South Wales Evening Post

Progress on airport’s ‘long-standing issues’ as suspension remains

- RICHARD YOULE SENIOR LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

SIGNIFICAN­T progress has been made to resolve “long-standing issues” at Swansea Airport, according to the minutes of a council meeting.

Cabinet members were presented with a report behind closed doors about the airport last month.

The minutes referenced long-standing issues previously highlighte­d by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), which suspended the airport’s licence in 2019, and the Health and Safety Executive.

The council owns but does not operate the airport, on Fairwood Common, Gower.

Minutes from the meeting said: “This current

report sought to provide an updated position, illustrati­ng the significan­t progress made to date, including the outcome of an independen­t audit report that the authority has recently commission­ed.”

No further details were given, and the council has declined to comment on the report.

The CAA said the suspension of the licence – affecting all private flights – followed an unannounce­d safety audit in 2019 which identified a series of safety concerns.

Aerodromes like Swansea’s need a licence if they are used by paying passengers or for commercial activities, such as flight training.

A CAA spokesmen said: “The suspension­s will remain in place until our safety concerns are addressed.”

The airport has been subsidised for years by the current tenant, businessma­n Roy Thomas, who set up a passenger flight service from Swansea called Air Wales. The flights stopped in 2004.

Mr Thomas said work to upgrade the airport’s infrastruc­ture was ongoing, and that he expected to be fully compliant with the CAA in around six to eight weeks’ time.

The airport originally opened as an airbase during the Second World War. It was then decommissi­oned, before opening as Swansea Airport in 1949.

Over the years it has been used by flight schools, private pilots and sky diving operators.

 ?? Picture: Robert Melen ?? Swansea Airport on Fairwood Common, Gower, where ‘significan­t progress’ has been made on ‘long-standing issues’.
Picture: Robert Melen Swansea Airport on Fairwood Common, Gower, where ‘significan­t progress’ has been made on ‘long-standing issues’.

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