A $900,000-plus project to eliminate 24.07 acres of
wetlands from southeast quarter of the Jamestown Regional
Airport grounds will help
reduce the likelihood of bird strikes on airplanes. “It’s a safety issue.
They’re a menace to aircraft,” said Matt Leitner, manager of the JRA.
By: By Kari Lucin, The Jamestown
Sun, The Jamestown
Sun
A $900,000-plus project to eliminate 24.07 acres of
wetlands from southeast quarter of the Jamestown Regional
Airport grounds will help
reduce the likelihood of bird strikes on airplanes.
“It’s a safety issue. They’re a menace to aircraft,” said
Matt Leitner, manager of the JRA.
The wetlands mitigation will remove three wetlands areas
in the southeast part of the airport, with the hope that birds will no longer
fly across the runway from some wetlands patches in the northeast quarter of
the airport.
In compliance with conservation laws, wetlands will be
restored near Woodworth to make up for the lost wetlands.
The Federal Aviation Administration will pay for 90
percent of the project, or approximately $825,000. The North Dakota Aeronautics
Commission will pay for 5 percent of the project, or approximately $46,000,
leaving the Jamestown
Regional Airport
to pay the other $46,000.
The project, which will not disrupt flights to or from the
airport, could be put out for bid as early as February 2014, with construction
planned to begin in either 2014 or 2015, said Steve Aldinger, project manager
with Interstate Engineering.
The exact date for the start of the project will depend on
when funding becomes available, which in turn depends on when Congress releases
money to the FAA for it, Aldinger said, adding that the project is fairly high
up on the FAA’s list because bird strikes are a safety issue.
The last bird strike at the Jamestown airport occurred on Oct. 23, 2012,
when a seagull struck an aircraft on its tail when the plane was in the clouds.
“It didn’t damage the plane, but it was inspected as a
precautionary measure,” Leitner said.
The last bird strike before that was in September 2011.
Most bird strikes occur in the fall and spring, when birds
are migrating, Leitner said. For the most part, the airport can frighten birds
away with sound, either from noisemaking projectiles or from noise cannons.
“We harass them aurally, and if they’re intransigent, we
resort to lethal measures, because safety is paramount,” Leitner said.
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