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FAA Airport Study Enters Phase Two

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Key Takeaways:

  • The FAA is conducting Phase Two of its "General Aviation Airports: a National Asset" study, specifically to categorize 497 airports that did not fit the initial classification.
  • Phase One of the study originally categorized 2,952 general aviation airports into National, Regional, Local, and Basic to facilitate consistent planning decisions.
  • The ongoing effort aims to further define airport categories and understand the diverse services GA airports provide, with results expected in December.
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It seems that fitting general aviation airports into categories is more difficult than the FAA first envisioned. The agency has announced Phase Two of its airport study, “General Aviation Airports: a National Asset,” and the focus of this follow-on effort will be on pinning down the categories of 497 airports that don’t quite fit the mold established in Phase One.

That study broke down what it described as “the nation’s 2,952 general aviation airports” into four categories: National, Regional, Local and Basic. The goal of establishing these categories was to help the FAA and state aviation authorities make consistent planning decisions.

Mark Phelps

Mark Phelps is a senior editor at AVweb. He is an instrument rated private pilot and former owner of a Grumman American AA1B and a V-tail Bonanza.

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