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4 Air & Space Law. 1 (1988-1990)

handle is hein.journals/airspaclaw4 and id is 1 raw text is:          Forum
      Committee
           on
     Air and Space
          Law
American Bar Association




    Volume 4, Number 1


HE AIR AND SPACE LAI


Summer 1988


Recent Airport Access Development

                        at U.S. Airports

                        BY LEONARD A. CERUZZI*


First let me be very clear, these comments do not purport to
be and do not necessarily represent the views of either the
FAA or the United States; they are, for whatever they may
be Worth, just my views. Second, they are not presented as
an answLer but with the hope that they may serve as a stim-
ulant, and perhaps a basis, for further discussion.


    It can be argued that, in addition to nature, govern-
mental entities, whether federal, state, or local, abhor a
vacuum, particularly a vacuum of legal authority. A cor-
ollary to that premise is that whenever such a vacuum
is identified or develops, one or more governmental or-
ganization at any or every level is inclined to step in and
exercise its authority, or at least what it perceives to be
its authority.
    The Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 created just
such a vacuum. Direct economic regulatory authority of
civil aviation was extinguished. The Civil Aeronautics
Board was abolished. Section 105 was added to the Fed-
eral Aviation Act to prohibit any state or political sub-
division or interstate agency or other political agency from
enacting or enforcing any law, rule, regulation, stan-
dard, or other provision having the force and effect of
law relating to rates, routes, or services of any air car-
rier ..... 49 U.S.C. 1305(a)
    Now a decade after economic deregulation became
law, and the favored phrase maximum reliance on com-
petitive market forces has become a cliche, the regula-
tion of aviation persists. It takes different and more
indirect forms, and is usually obscured and obfuscated,
but it is there.
    A key element in and a source of the inherent
strength of the air transportation system of the United
States is the fact that the system is a product of shared
responsibility among diverse interests. That is also the
system's Achilles' heel and the source of the current in-
direct regulation of aviation.
    The nature of the air transportation system makes it
difficult to define or describe; however, the components
of the system are not hard to identify. The federal gov-
ernment provides both the regulatory framework appli-
cable to airmen, aircraft, and providers of aeronautical
services as well as the infrastructure of navaids, airways,


and air traffic control services. Airports have been cre-
ated, designed, developed and maintained by local gov-
ernmental bodies with substantial federal and user
financial support. The various users of these facilities
range from air carriers to business aviation to general and
recreational aviation. Included within the category of
users are passengers and all those businesses who rely
upon aviation in the process of conducting their busi-
nesses.
    Operationally, the system is a dynamic entity in
which it appears that the whole is not merely equal to
but is greater than the sum of the parts. It is the inter-
relationship between and among the component ele-
ments of the system, not merely the components
considered in and of themselves which compose the sys-
tem.
    What we are now seeing is a growing disharmony
within the system, a growing conflict between the com-
ponent elements which compose the system. There are
many different reasons for that disharmony and conflict.
Frequently noise is the reason presented, but many times
that is the excuse, not the reason. In any event, the per-
ceived vacuum of authority and the tendency or incli-
nation of one or more governmental organizations at any
or every level to step in and exercise its authority, or at
least what it perceives to be its authority, in the public
interest, to fill that vacuum, suggests that the dishar-
mony and conflict will grow rather than abate.
    Massport's PACE (Program for Airport Capacity Ef-
ficiency) illustrates this point. PACE is presented by
Massport an an exercise of its authority to respond to
increasing passenger demand and what it considers to
be unacceptable delays. The PACE program will limit
use of the airport by general aviation and small com-
muter airplanes while providing special exemption treat-
ment for Massport designated locations provided certain
other conditions are met. Massport's program has not
been warmly received throughout the aviation commu-
nity, and in fact is the subject of litigation in district court
and formal administrative complaints presented to the
FAA.
    The Boston-Logan Airport situation is further com-
plicated by the complex three-tier Logan noise rules
                                (continued on page 9)


ER

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