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OHIO AVIATION ASSOCIATION April 22, 2014. 2 WELCOME AND INTRODUCTIONS Dave Dennis – Aviation Planner, ODOT Office of Aviation; Project Manager for Focus.

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Presentation on theme: "OHIO AVIATION ASSOCIATION April 22, 2014. 2 WELCOME AND INTRODUCTIONS Dave Dennis – Aviation Planner, ODOT Office of Aviation; Project Manager for Focus."— Presentation transcript:

1 OHIO AVIATION ASSOCIATION April 22, 2014

2 2 WELCOME AND INTRODUCTIONS Dave Dennis – Aviation Planner, ODOT Office of Aviation; Project Manager for Focus Study; Ohio Airport Grant Program - Apps due May 1! Jim Bryant – Administrator, ODOT Office of Aviation Chuck Dyer – Liaison with ODOT Division of Planning www.airportsfocusstudy.ohio.gov Dave Dennis, 614-387-2352 Dave Dennis – Aviation Planner, ODOT Office of Aviation; Project Manager for Focus Study; Ohio Airport Grant Program - Apps due May 1! Jim Bryant – Administrator, ODOT Office of Aviation Chuck Dyer – Liaison with ODOT Division of Planning www.airportsfocusstudy.ohio.gov Dave Dennis, 614-387-2352

3 3 PROJECT ADVISORY COMMITTEE Aircraft Owners & Pilots Association - AOPA County Commissioners Association FAA Detroit Airports District Office – Det. ADO; 90% AIP grant National Air Transportation Association - NATA National Business Aviation Association – NBAA Ohio Regional Business Aviation Association - ORBAA Ohio Aviation Association - OAA ODOT Office of Aviation ODOT Office of Statewide Planning Ohio Department of Development Ohio Chamber of Commerce Ohio Municipal League

4 4 ROLE OF PROJECT ADVISORY COMMITTEE Provide advice on policy issues, e.g., adding instrument approach to the airport classification criteria “Sounding Board” - Assist in the flow of information to and from aviation stakeholders Review study deliverables

5 5 FOCUS STUDY PURPOSE AND GOALS “The Focus Study will be used to optimize investment in Ohio’s airport system with an eye toward safety, efficiency and economic growth. It will identify needed system improvements, develop a framework for prioritizing those projects, and assess the economic impact of each publicly owned airport. The Study’s findings will assist ODOT and FAA in making hard decisions on proposed airport development in a period of limited funding.”

6 6 FOCUS STUDY PROGRESS

7 7 PROJECT FACTS Inventory – All 104 system airports were visited – 100% response from airport managers – 70% response rate from economic development agencies – Data on 500+ general aviation airport tenants System Facts – Airports with: – 5,000-foot runways:42 – Air traffic control towers:15 – Weather reporting:62 – Precision approaches (ILS):21 – Jet fuel: 79

8 8 DATA COLLECTION – INVENTORY PHASE Airport Management Surveys Airport Business Surveys Pilot Surveys Non-Aviation Business Surveys Economic Development Agency Surveys

9 9 GENERAL AVIATION ACTIVITY FORECASTS Projections 2012 2032 – Based aircraft: 4,6875,182 – Annual operations: 2.7 million 3.0 million Considered Ohio demographic shifts and national general aviation trends Jet Operations < 300 jet ops: 28 airports 300 to 700 jet ops: 21 airports > 700 jet ops: 55 airports

10 10 AIRPORT CLASSIFICATION Identify how Ohio’s airport system serves our state today – Build on national FAA classification system – NPIAS, Asset Study – Airports serve different market segments – One size does not fit all – Availability of funding is not a factor in developing classifications

11 11 AIRPORT CLASSIFICATION Air Carrier Airports – Support scheduled airline operations (7 airports, not the focus of this study) General Aviation Airports – Split into two groups, those that serve turbine (jet and turboprop) aircraft, and those that serve piston (propeller) aircraft

12 12 AIRPORT CLASSIFICATION Level 1 Airports – Serve nearly all the needs of general aviation turbine powered aircraft and their users. Level 2 Airports – Serve many, but not necessarily all, the needs of turbine powered aircraft.

13 13 AIRPORT CLASSIFICATION Level 3 Airports – Serves piston powered aircraft predominately, meeting nearly all their needs. Level 4 Airports – Serves piston powered aircraft, but may not meet all aircraft needs.

14 14 AIRPORT CLASSIFICATION CRITERIA Criteria used following extensive PAC input: Runway length – under/over 4,000’ Type of fuel available – sales of 10,000 gallons of jet fuel Maintenance services available – turbine, piston, none Instrument approach capabilities – precision, non- precision, circling

15 15 7 Air Carrier Airports 33 Level 1 Airports 18 Level 2 Airports 29 Level 3 Airports 17 Level 4 Airports OHIO AIRPORT CLASSIFICATIONS

16 16 AIRPORT CLASSIFICATION USES Develop facility and service recommendations Measure system performance Identify system’s capital needs Assess service areas – Overlaps – Gaps

17 17 AIRPORT SERVICE AREAS – ALL SYSTEM AIRPORTS Ohio’s Airport System provides convenient airport services to more than 97% of the population.

18 18 COMPLIANCE AND STEWARDSHIP WILL BE CONSIDERED Are airports in compliance with select FAA requirements? – Pavement maintenance – Through-the-Fence (off-airport access) – Leases – standardized – Land use compatibility – Runway Protection Zone controls – Runway Safety Area compliance

19 19 STEWARDSHIP Pavement Condition Index* *Based on ODOT inspection data Poor Good

20 20 EXAMPLES OF COMPLIANCE ISSUES Through-the-Fence (TTF) – 26 airports have TTF activities – Considers commercial and residential properties – Are there airport/TTF agreements in place? Obstruction Removal – On airport – Off airport: Easements, land acquisition

21 21 UNIQUE ASPECTS OF OHIO’S AIRPORTS Aviation Education and Training – 73 airports with aviation education or training programs – World class aviation college and university facilities: Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Kent State University Ohio University The Ohio State University

22 22 UNIQUE ASPECTS OF OHIO’S AIRPORTS A Leader in the Fractional Ownership Industry – Headquarters of NetJets (Port Columbus) and Flight Options (Cuyahoga Co.) – 1,400 direct jobs

23 23 GENERAL AVIATION TAX IMPACTS Annual Tax Impacts – General aviation fuel tax revenues: $15.9 million – Aviation services tax revenues: $13.7 million – Total sales tax from aviation: $29.6 million – Data on fuel sales and aviation services was collected during inventory phase, high level of confidence – Tax revenues from aviation fuel and services NOT set aside for aviation purposes

24 24 FOCUS STUDY - NEXT STEPS Finalize compliance evaluation Complete Geographical Information System (GIS) analysis of service areas, regional needs and capacity – gaps and overlaps Develop recommendations for system improvements

25 25 FOCUS STUDY - NEXT STEPS Continue working with Project Advisory Committee The draft system recommendations will be available for public review and input during the final round of public meetings in the Fall 2014 Publish final report December, 2014

26 26 Thank You www.airportsfocusstudy.ohio.gov Dave Dennis, 614-387-2352


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