its current facilities could, at a pinch, handle about 8 mppa. It would be very busy in the terminal building at times and not a great experience but it is apparently feasible.
Whatever the North Somerset Council decides almost certainly won't be the end of the matter as appeals or legal challenges seem certain. The whole thing could yet be called in for a public enquiry.