Facing mounting opposition from Twin Cities residents worried about future airplane noise, Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport officials on Monday backed away from a major shift in flight patterns that would have increased traffic over some neighborhoods.
Instead, the Metropolitan Airports Commission (MAC) endorsed a less dramatic shift that uses new satellite technology of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) only where it would reduce airplane traffic over Eagan, Mendota Heights and other suburbs. The MAC opposed using the technology where it would concentrate more air traffic over some neighborhoods of southwest Minneapolis, Richfield and Edina.
But the FAA, which had hoped to use the technology for all takeoffs from MSP by early next year, said the more limited strategy would have to be studied to make sure it is safe, and the earliest it could begin would be mid-2014.
The FAA is promoting the new technology as a way to improve safety and save fuel. By concentrating takeoffs on more narrow routes, it would reduce flights over some neighborhoods by routing them more precisely over the Minnesota River Valley or highways. But it also would send increased traffic over other homes in more densely populated areas.
Airport staff earlier supported using the technology for all departures. But those plans stalled amid an increasing chorus of objections by residents and local politicians, who complained that the airport and the FAA were fast-tracking the new system without rigorous examination of its effects.
MAC chairman Dan Boivin, a veteran of past battles over plane noise, said he hadn't encountered such intense public reaction since the 1990s.
"It's been overwhelming," said Chad Leqve, manager of noise, environment and planning for the airport.
And on Monday a standing-room-only crowd spilled out through the double doors of the MAC meeting room, which is above a concourse beyond airport security. They were required to get passes to reach it.