The Mercury News

Oakland airport could get new name

- By Shomik Mukherjee smukherjee @bayareanew­sgroup.com Staff writers Will McCarthy and John Woolfolk contribute­d to this report.

OAKLAND >> Considerin­g the city's recent fortunes, a survey seeking feedback on a potential renaming of Oakland Internatio­nal Airport might have deepened worries that the city would soon no longer be associated with one of its largest institutio­ns.

But officials for the Port of Oakland, which manages the 100-year-old airport, confirmed in an email to this news organizati­on that any rebranding will not involve removing the city's name.

But they're also not pulling any punches about why they want to make a change — the name “Oakland” alone, it seems, is not selling enough plane tickets.

“Market research both nationally and internatio­nally has shown that majorities of internatio­nal and U.S. passengers are unfamiliar with Oakland's or our airport's proximity to the San Francisco Bay,” port official Matt Davis said in a statement.

“This lack of awareness depressed inbound passenger demand, even from passengers flying to destinatio­ns near Oakland,” Davis' statement added.

The survey, sent out to numerous East Bay residents, gauges how they feel about a possible airport name change, with responses ranging from “very comfortabl­e” to “not at all comfortabl­e” and “don't know.”

It comes just weeks after the port announced a major expansion of the airport that includes constructi­on of a 830,000-square-foot terminal, among other facility upgrades.

With suburbs like Dublin, Walnut Creek and Livermore rising in population, the improvemen­ts, plus a potential renaming, signal the airport's broad, region-focused strategy for increasing its profile.

The issue has come up before at another major airport, San Jose Mineta Internatio­nal, which in official uses bears the full name of the city's late former mayor Norman Y. Mineta.

San Jose leaders have pondered a name change for years, kicking around the idea of adding “Silicon Valley” to the title to attract more visitors — the question Oakland now faces.

And while advertisem­ents on the walls of the Oakland airport tout direct flights to Las Vegas, the airport struggles to service “long-haul routes to popular destinatio­ns in the East Coast and Europe,” port officials said.

The renaming, they said, might add a “geographic identifier” that helps would-be passengers “understand the airport's proximity to the San Francisco Bay Area.”

For all the hypothetic­als, though, the exploratio­n seems to be preliminar­y.

Oakland's airport, which is so far south off I-880 that even some Bay Area residents often mistakenly believe it is in San Leandro, falls within the district of City Councilmem­ber Treva Reid, who said in an email she hasn't yet heard any mention of a name change.

Any future renaming would need to be approved by the port's Board of Commission­ers in a public vote. And even if its name is altered, the airport's threelette­r code, OAK, would remain unchanged in shorthand references to flight informatio­n.

Still, “Oakland” doesn't appear to be going anywhere. And while a hypothetic­al “East Bay Oakland Internatio­nal Airport” might not roll off the tongue, it's a lot better than “Golden State Airport.”

 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? The Airport Station of the “BART to OAK,” seen in 2014, connects BART to Oakland Internatio­nal Airport. The airport could soon have a new name that better promotes the region, officials say.
ANDA CHU — STAFF ARCHIVES The Airport Station of the “BART to OAK,” seen in 2014, connects BART to Oakland Internatio­nal Airport. The airport could soon have a new name that better promotes the region, officials say.

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