City of Bridgeton City of St. Charles St. Charles County v. Faa Rodney E. Slater, in His Official Capacity as Secretary of Transportation Jane F. Garvey, in Her Official Capacity as Faa Administrator John E. Turner, in His Official Capacity as Faa Regional Administrator

212 F.3d 448
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 2000
Docket98-3506
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 212 F.3d 448 (City of Bridgeton City of St. Charles St. Charles County v. Faa Rodney E. Slater, in His Official Capacity as Secretary of Transportation Jane F. Garvey, in Her Official Capacity as Faa Administrator John E. Turner, in His Official Capacity as Faa Regional Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Bridgeton City of St. Charles St. Charles County v. Faa Rodney E. Slater, in His Official Capacity as Secretary of Transportation Jane F. Garvey, in Her Official Capacity as Faa Administrator John E. Turner, in His Official Capacity as Faa Regional Administrator, 212 F.3d 448 (8th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

212 F.3d 448 (8th Cir. 2000)

City of Bridgeton; City of St. Charles; St. Charles County, Petitioners,
v.
FAA; Rodney E. Slater, in his official capacity as Secretary of Transportation; Jane F. Garvey, in her official capacity as FAA Administrator; John E. Turner, in his official capacity as FAA Regional Administrator, Respondents.

No. 98-3506, 98-3774, 98-3925

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

Submitted: September 15, 1999
Filed: April 7, 2000
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc
Denied June 13, 2000*

Petitions for Review of the Decision of the Federal Aviation Administration.[Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted]

Before RICHARD S. ARNOLD, FLOYD R. GIBSON, and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.

LOKEN, Circuit Judge.

Two cities and a county located to the west of Lambert-St. Louis International Airport petition for review of a decision by the Federal Aviation Administration approving and authorizing federal funding for a proposed westward expansion of the Airport. Judicial review is authorized by the FAA Authorization Act of 1994, 49 U.S.C. 46110. Petitioners argue the decision violates the National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. 4231 et seq. (NEPA); 4(f) of the Transportation Act, 49 U.S.C. 303(c); and the consistency and notice provisions of the Airport and Airway Improvement Act of 1982, 49 U.S.C. 47106(a)(1) and (c)(1). Having given the FAA's decision and the administrative record the thorough, probing, but deferential review required by Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 414-15 (1971), and other cases, we conclude the FAA's decision was not "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law." 5 U.S.C. 706(2)(A). Accordingly, we deny the petitions for review.

I. Background

Located some twelve miles northwest of downtown St. Louis, Lambert is one of the nation's busiest and most delay-ridden airports. Lambert's importance to the National Airspace System is well-documented. In 1996, it ranked fourteenth nationally in terms of passengers enplaned and deplaned, and eighth in terms of aircraft operations. All of the nation's major commercial airlines serve Lambert, and Trans World Airlines uses Lambert as its primary connecting hub. Lambert is also important to the region's economy. Its proximity to St. Louis makes it accessible to the metropolitan area's 2,500,000 residents, and Lambert-related activity is estimated to provide $5 billion annually for the St. Louis region.

Local planners and the FAA have long explored alternatives for expanding Lambert's capacity and reducing air traffic delays. Lambert's delay problems stem primarily from its inadequate take-off and landing facilities. For decades, Lambert has relied on two parallel northwest/southeast runways, denominated 12L/30R and 12R/30L, to handle the bulk of its commercial traffic. Because only 1,300 feet separate the centerlines of the two runways, Lambert's air traffic controllers cannot. conduct independent simultaneous arrival operations in adverse weather conditions.1 Consequently, when bad weather precludes the use of visual flight rules (about six percent of the year in St. Louis), Lambert becomes not much better than a one-runway arrival operation, causing average per-operation delays to exceed seventy minutes. Lambert's ineffective functioning during inclement weather often disrupts the flow of air traffic nationwide.

The City of St. Louis owns Lambert and is the sponsor of the project at issue. The airport operator, the St. Louis Airport Authority, has been exploring options to expand runway capacity for over ten years. Between 1989 and 1993, St. Louis sponsored a comprehensive study resulting in an airport development plan called Alternative F-4, which called for building four new parallel runways on the site of runways 12L/30R and 12R/30L. Subsequent analysis revealed, however, that construction of the new runways would jeopardize Lambert's ability to function as a hub and would cost significantly more than originally anticipated. Consequently, St. Louis again studied numerous options. From nine alternatives representative of this universe, St. Louis selected a proposal known as Alternative W-1W, which entails the construction of a new 9,200-foot runway parallel to and to the west of existing runways 12L/30R and 12R/30L. The negative impacts of this expansion -- primarily noise and the need to acquire property presently devoted to other uses -- will fall most heavily on the City Bridgeton, which lies immediately to the west of Lambert, and to a lesser extent on the City of St. Charles and St. Charles County.

St. Louis applied to the Department of Transportation for federal funding of Alternative W-1W. The FAA undertook an independent review of the project, announcing that it would prepare an environmental impact statement for the proposed Lambert expansion. The FAA spent more than two years analyzing the preferred expansion plan and several alternatives, holding public meetings and responding to thousands of public comments. After issuing a Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) in December 1997, the FAA held meetings with various parties. The agency received both positive and negative comments about the project and its review process. On September 30, 1998, the FAA issued its Record of Decision approving federal assistance for the W-1W project. Bridgeton, St. Charles, and St. Charles County timely petitioned for judicial review of this final agency action.

II. The Record of Decision

The FAA's Record of Decision properly includes the findings required by the relevant federal statutes and regulations, and it concludes with a formal FAA Approval and Order. But the document also provides a detailed 125-page account of the process by which the FAA reviewed and ultimately approved the W-1W project. After recounting the history of Lambert airport and briefly summarizing the development process, the Record of Decision sets out the purpose and need for the Lambert expansion to provide "the primary foundation for the identification of reasonable alternatives and the evaluation of the impacts of the development." The articulated purposes of the expansion project are (1) "to effectively and safely accommodate projected levels of aviation activity at an acceptable level of delay" by increasing airfield capacity, improving visual flight rules capacity, allowing dual independent simultaneous arrivals in bad weather conditions, and decreasing delays; (2) to enhance the National Airspace System by increasing capacity and reducing delays; (3) to maintain Lambert's importance to the economic vitality of the St.

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212 F.3d 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-bridgeton-city-of-st-charles-st-charles-county-v-faa-rodney-e-ca8-2000.