Court Tosses City’s Lawsuit to Close Santa Monica Airport

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Key Takeaways:

  • A federal judge dismissed Santa Monica's lawsuit against the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) seeking to clarify airport ownership and allow its closure.
  • The dismissal was based on procedural grounds, including claims being time-barred, requiring presentation to a different court, or being premature as the city had not yet decided to close the airport.
  • The city disputes FAA claims that it is bound by post-World War II agreements and federal grants to operate the airport in perpetuity, or at least until 2023 and beyond.
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It has beenreported that Santa Monica’s lawsuit against the Federal Aviation Administration seeking to clarify ownership of its municipal airport in order to close it was thrown out today by a federal court judge in downtown Los Angeles. U.S. District Judge John L. Walter dismissed the case, ruling that one of the lawsuit’s claims was barred by a statute of limitations, other claims must first be presented to the U.S. Court of Federal Claims and others were brought prematurely because the city had not yet made a decision on whether it plans to close the airport. Questions have been swirling about the airport’s future, as it is essential to the disaster plan for Los Angeles while residents who moved in adjacent to the nearly century-old airport claim it should be closed because of noise. The lawsuit, filed in October, questioned whether the city was required under agreements with the federal government to operate the land as an airport in perpetuity.

According to the city’s lawsuit, Santa Monica leased the airport to the federal government during World War II, and local and federal officials made improvements to the facility. After the war, the airport was returned to the city under an instrument of transfer, but federal officials contend that document calls on the city to operate the airport in perpetuity. City officials dispute that claim, contending the city has owned the land for nearly 100 years, and the property was merely leased to the government during the war. FAA officials said the agency’s position on the facility has been that the city should keep operating the airport until at least 2023 because of assurances that were made when the city received federal airport-improvement grants. The agency has also contended that the city is bound to continue operating the airport beyond 2023 under the terms of the post-war agreement in 1948.

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