Airport commission meeting Thursday was marked by tense exchanges.
Steve Myrick

Airport Faces Strict New Deadline from FAA on Lagging Rescue Building

<p>The Federal Aviation Administration has given the Martha&rsquo;s Vineyard Airport Commission a deadline of Dec. 31 to finish designing an aircraft rescue and firefighting facility that is already years behind schedule.

The Federal Aviation Administration has given the Martha’s Vineyard Airport Commission a strict deadline of Dec. 31 to finish designing an aircraft rescue and firefighting facility that is already years behind schedule. The edict followed an August 26 meeting, in which commission chairman Myron Garfinkle and vice-chairman Robert Rosenbaum were called to the FAA regional headquarters in Burlington.

The FAA awarded the airport an $800,000 grant for design of the building in 2011; the new building is planned to include offices, bunk facilities, and room to house firefighting and snow removal equipment.

At a meeting of the commission Thursday, Mr. Garfinkle said Mary Walsh, the top regional administrator for the FAA, strongly criticized the lack of progress.

“Mary Walsh was very upset, expressed extreme displeasure with the fact that we didn’t use that money,” Mr. Garfinkle said.

Mr. Garfinkle and Mr. Rosenbaum said they were asked to leave the room and were called back 15 minutes later.

“They gave us one more chance,” Mr. Garfinkle said. “There will be a very strict timetable that we will have to adhere to.”

He said the FAA will consider a grant of $8 million for the construction of a firefighting facility, but that the airport will have to fund any snow removal facility on its own.

Mr. Garfinkle said he left the meeting “shell shocked.”

About $300,000 from the original design grant award, which was for a combined firefighting and snow removal facility, has been spent on preliminary design. According to acting airport manager Deborah Potter, the design process was nearing about 60 per cent completion. The cost of the combined facility, according to preliminary designs, would be in a range of $11 million to $16 million.

Those plans will have to be changed, at added expense, because the FAA now wants to fund only a firefighting facility, not a combined use building, according to Mr. Garfinkle.

Thursday marked the first airport commission meeting since Mr. Garfinkle disclosed that the airport was facing an Oct. 15 deadline to correct a series of deficiencies flagged by the FAA, or risk losing millions of dollars in federal grant money and also its status as a commercial airport. Manager Sean Flynn has been out since August 10 and is not expected to return, according to Mr. Garfinkle and Mr. Rosenbaum, who are negotiating with him over terms for his departure. Mrs. Potter, the assistant manager, has assumed the role of manager for now.

The meeting was marked by open tension among commissioners. Mr. Garfinkle said he was surprised to learn that commissioner Beth Toomey had called an FAA administrator in advance of the meeting asking for information. Mr. Garfinkle asked Ms. Toomey to explain her reasoning in the public session.

“I feel like there hasn’t been a lot of communication,” Ms. Toomey said. “I feel like the chair and the vice-chair are managing the airport, not the manager. I had concerns.”

Later, Mr. Rosenbaum responded. “In talking to the FAA, it is very common for airport commissioners to be involved in all aspects of the airport’s operations and management,” he said. “They did not expect commissioners to sit back in an ivory tower and come in once a month for a briefing.”

Also at Thursday’s meeting, Mrs. Potter updated the commissioners on two key deficiencies flagged in two separate FAA inspections at the airport earlier this year: lack of a wildlife management plan and failure to keep up with scheduled painting for runway markings. Among other things, during one inspection, deer were found inside the perimeter fence, a clear aviation hazard and safety violation.

On Thursday Mrs. Potter said work is progressing quickly on the wildlife management plan, and she expects to have the plan ready well before the Oct. 15 deadline.

She also told commissioners that airfield line painting is scheduled for Sept. 28 and 29. The painting will require 12-hour night closures of the airport on those two dates. The painting is funded by the Massachusetts Department of Transportation.

Following public discussion, the airport commission voted unanimously to go into executive session. The subject of the closed-door session, which included commission attorney Susan Whalen participating by phone, was listed in the agenda as three separate open meeting complaints filed against the commission.

Two of the complaints were filed by Mr. Flynn; the third complaint was filed by Barnstable resident Ronald Beaty.

Much of the Gazette’s information regarding the airport’s relationship with the FAA has come from interviews with Mr. Garfinkle and Mr. Rosenbaum. The Gazette has repeatedly sought copies of inspection reports and other correspondence from the commission, but has been told the material cannot be disclosed while part of an ongoing investigation.

Shortly before deadline Thursday, the Gazette received one of the items it had requested: a copy of the FAA’s May 2014 inspection report and a follow-up letter from November 2014. The inspection report noted four discrepancies, one of which was corrected during the course of the inspection. One of the others related to an airport compliance manual and the other two concerned airport markings. The November letter noted that the inspection file was closed after airport management had indicated all four discrepancies had been corrected. adding: “We commend you for the expeditious correction of these discrepancies.”

Separately, Ms. Whalen responded late Thursday to an August 21 order from state Supervisor of Records Shawn A. Williams directing the commission to provide emails requested by the Gazette in June or explain in writing “with specificity” why the records should not be disclosed.

In a letter to the Gazette, Ms. Whalen said the emails related to a specific individual and were “disciplinary in nature as well as evaluative of the employee’s performance.” Disclosure would result in “an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy,” she said.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 09/10/2015 - 19:48

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oldtimer chilmark

Seems like Mr. Flynn still has control over one commissioner in Beth Toomey.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 09/10/2015 - 21:53

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concerned tisbury

Very disrespectful for Beth to go over Myron's head. Doesn't she know she's making it worse! Every time she does something like that it will cost the airport more money to get rid of him. Shame on you Beth.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/11/2015 - 11:12

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Herbert Roskind Oak Bluffs

Suggest airport use our old Duchess hanger for snow removal requirements. The airport presently owns and occupies this 8000 square foot hanger. It is insulated, heated and has two office and a bathroom with shower. It could be economically modified for a bunk room if needed.

Sally MV

OMG - a logical, well-thought-out suggestion that could actually save millions of dollars and get the airport moving toward compliance. We need more folks thinking like Herbert Roskind to clean up this mess.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/11/2015 - 16:59

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oldtimer chilmark

After reading this article I took the time to watch on MVTV a MVAC meeting from I believe 8/13/15, maybe if Ms. Toomey was engaged in the meeting or showed any true interaction and care for her appointed position she would possibly know what was going on and that the MVAC was in charge of how the airport is run. This is an extremely important time for the airport to get its act together so it should be taken seriously by all involved.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/12/2015 - 07:50

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sue tisbury

Isn't the airport commission in charge of custody, care and management of the airport by law? Perhaps Ms. Toomey should read the law and what she is supposed to be doing and not how Connie T. And the gang ran it into the ground. Also, I understand she wants to be chief but unfortunately, she is one of the other five that are not chair and co-chair. She and Norm are the odd ones out, just like the way Christine and Rich were treated before Myron, Bob and Clarence were appointed. If she had questions about what was going on why not ask Myron as opposed to contacting the FAA directly. Maybe if they are not telling her everything, they have concerns about her loyality to the board and she is not telling Mr. Flynn more than he needs to know.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 09/13/2015 - 10:13

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Peter Chilmark

What about borrowing the design from an existing fire and rescue building at another airport? Maybe the airport could save time and money not re-creating from scratch a building that works and has already been approved and funded by the FAA. The island airport's needs can't be that different from other small seasonal airports.

Concerned resident MV

Why don't you go and take a look at the new AARF building on Nantucket. Looked fine when we took a flight over and then looked at it. It's new, up to date, so just copy it.Hire their architect, it was already approved by FFA I would guess.

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