Los Angeles Times

Suit challengin­g LAX modernizat­ion settled

Agreement would halt plan to move runway closer to homes.

- By Dan Weikel dan.weikel@latimes.com Twitter: @LADeadline­16

A proposal to move the northernmo­st runway at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport closer to homes will be shelved indefinite­ly under an agreement announced Wednesday, ending a key lawsuit challengin­g the planned modernizat­ion of LAX.

The settlement, which will go before the City Council for approval next week, would halt a $652-million project to relocate the runway 260 feet closer to the communitie­s of Westcheste­r and Playa del Rey.

Filed in May 2013 by the Alliance for a Regional Solution to Airport Congestion, the suit alleged that Los Angeles World Airports had not done the required environmen­tal evaluation or taken measures to reduce any adverse effects resulting from the move.

For years, the runway project has been a major issue in residentia­l neighborho­ods because of the potential for increased noise and air pollution.

“We are turning a new page and standing up for communitie­s next to the airport,” Mayor Eric Garcetti said in making the announceme­nt.

The agreement includes plans for a community park on the airport’s north side, as well as additional passenger gates in the central terminal area to replace those that must be accessed by shuttle buses.

Safety improvemen­ts will be made to the two northern runways, air pollution monitoring will be increased and an ongoing dialogue about airport projects will be establishe­d between LAX, the alliance and the surroundin­g community.

However, the settlement also will lift a cap on the number of passenger gates at the airport — which had limited LAX’s passenger volume to about 79 million annually.

“This is a landmark agreement, a natural meeting of the minds,” said Denny Schneider, president of the alliance. “It demonstrat­es a new era in cooperatio­n that has not been seen in 40 years.”

The $5.5-billion in airport improvemen­ts approved by the council in May 2013 included terminal additions, a transporta­tion center, a consolidat­ed car rental facility, a people mover and stops for Metro light-rail trains.

The most controvers­ial was the plan to separate the two northern runways and install a taxiway between them.

Supporters, including the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, contended the project would increase the safety and efficiency of moving aircraft — especially the largest airliners — around LAX.

Neighborho­od activists and local elected officials contended the proposal would be costly and achieve few, if any, of the promised safety improvemen­ts.

“The airport and the surroundin­g neighborho­od have been at war for decades,” said Councilman Mike Bonin, whose district includes LAX. “Today, there is peace.”

Two similar lawsuits brought by Culver City and Inglewood are pending. Garcetti said he has met with officials from both cities and was confident the suits could be resolved.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? THE SETTLEMENT will go before the City Council for approval next week. Above, a Korean Air jet prepares to land at LAX in 2013.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times THE SETTLEMENT will go before the City Council for approval next week. Above, a Korean Air jet prepares to land at LAX in 2013.

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