Posts Tagged ‘Alastair Welch’

RE: This evening’s meeting

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Denis – Thank you for your note.

I feel the tone of the note simply reinforces the benefit that we would both
gain from sitting down and discussing your concerns. I have written to your
Chairman on a number of occasions inviting her to meet with me – for the
avoidance of doubt – there is an open invitation for you to sit down and
meet with me to discuss your concerns – you have my contact details.

An illustration of the reason it may be helpful to sit down – on Friday you
were reading Boeing data suggesting the A319 was louder than the 146. What
you did not mention (although your website has highlighted it on a number of
occasions in the past) is that the 319 is payload restricted on take off
with 1800m distance – ie it cannot reach the USA etc. The noise at max
takeoff from Southend (with a longer runway)is less than the A319 at max
take off weight for Southend. If it would be helpful, I would be happy to
sit down and run through this.

I don’t think it would be helpful to run through the rest of your note -
Suffice it to say you are wrong on the meeting item, wrong on the
airportwatch representative, wrong that my PA was even there etc etc.

I could counter with on buzzword bingo – but my aim is for a constructive
dialogue based on fact and I have no wish to make this trivial.

As I say – open invitation to you to meet with me.

Regards, Alastair.

Whatever happened to the airport meeting?

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

The deserted departure lounge

The deserted departure lounge featuring display boards about the proposed expansion.


Dear Mr Welch,

I was disappointed this evening to find that the Departure Lounge was locked and there was nobody about. A Jennie Johnson of Eastwoodbury Lane had previously issued leaflets advertising a meeting at 7pm today in the Departure Lounge, which we were told would be “An Airport Update by Alistair Welch”.

I since learned from Ms Johnson that she had decided not to attend this evening. However, given that you told us on Friday that you are keen to meet members of the SAEN committee I had hoped you would make yourself available in any case.

It is a shame that you had expressed fear at appearing on the same panel as a knowledgeable expert from AirportWatch, which as we all knew long before the meeting was the real reason for Roger Wood’s invitation being withdrawn. It’s also pretty low to have your PA in the audience, heckling. My personal carbon emissions are hardly relevant to the debate even though I don’t own a car and have never flown.

I look forward to another opportunity to discuss the airport’s proposals with you in public. There is little point in us meeting in private (not that you have ever invited me to do so) as it is far easier to communicate by letter or email, particularly as we then have a record of what we have each said.

Regards,


Denis Walker
Press Officer, Stop Airport Extension Now

http://www.saen.org.uk/

Airport given a hard time at Leigh meeting

Friday, November 13th, 2009
LTC Public Meeting, 13th Nov 2009

LTC Public Meeting, 13th Nov 2009

Leigh Town Council held a meeting this evening to give the public an opportunity to find out more about the airport’s expansion plans and what impact they would have particularly for people living under the flight path in Leigh. Around 180 people attended.

The panel was made up of Rob Matthews and Alistair Welch of Southend Airport, Nigel Holdcroft and Andy Lewis of Southend Borough Council and Denis Walker of SAEN and South East Essex Friends of the Earth.

Roger Wood, a campaigner from LADACAN (the Luton Airport equivalent of SAEN) and the Aviation Environment Federation had accepted an invitation to appear on the panel two days previously, but his invitation was withdrawn a few hours later by Leigh Town Council on the basis that he didn’t live in Leigh.

The airport revealed that during that afternoon, they had concluded negotiations with Network Rail and National Express to build their proposed station at a cost of around £12m. No other new information was forthcoming from them.

David Amess, MP for Southend West was unable to attend the meeting but presented his apologies and a statement in which he asked for the audience to vote on whether they wanted the decision to go to a Public Inquiry. However, there was confusion among the panellists (including those from Southend Borough Council) as to whether it was necessary to call the planning application in before or after the decision was made. Mr Amess’s statement made specific reference to calling the application in after it had been decided by Southend Council’s Development Control Committee and it is possible that he was only talking in terms of an appeal if planning permission was refused. We will investigate this matter further and keep you informed. Update: We now have a copy of Mr Amess’s statement. Analysis to follow shortly.

Towards the end of the meeting Cllr Alan Crystall, a member of Southend Council’s Development Control Committee (DCC), stood up and gave his view that the runway should not be extended. This would have barred him from taking part in the DCC’s decision were it not for the fact that he had already been barred for making comments opposing the expansion previously. He brought up the matter of the Government’s lack of support for expansion to 2 million passengers per year, which was then challenged by Alistair Welch, whose documentation indicates support from the Government.

However, Denis Walker then read out the following statement made by the East of England Regional Assembly in their response to Phase 2 of the JAAP:

The JAAP does include the support and identified role of the airport contained in the 2003 Air Transport White Paper (ATWP). However, contrary to JAAP policy LS1, neither the ATWP nor the East of England Plan identifies growth at London Southend of up to two million passengers per annum (mppa). The two mppa figure was an assumption used in the demand and impact appraisal work and was based on the maximum use of the runways at the major airports and no new runway capacity.

Given that the ATWP supported new runways at Stansted and Heathrow, the role for Southend that is supported was not for two mppa, but to meet local demand and the needs of business aviation. This is reflected in policy E7 and paragraph 4.31 of the East of England Plan.

This is just one example of the numerous factual inaccuracies to be found in the Airport’s planning application and we will share others as they come to light.

Alastair Welch: Being evasive

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

Leigh-on-Sea
Essex

11th July 2009

Your refs: 246/09 & 247/09

Dear Mr Welch

Thank you for your letters dated 30th June and 9th July respectively which we have just picked up off the mat on our return from Holiday.

I refer to the third paragraph in your letter of the 30th June in which you state “If a runway extension were to be progressed we would be able to install a second Instrument Landing System (ILS) at Southend improving safety and approach procedures for aircraft runway 06″. What if a runway extension does not go ahead? There will still be flights approaching over Leigh and Southend. Why are you not able to install an ILS regardless of whether the runway extension goes ahead? Do we, as residents, not warrant improved safety and approach procedures?

But as you might appreciate it is of course the noise factor that is our major concern as residents. If, as you state the various aircraft that were the subject of my letters were operating to standard procedures and wholly within the airport’s operating conditions this is presumably what we could expect every 10 minutes or so of every day throughout the summer season. Perhaps you would be good enough initially to explain precisely what these standard procedures and operating conditions are. Sufficed to say the noise generated by these aircraft would be totally unacceptable when repeated on a day to day basis if residents living close to or under the flight path are to retain any vestige of quality of life.

In your letter of 9th July you asked me to be more specific about what I mean by ‘re-aligning the runway’. I would have thought that this is something which you and the Councils concerned would have had as a major primary consideration if you are at all concerned as you say with the day to day quality of life of the thousands of residents who live close to flight path of the existing runway. I am no expert and I only know what I have read in the local press. However, I do recollect a letter in which the correspondent stated that if the runway was re-aligned to SE-NW there is a one mile wide by 4 miles long corridor of open countryside from Southend which runs between Hockley and Hawkwell to the north and Rayleigh and Eastwood to the South (viewable on Google Earth), beyond which is only countryside. Additionally I also took note of a more recent letter in which the writer stated that wind speeds and direction are changing possibly due to global warming so to dismiss re-alignment of the runway as technically impossible is a bit of a misnomer. The UK largest airport London Heathrow is aligned East to West, London City Airport is also aligned East to West, Manston (just across the Thames Estuary from Southend and evidently also one of the UK’s longest runways is roughly SSE-NNW. I only know what I read but it seems legitimate to ask the question inasmuch that it seems quite clear that modern aircraft can take off and land in almost any wind direction.

I would ask the question, have you at any time looked into the possibility of re-alignment? If not, why not? And if so, why is it not possible?

Yours sincerely

H F Bramble (Mrs)


London Southend Airport

16th July 2009

Mrs H F Bramble
Leigh on Sea
Essex

Dear Mrs Bramble,

Thank you for your letter dated 11th July in which you ask me a question about the installation of an instrument landing system on runway 006 and also about the feasibility of a realigned runway.

If I may I’ll respond to the questions in reverse order:

Runway realignment – firstly the reason I asked you to clarify was that I was unclear whether you were referring to a slight reorientation of the existing runway or the construction of a new runway perpendicular to the existing runway – I believe you suggest the latter. As you may know the airport had a ‘cross wind’ runway for a number of years although this was decommissioned many years ago. Whilst there is a long technical explanation, the short answer is that this is simply not practical. I would be very happy to discuss this with you in more detail on the phone if this would be helpful, but I can assure you this has been explored in some detail and discounted.

ILS – an Instrument landing system consists of two key equipment components – a ‘localiser’ which is a series of aerials at the end of the runway and a ‘glidepath’ which is some electronic equipment which sets out an approach angle for approaching aircraft. This glidepath has to be close to the touchdown zone for aircraft and has to have clear line of sight for approaching aircraft. We cannot achieve this with the current runway arrangement due to the proximity of both the taxiway system and other above ground obstacles. The proposed changes to the runway would enable the ILS to be installed in an area free of obstacles adjacent to the new touch down zone.

I hope this is helpful but as I have indicated if you would find a more detailed explanation helpful, please do contact me on 01702 608115, I’d be happy to explain this to you in as much detail as would be helpful.

Kind regards.

Yours sincerely

Alastair Welch
Managing Director


22nd July 2009

Dear Mr Welch

London Southend Airport – The Runway

Many thanks for your letter dated 16th July 2009 in which, inter alia, you kindly offered to discuss with me on the telephone the reasons why re-alignment of the runway would not be practical (I note you say “practical” but not “practicable”).

Such a discussion would sadly not be productive for either of us. I have no technical expertise in this area as I suspect you will already have assumed. I am simply one of those thousands of residents who live close to, or directly under, the existing flight-path and whose quality of life would stand to be completely destroyed if the proposal to extend the existing runway is finally approved.

Despite my humble status, however, I am capable of reading and digesting correspondence from people who clearly purport to know much more about the subject than I. And, when I fead the sort of letters to which I drew attention in my letter of 11th July, on the face of it there did seem to be a very real possibility of a compromise solution involving re-alignment of the runway which would offer the prospect of increased flights without destroying quality of life.

In these circumstances I feel sure you will agree that residents, like myself, are entitled at the very least to know much more about this aspect than has been published hitherto, certainly more than a bald statement that “it has been explored in some detail and discounted”.

Perhaps you would, therefore, be good enough to advise me:-

  1. When was the subject last discussed?
  2. In what forum was it discussed and explored?
  3. Are the records of the discussion/exploration available for public inspection?
  4. Have there been any papers produced on the subject? If so, are copies available for public consumption?
  5. What is the technical explanation (to which you refer in your letter) of why the re-alignment is not practical?

A number of my friends and neighbours look forward to your reply. Who knows, you might just be able to dissuade them from the long-held, and thus far understandable, view that you couldn’t give a damn about their quality of life.

With best wishes

Yours sincerely

Mrs H F Bramble


London Southend Airport

21st August 2009

Mrs H F Bramble
Leigh on Sea
Essex

Dear Mrs Bramble,

Thank you for your letter dated 22nd July. You make a number of points and ask a number of questions which you ask me to respond to in writing. I do feel, however and as I mentioned in my previous letter, I think it would be much more useful to discuss this matter over the phone or I would be happy to meet with you in person.

This issue is a complex one and I feel it would be much easier to explain to you in person and answer any questions that arise as part of the discussion then and there.

I do hope you are able to take up this offer. Please contact Nicola Charles on 01702 608115 to arrange a suitable time. If you feel that this is not something that you would like to discuss now the offer will remain open for you to take up at a time that is more convenient.

Yours sincerely,

Alistair Welch
Managing Director

Alastair Welch: Meeting constituents

Monday, April 27th, 2009

London Southend Airport

27th April 2009

David Amess MP
House of Commons
London
SW1A 0AA

Dear Mr Amess MP,

Thank you for your letter dated 18th April addressed to Mr E Stobart, inviting him to meet with a group of your constituents with concerns about the airport expansion.

I am afraid that Eddie Stobart retired from the business many years ago and Stobart Group plc is led by our Chief Executive Andrew Tinkler.

You may recall from our earlier correspondence that I have myself been trying to arrange a private meeting for some time with Kiti Theobald, chairman of an anti expansion group, although to date she has declined these invitations.

Having spoken with Andrew Tinkler, might we suggest that in principle we would be very happy to join you in a private meeting with your constituents and suggest the meeting may best be held in your offices in London to suit you.

As you will appreciate, it would be helpful to understand who the constituents are and any particular concerns you are aware of in advance of any such meeting.

If you would be supportive of this approach, perhaps your office could liaise with Nicola Charles on 01702 608### and we look forward to making the appropriate arrangements.

With kind regards

Yours sincerely

Alastair Welch
Managing Director

David Amess MP: Our children, our health and our environment

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Dear David Amess,

I would like to take this opportunity to oppose the expansion of Southend Airport.

I believe the expansion would produce a considerable detrimental health & environmental impact upon residents & the local area.

  • Noise pollution. If what is proposed, then the frequency of larger aircrafts would produce a significant increase in the noise pollution of this area. It would not only increase in frequency, but would also be at more unsociable hours & night times. This would result in sleepless nights for many.
  • Environmental. When we are at a time when it is crucial to decrease our “carbon footprint” then surely we should look at more environmentally friendly travel & freight solutions, rather than the use of heavy aircraft, due to their negative effects on our already fragile global climate.
  • Negative Heath Effects. Studies show that the effects of air pollution on the public could lead to increased heart & respiratory problems, including asthma. The HYENA study recently proved that noise from aircrafts can actually raise your blood pressure even when you are asleep.
  • Property prices. In an already unstable financial market, I fail to see how the council think it would be beneficial to our area to add to the reduction in house prices. I moved to Leigh on Sea as I thought it was a beautiful & peaceful area. Since I have moved here, house prices have already dropped, as in many areas. By expanding the airport, this could only lead to further drop in house prices, devaluing our wonderful Leigh on Sea.
  • Road Infrastructure. The A127 & A13 are already struggling to cope with the extent of traffic leading into Southend. This can be seen when it is tested on a sunny weekend or Bank Holiday. Our roads cannot support the tourist influx at the best of times & leave roads often almost in gridlock!
  • Most importantly, Our Children. There are many children that would be affected by the expansion. Not only would they be affected by the points raised above, but also their schooling will be upset by the noise pollution. How many of us find it difficult to concentrate with noise around us, yet we are asking our children, our future, to learn & focus with the sound of planes as background noise. This negative effect would be contributed also by the lack of sleep our children would get. A study made by Barts & The London, Queen Mary’s School of Medicine & Dentistry, University of London has suggested that exposure to aircraft noise can impair reading comprehension. The authors concluded that schools exposed to high levels of aircraft noise are not healthy educational environments. EU research has also shown that exposure to aircraft noise has negative effects on children’s cognitive development.

There are a few precious things in life that we need to invest in & take special care of; our children, our health and our environment. I pose one question to contemplate….How can the expansion of our airport enhance these? My answer is that they can’t!

Yours sincerely,

Siouxzy Prior


DAVID AMESS MP

Member of Parliament for Southend West
HOUSE OF COMMONS
LONDON SW1A 0AA

Mrs Siouxzanne L. Prior
Leigh-on-Sea
Essex

Monday, 20th April 2009

Dear Mrs Prior,

Thank you for your letter regarding Southend Airport, which I have read carefully. I absolutely understand your concern and share your anxiety about the impact on Leigh residents. The proposed expansion involves redirecting a busy road, has environmental implications and will also mean more noise disturbance, particularly for residents in Leigh such as yourself over which the new flight paths would run.

I have made my views clear to the Airport’s Managing Director Alastair Welch and will continue to watch this issue very very carefully to ensure that local residents’ interests are represented. I will also make sure your views are made known to the relevant authorities. I will contact you again as soon as I receive a response.

In the meantime, if you have any questions or think I can be of any further assistance in relation to this matter, please do not hesitate to contact me.

With all best wishes,

Yours sincerely,

David Amess MP


DAVID AMESS MP

Member of Parliament for Southend West
HOUSE OF COMMONS
LONDON SW1A 0AA

Mrs Siouxzanne L. Prior
Leigh-on-Sea
Essex

28 April 2009

Dear Mrs Prior,

Following our recent correspondence, I have received a response from Alastair Welch, Managing Director for Southend Airport.

Please find enclosed a copy of his reply. Though the letter responds to the points you made in some detail, I entirely appreciate it is unlikely to allay your anxiety – indeed, it does not mine. I will continue to make the case that any change in the status of the airport must not detrimentally affect the welfare of local residents.

I have also sent on a copy of your letter to the Chief Executive of Southend Council and the Leader of the Council. I have made and will continue to make representations to ensure that local residents’ concerns are not only listened to, but acted upon.

If you have any questions about the letter or if you think I can be of any further assistance in this matter, please do not hesitate to contact me.

With all best wishes,

Yours sincerely,

David Amess MP

London Southend Airport

23rd April 2009

David Amess MP
House Of Commons
London
SW1A 0AA

Dear Mr Amess,

Thank you for your letter dated 20th April in which you invite me to comment on a number of points raised by Mrs Prior of Leigh-on-Sea.

As you will appreciate, the merits of any runway extension will have to be expored as part of any future planning application and is something that the relevant authorities would have to consider at that time.

That said; your constituent raises points on a number of topics, specifically noise, pollution and road traffic which I comment on in turn:

Noise – The councils have made clear that the permitted noise levels at night (currently over 900 flights per month are permitted) would have to be dramatically reduced if any runway extension were to be approved.

CO2 – Rightly, we all have an obligation to address the impacts of global warming. Technically the emissions issue of aviation will increasingly be addressed in policy terms by EU emissions trading. That said, if we were to bring forward an application to extend the runway we would need to take account of this in any environmental impact assessment. Interestingly, today there are around 500,000 flights per year taken to Europe by people living in Southend and Rochford. These people typically drive to Stansted or Gatwick for their flights today which, itself has a big impact on CO2 emissions.

Road traffic – whilst I have yet to see the Councils’ traffic assessment, the airport at 2 million passengers – which we envisage could be in 10-15 years time – would, in the peak hour result in around 240 passenger related road movements per hour in each direction. The peak hours fall before the morning roads peak and after the evening roads peak. In addition, the peak movements per hour – under 500 – is around the number associated at the peak hour with a typical supermarket – and very significantly less than that associated with a major superstore.

The current council consultation relates to planning policy and as such is somewhat general in certain aspects – what is clear however, is that the two local councils’ preferred option sees Southend as an airport eventually achieving a maximum of 2 million passengers per annum – around 10% of the current size of Stansted or 3% of Heathrow. My hope is that we can serve the local population with high quality facilities, which allows them to fly from their local airport.

Today, the residents of Rochford and Southend alone make around 500,000 journeys to Europe by air each year. If the European flights from residents in Castle Point and Basildon are added this total is over 900,000. Far from being a London overspill, we see this being an airport to serve the local community.

Finally, the benefits of a successful local airport are, I believe, of very considerable value to the area. The additional on-airport employment will be considerable with over 1,000 additional jobs in ten years time. The inward investment arising from the improved access to Europe is of significant benefit and we believe the airport can play a central role in the regeneration and transformation of Southend and the broader South Essex corridor for the future.

I hope you find this helpful.

Kind regards,

Yours sincerely,

Alastair Welch
Managing Director