Airport Authority Submits Stormwater Plan to DEP

Airport Authority Chairman Joe Tannehill reported that the airport construction team and engineers had completed their plan for addressing stormwater management deficiencies at the new airport site in West Bay.  The Airport Authority submitted the plan to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) for review and approval.

“This represents the first step in correcting stormwater management issues at the airport site,” said Tannehill.  “We have hard work ahead, but we are committed to correcting deficiencies on the site as soon as possible.  I have instructed our construction team to begin implementing our plan immediately.  If FDEP requests changes or suggest ways to strengthen our plan, we’ll make adjustments as necessary.”

Last week FDEP officials and representatives of the Army Corps of Engineers (USACOE) toured the new airport construction site and expressed concerns that current efforts to mitigate excessive stormwater runoff had become inadequate in the wake of unusually heavy rains during the month of April.

FDEP requested that the Airport Authority submit its plan for correcting the deficiencies by April 29.  Chairman Tannehill quickly convened the site contractors and pushed them to address the stormwater management issues as aggressively as possible.

Under the plan submitted to FDEP by the airport construction team will:

  • Finalize the site’s western perimeter ditch, which includes sodding the entire channel allowing water from north of the site to by-pass the site and not be degraded in quality. This work should be complete in approximately two weeks.
  • Set up filtration pumping system to remove sediment from water on site so when it leaves the site it will meet permit requirements. This new system will be operational within one week.
  • Finalize the outfall area to Morrell Branch which includes riprap, seeding and sodding.
  • Complete the drainage system in the crosswind runway area, which will also finalize the outfall system to Morrell Branch.
  • The airport construction team noted that one of the biggest stormwater management issues is managing water flows on to the property from “outside the fence.”  Old logging ditches and pipe systems have become overgrown and filled with debris through the years. The ditches filled during the massive rain storms and the water flowed onto the site.

The Airport Authority has asked permission from the Army Corps of Engineers to work on these problem areas outside the 1300 acre construction area.

“We have put together a good plan to address the deficiencies,” said Tannehill.  “We look forward to any suggestions and improvements that FDEP may provide.  Our immediate focus is to implement these corrective measures as soon as possible.  We have begun work already.”

“Developing this plan was the first step in addressing the problem,” said Tannehill.  “We will continue to review the root causes and the lessons learned from what has happened.  In the days and weeks ahead we will continue to share information with the public and keep the community informed with the steps we are taking to ensure this doesn’t happen again.”

Regular updates on stormwater management and other issues will be posted on the Airport Authority’s public information web site at http://www.newpcairport.com.

“I learned long ago that you learn more from difficult situations than easy ones,” said Tannehill.  “This has most certainly been a difficult situation. This airport Board resolved long ago to make the new Panama City – Bay County International Airport one of the world’s most environmentally-friendly, and the events of the last week have taught us a lot and strengthened our commitment to the environment.”

“We will continue working with FDEP to ensure our new airport ultimately results in a net environmental gain for our region, and to build and operate one of the nation’s greenest airports,” said Tannehill.

The plan the Airport Authority submitted to FDEP can be downloaded here.

Foreign Trade Zone Status at New Airport

Panama City, FL (Nov. 10, 2008) – The Panama City – Bay County International Airport Authority has directed Airport Executive Director Randy Curtis to evaluate the options for establishing a Foreign trade zone at the new international airport currently under construction in West Bay.

“The airport board believes it is important to establish a Foreign Trade Zone at the new airport in order to maximize its economic development potential,” said Airport Authority chairman Joe Tannehill.  “Having a foreign trade status at the new airport will put us in another category altogether and be an important differentiator in competing for new jobs and business expansions.”

The action taken by the Airport Authority is in consideration of extensive statistics documenting the importance of foreign trade to the Florida economy. It noted that establishing a Foreign Trade Zone at the new Panama City – Bay County airport would make the new facility one of 10 airports in Florida.

Airport board members agreed that Foreign Trade Zone in West Bay would benefit the community and the region by facilitating and expediting international trade, providing special customs procedures as a public service to help firms conduct business, encouraging and facilitating exports, attracting offshore activity, assisting state/local economic development efforts and creating employment opportunities.

The action taken directs Airport Executive Director Randy Curtis to begin immediately preliminary work to create a Foreign Trade Zone at the new international airport in WestBay.

Specifically, the board asked Curtis to develop options for the airport board to consider concerning the size and boundaries of the trade zone, including a discussion of the costs and benefits associated with each option presented.  Further, the board asked Curtis to investigate public/private partnerships to stimulate intermodal infrastructure development.

Florida Trade Facts:

The U.S. is the world’s largest trading nation, exporting nearly $1.3 trillion in goods and services and more than one-fifth of the growth in U.S. GDP depends on exports. (1)

Manufacturing exports support an estimated 5.2 million jobs, including 1 in 5 manufacturing jobs, and jobs supported by goods exports pay 13-18% higher than the average wage. (2)

More than 30,000 companies export from Florida locations, including more than 28,000 small and medium-sized businesses. (3)

Florida’s export shipments of merchandise in 2007 totaled $45 billion, up 80 percent from $25 billion in 2003, ranking sixth among the states in terms of total exports in 2007, and exporting to 222 foreign destinations. (4)

1 – Office of the United States Trade Representative, 2005 data (latest available).
2 – Office of the United States Trade Representative, 2002 data (latest available).
3-  International Trade Administration and Bureau of the Census, Foreign Trade Division (2006 data).
4 – Revised Origin of Movement State Export Series, Bureau of the Census, Foreign Trade Division (2007 data).

Contact:
The Panama City Bay County International Airport
Randy Curtis, Executive Director, 850-763-6751 ext. 203

Airport Authority Prevails on Permit Challenge

News Release

PANAMA CITY – BAY COUNTY AIRPORT AND INDUSTRIAL DISTRICT
PREVAILS ON CHALLENGE TO ITS FEDERAL PERMIT

CONSTRUCTION CONTINUES ON NEW INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT

Panama City, Florida – (October 30, 2008) – The Panama City – Bay County International Airport and Industrial District (Airport Authority) received a Final Order in U.S. District Court in the Florida Clean Water Network, National Resource Defense Council and Defenders of Wildlife’s challenge to environmental permits issued on the Airport Authority’s project for a new international airport in West Bay.

In February, 2008 the Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit challenging the legality of a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers permit and attempted to obtain a temporary restraining order to suspend the permit and stop the construction of the Northwest Florida’s new airport. The Court denied the Plaintiffs’ Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order

In his ruling issued today, Judge Timothy J. Corrigan of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Jacksonville Division  found that “the record supports that the Corps considered the concerns raised by those who opposed the project and the comments of those who favored it, it considered the FAA’s position, and it considered the goal of the Authority before determining that the project purpose should appropriately include flexibility for growth opportunities sufficient that international charter operations could use the airport.”

The Court further found that “the Corps considered the record before it, including the EIS (Environmental Impact Statement) prepared by the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) and the West Bay Vision Plan (which, as noted above, envisions a fifty year regional development plan anchored by the relocated Airport), and determined that compatibility with these local and regional comprehensive planning efforts was a necessary and not incidental component of the project…..[T]he County looked to use the airport project as a centerpiece to stimulate economic development in the region at the only site that could accommodate growth and FAA safety and military airspace concerns while avoiding hurricane storm surges…”

“I am thrilled with the court’s decision.  This has been a long fought battle and I am pleased that the court has vindicated our decision and the decision of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,” said Joseph Tannehill, Chairman of the Airport Authority. “As the federal court noted, this airport project is the centerpiece to stimulate economic development. There’s no better time in the history of Bay County, considering these economic times, than for us to have this project at this stage at this time.”

Judge Corrigan’s opinion dismissed with prejudice the Plaintiffs’ claims pertaining to the Clean Water Act Section 404 permit which the Plaintiffs brought against the United States Fish and Wildlife Service and the United States Army Corp of Engineers under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA).

“This Airport and the West Bay Sector Plan represent unique opportunities for Northwest Florida,” said Bill Cramer, Vice Chairman of the Airport Authority. “For once economic development can be advanced in unison with environmental protection. We appreciate the court’s judgment on our project and we will continue to proceed toward our projected opening of May 2010.”

Contact:
The Panama City Bay County International Airport
Randy Curtis, Executive Director, 850-763-6751

Airport Terminal Contract Awarded

After nearly two weeks of brainstorming, collaboration, and value engineering, Walbridge and HNTB came back with just over $10 million in savings.  This is still $3 million more than originally budgeted, but the reduction is $5 million greater than estimated at the last meeting.

Not a quarrel was made about the savings, but there was plenty of discussion about the fee at which HNTB was to charge for the services rendered in order to perform the savings exercise.  We’ll get into that is a bit, but first, lets discuss the savings and what they entail.

Among other things, the terminal canopy is being reduced “dramatically”.  The renderings have changed, reflecting the overall look of the new terminal.  The new canopy will be of a different material with the materials used for the wall structure consisting of steel frame that will be covered with stucco – replacing the previous wall of windows.  The savings in the canopy modifications alone ring in around $1 million.

In the redesign of the terminal, the architecture firm was striving to keep consistent with the “Florida Cracker” look and feel using wood and other natural-looking materials.  The trellis arrangement that was originally to be visible from the inside of the terminal has been removed from the plans with the structure support now coming from a series of columns, some visible and others built into the walls.

Also, instead of purchasing new passenger bridges that will pass passengers to the aircraft, the board will purchase “pre-owned” bridges.

One of the largest savings came with a modification of the baggage handling/screening process.  The original system, the way I understand it, consisted of a sophisticated automatic process that far exceeded the minimum safety requirements of the TSA. A savings of $1.6 million brought in a system that still meets TSA requirements, but isn’t as “fancy” as the original system.

Now the topic of much debate.  Why should the Airport Authority Board have to pay a fee to HNTB for the redesign process that was to get the cost back down to budget.  This is a very valid point in that, if I tell you a web site I build for you will be one price, then after we work through a process to determine your needs and hammer out all the details, the price is 25% more than the original quote, then I charge you money to work through with you to get the price back down to budget, is that right?

Well, I’m afraid the answer is actually quite a bit more complex than that.  In fact, it is probably quite a bit more complex than I understand.

You see, it all started in April or May of this year when the bid was 95% complete and all the numbers still looked on target.  As one of the board members so pointedly put it, “so the terminal went over budget $14 million in the last 5%?”

Jeff Dealy, with KBR, explained this as sort of an anomaly.  With materials costs rising sharply right around the April/May time period and the “bid sheets hitting the streets” at that same time, the bids the architecture firm was receiving from its consultants were coming in higher than originally anticipated.  The problem is that today was the first many had heard of this; and the question is who’s fault is it?

The Airport Authority Board insists that the fault lies with HNTB.  Joe Tannehill stated that if HNTB had noticed the costs going out of control, they should have said something early on so as not to have had to go through this excersise in the first place.  Board member Bill Cramer was pushing for an “outside” number, a “not to exceed” estimate on the fee HNTB would be charging the board to perform the VE excersise.  At the time of the meeting, HNTB didn’t have the fee number solidified and was unprepared to give a quote.  Joe Tannehill stated that he didn’t beleive there should be a fee at all because if the architecture firm was “doing their job”, they would be at budget.

After around 30 minutes of rather interesting dialogue, Chairman Tannehill made a motion to have a recess and return at 12 giving HNTB time to figure out what the fee would be and to return with a suitable number.

The decision had to be make today, so the Board needed all the information so as to eliminate as many future unknowns as possible.

After the recess, it was decided by HNTB that the fee cost would be more than what was considered suitable, but that they would cap it at $500,000.

It was suggested by Andy McKenzie that HNTB only charge the Board the direct costs it incured and payed out to outside consultants that HNTB did not own.

A motion was made and passed to approve the bid and award the contract with the allowance of the board to address who was going to pay for HNTB’s fee.

That was it as I understand it, please feel free to correct anything I said if it was wrong or the wrong assumption was made at any point.

Mr. Minor, will you please send me an email as I’d like to pick your brain a little on the dynamics of all of this.