May 2, 2024 Breaking News, Latest News, and Videos

Letting Go of SMO:

Full Disclosure: Columnists are rarely experts. With today’s technology-intensive lifestyles, there are people who write columns in tech publications who can actually give you some useful advice on how to improve the speed of your computer. But alas, like most of us, I’m just an observer albeit one that has the privilege of weighing-in once a week in this newspaper on things that seem to matter. That said, you should also know I love airplanes. My father was a pilot when I was a kid and there was nothing that topped taking a ride with him in a single-engine Cessna on a Sunday afternoon.

But I’m not sure any of my nostalgia for flying with my Dad mixes into the struggle Santa Monica is having over the Santa Monica Airport (SMO.) The Santa Monica City Council has unanimously approved a motion to consider a resolution (read the first part of this sentence again to be clear) indicating its intent to close SMO by June 30, 2018 or as soon as legally permitted. Staff will bring that proposed resolution to the Council on its August 23rd meeting.

Because voting to consider a resolution is kind of like a parent saying, “We’ll think about it…” to a child’s plea to go to Six Flags, there are those who suspect the Council of “pandering” to anti-airport activists: Doing, by not doing.

This observer believes there might be four major tent stakes that seem to be holding the closure of SMO in a stalemate. One, SMO has been a fixture since most Santa Monica residents have lived here. First it was Clover Field and the site of the Army’s 40th Division Aviation, when the “airport” became a Distribution Center after World War II. In 1958 Douglas Aircraft wanted to produce and test the DC 8 aircraft there and asked the city to lengthen the runway. Residents objected, and Douglas closed a plant that had employed 44,000 workers during World War II… moving airliner production to Long Beach. SMO then evolved into a general aviation airport. So SMO has been a fact of life in our city since before many of us were here. It’s difficult to imagine something going away when it’s been around since, like, forever, dude.

Two, residents living immediately adjacent to SMO are right to be concerned about crashes and noise. But they are also possibly vulnerable to the charge of being NIMBY, or saying “Airports are fine, just not in my backyard.” Although with SMO’s long history there’s little question many homeowners nearby were aware they were next to an airport when they bought their homes.

Three, as with every major issue in our city, there’s always a question of money. According to an article in The Mirror, SMO makes a direct economic impact on our city of $275 million, creates more than 1,400 local jobs and enjoys rent revenues that may soon approach half a billion. None of SMO’s proponents could possibly want all that dough to just fly away.

Tent stake four is kind of a personal theory, but I think it holds: Private jet owners and users want to keep SMO intact so that they don’t have to hassle with landing at LAX. Think of how much closer the Malibu or Brentwood homes of LA’s movers and shakers are when landing at SMO instead of fighting the traffic, human and auto, at LAX.

The question then seems to become whether it would be truly futuristic and smart to close SMO and use the land for something else. Ted Winterer of the City Council felt that the motion Tuesday brought clarity to any suspicions that the Council wants to open the land to “massive development,” although your definition of “massive” might vary from mine.

Do we ever really listen to Cher and “turn back time?”  I’m not currently aware of any efforts by residents in Southern California to close down certain freeways once and for all. But then, freeways benefit drivers and we’re all drivers here. SMO serves those who fly aircraft, although I can already hear someone clearing their throat to say “and that benefits all of Santa Monica in one way or another.”

Our city will yield to the construction of new hotels that inevitably serve a small portion of the economic 1 percent who can afford rooms starting at $400. Allowances that bring new retail rarely mean that a new Goodwill store will be opening, or even a Target or WalMart. It’s great that Santa Monica has something like 400 restaurants, but many of them target fine dining rather than helping working parents put something together for dinner on a weeknight.

And thus do I often feel that there’s a patina of something that might disturb Bernie Sanders about keeping SMO an airport. SMO may arguably – in one way or another – benefit all citizens of Santa Monica by remaining an airport, but that’s not the same as serving all the citizens of Santa Monica. As I said at the top, I love flight and airplanes. I like democracy, fairness and safety more. But again, I’m just an observer.

in News
Related Posts

UCLA Gaza Solidarity Encampment Dismantled After Night of Counter Protesters’ Violence

May 2, 2024

May 2, 2024

LAPD and Other Agencies Sent in For “Student Safety”, Students Arrested  The UCLA Gaza Solidarity Encampment was removed during the...

UCLA Gaza Solidarity Encampment Attacked by Counter-Protesters During the Night/Early Morning Hours

May 2, 2024

May 2, 2024

Violence Erupts as Demonstrators Face Aggression During Tense Overnight Attacks On the night and early morning of April 30 into...

(Video) Footage of the Violent Counter Protesters at UCLA. TW: For Language and Violence

May 2, 2024

May 2, 2024

This reporter was grabbed and cursed at the end of the video. @smmirrornews Footage of the Violent Counter Protesters at...

Reactions From Local Authorities About the Violent Attacks April 30 at UCLA

May 2, 2024

May 2, 2024

Condemnation for the Incident and How it Was Handled Pour In After the terrifying events on the night and early...

US PREMIERE IN NYC AT THE SOCIALLY RELEVANT FILM FESTIVAL – MARCH 16, 2024

May 2, 2024

May 2, 2024

FEATURING SAMMY SHEIK – WINNER BEST ACTOR FOR “I AM GITMO”AT MARBELLA INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2023 Los Angeles, CA –...

Cinco de Mayo Festival Coming to Oakwood Park This Weekend

May 1, 2024

May 1, 2024

Revelers Can Expect to Be Entertained by Aztec Dancers, Grupo la Rosa Folklorico Dancers, and Charro (Mexican Dancing Horses) The...

These Bike-Centric Events Are Coming to Santa Monica This Month

May 1, 2024

May 1, 2024

The Festivities Extend Beyond May, With the Aids/Lifecycle Finish Line Festival on June 8 As Bike Month kicks off, the...

Hotel Labor Disputes End in Santa Monica

May 1, 2024

May 1, 2024

Key Highlights of the Agreement Include $5 per Hour Raise in the First Year, and Wage Increases of up to...

“Days Like These” Art Exhibition Coming to Bruce Lurie Gallery

May 1, 2024

May 1, 2024

Featured Artists Hail From the Florida Panhandle and Cleveland, Ohio “Days Like These,” an exhibition showcasing the latest paintings from...

New Bakery, Petitgrain Boulangerie, Set to Open in Santa Monica in Broadway Bakery Space

May 1, 2024

May 1, 2024

Industry Veterans Bring Their Expertise to the Wilshire Blvd Location By Dolores Quintana Petitgrain Boulangerie, a new bakery, is taking...

Cirque du Soleil Is Returning to the Santa Monica Pier

May 1, 2024

May 1, 2024

This Marks Cirque du Soleil’s First Big Top Show In Santa Monica Since 2014 The renowned Cirque du Soleil production,...

Artisan Soft Serve Chain “Turn Dough” is Opening a New Westside Location

April 30, 2024

April 30, 2024

Other Locations Are Set up on Venice Beach’s Ocean Front Walk and the Hollywood Walk of Fame By Zach Armstrong...

Mayor Karen Bass and Mayor Phil Brock Converge on D.C. to Tackle Homelessness Crisis

April 30, 2024

April 30, 2024

Bipartisan Coalition of Mayors Advocate for National Solutions Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, Chair of the U.S. Conference of Mayors...

Venice Lifeguard Station Is Now a Historic Monument. Here’s What That Means for the Iconic Structure

April 30, 2024

April 30, 2024

The Station Qualified for the Classification by Adding to l.a.’s Cultural History and Embodying Distinct Traits of a Certain Construction...

(Video) SMC to Be the First Community College With a “Microforest”

April 30, 2024

April 30, 2024

State Sen. Ben Allen Attended the Unveiling as a Guest Speaker @smmirrornews SMC is leading the way in sustainability #santamonica...