The Post

Threat forces closure of airport

- Brittany Keogh

Ka¯piti Airport was shut down suddenly yesterday following a threat made on social media, compoundin­g the challenges facing the airport, which will be shut for several hours each day during the next seven weeks because of a shortage of specialist staff.

The airport was alerted to the ‘‘potential security event’’ yesterday morning, with the facility closed to air traffic about noon, said an airport spokeswoma­n. She could not comment on the nature of the threat or which platform it was made on.

‘‘As a precaution­ary measure, the tower and runway were closed while police investigat­ed. Police have since deemed any threat to be low-risk,’’ she said.

Police received a report regarding concerning social media commentary directed at Ka¯piti Airport yesterday morning, a spokeswoma­n said. It made the decision to close as a precaution and an investigat­ion into the comments was ongoing.

This occurred a day after the airport, which is usually open for more than 13 hours on weekdays during summer, on Saturday began restrictin­g operating hours.

It will close for about six to seven hours onmost weekdays and for a few hours on Saturdays until February 1. Emergency services will still be able to use the airport, located at Paraparaum­u, a 45-minute drive north of Wellington, when it is closed.

The reduction in operating hours over summer follows months of speculatio­n that NZPropCo, which currently owns the airport, plans to close it.

However, NZPropCo said it was yet to make a decision about the airport’s future and was consider

ing ‘‘a range of options’’.

A NZPropCo spokeswoma­n said that since a triple-fatal aircraft crash at the aerodrome in 2008, it had been required by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) to operate an aerodrome flight informatio­n service (AFIS).

AFIS workers are based in the control tower at the airport and provide pilots with informatio­n, such as whether other planes are taking off or landing, via radio.

New Zealand’s air navigation service provider Airways employs four AFIS staff who are based at Ka¯piti Airport. Two of them had recently resigned. Replacemen­t staff had been hired but were still being trained.

NZPropCo said it was working with Airways to minimise the impact of the staffing shortage but to meet its safety obligation­s, it was forced to close when there were no AFIS staff on shift.

The reduction in operating hours coincides with the busiest time of year for the Ka¯piti Districts Aero Club, which is based at the airport. The aero club said it stood to lose a ‘‘significan­t’’ amount of money because of the closures.

Club president Tony Quayle said his understand­ing was that the airport should be able to operate as usual if it advised the CAA of the staffing issue as at such a small airport pilots could communicat­e with each other via radio rather than rely on AFIS.

Ka¯piti mayor K Gurunathan, a longtime supporter of keeping the airport open, agreed. He said independen­t aviation experts had told him the airport did not require AFIS: ‘‘This is not a busy airport.’’

The mayor worried that the reduction in operating hours was the beginning of the end for the airport. ‘‘It is death by a thousand cuts,’’ he said.

But NZPropCo said it was not that simple. ‘‘Continuing to operate in this situation – whereby AFIS is sometimes off watch when normally they would be on watch – would be a breach of our existing safety obligation­s,’’ a spokeswoma­n told Stuff.

Quayle said flight training brought the club $140,000 in revenue December 12-February 1 last summer. However, with the reduced operating hours it expected to earn much less.

 ??  ?? Ka¯piti Airport is facing a few challenges.
Ka¯piti Airport is facing a few challenges.

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