Runway Red Lights — Solution Or Stopgap?

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Key Takeaways:

  • Runway status lights, effective in reducing incursions at airports like DFW and San Diego, are being deployed at LAX, marking the first installation on high-speed exit taxiways.
  • Despite positive reports and a recommendation for wider deployment by the DOT Inspector General, the FAA views these lights as a "stopgap measure."
  • FAA Acting Administrator Bobby Sturgell noted that while the lights help reduce incursions, they don't address fundamental airport layout issues, such as closely spaced runways at LAX.
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It might seem like a sensible solution, especially at big airports with a complex array of taxiways and runways — embed red lights into the runway pavement at the intersections. It’s been tried at Dallas-Fort Worth and in San Diego, and reports are positive. But the technology is simply a “a stopgap measure,” according to FAA Acting Administrator Bobby Sturgell. “Runway status lights are one way to drive down incursions, but theyre not the best way,” he said this week, while visiting Los Angeles International Airport to announce that the lights will be installed there. At LAX, he says, the runways are simply too close together, and that layout needs to be addressed. A recent report by the Office of Inspector General for the Transportation Department found that the status-light systems are effective and should be deployed at airports across the country.

The new lights at LAX should be up and running by early next year. The LAX system will be the first to include installations on high-speed exit taxiways.

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