Metropolitan Washington Airports
National Airport (Amended 2/21/09)
Located - 4 1/2 miles south of Washington D.C.
Main runway is just 0.7 miles from Jefferson Davis Highway (US Rt 1)
Opened - June 16, 1941
Built by - the Federal Government
Size - covers 860 acres: 733-land, 127-water.
Runway Configuration - There are three intersecting runways at National:
- Runway 1/19 (length - 6,869 feet) [Multiplying the runway heading by 10 gives
the magnetic compass reading of the runway; thus the "19" is translated
as 190 degrees (due south) and the "1" as 10 degrees (due north)]
- Runway 15/33 (5,189 feet)
- Runway 4/22 (4,505 feet)
National Airport Runway
Configuration

Dulles International Airport
Located - Chantilly, VA. approximately 26 miles and 30 minutes from downtown Washington,
D.C
Opened November 19,1962
Built by - the Federal Government
Size - Dulles was built on 10,000 acres situated in Loudoun and Fairfax
Runway Configuration - There are currently three runways at Dulles with two more
planned. The present ones are:
* 1L (left)/19R (Right) (11,500 feet)
* 1R/19L (11,500 feet)
* 12/30L (10,500 feet)
* 12/30R (10,500 feet)
Washington Dulles International Airport Runway Configuration

Additional facts about National and Dulles Airports and their operations may be viewed
at the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority website.
Top of Page
Operational factors. At National, major air carriers
"fly the river corridor"; that is, they fly up or down the Potomac River
using the longest runway at National, runway 1/19. Sometimes aircraft take off to
the north and land from the south. At other times it is the reverse. The reason for
reversing the direction is that aircraft should always take off into the wind. Flying
into the wind affords more lift and is therefore a safer way to operate. If the wind
is less than 9 knots, however, FAA air controllers may elect to have aircraft take
off even if there is a slight following wind. At National, this switching from north
to south operations will be noticed by residents, and may happen several times a
day.
Restricted areas
There are areas in the Federal part of Washington D.C. over which aircraft may
not fly. These are called restricted areas. They are the:
- White House
- Capital
- Mall
- Vice President’s house at the Naval Observatory.
Aircraft design (revised 2/07). When reading the takeoff
and landing noise levels stated in FAA documentation, it is easy to think that planes
make more noise on landing that they do on takeoff. A Boeing 757, for instances,
has a takeoff noise level of 72 dbA and a landing noise level of 85 dBA. The confusion
comes from the fact that when the FAA certifies a plane's noise levels they place
the noise meter micrphones at different locations. For takeoff the microphone is
located about 4 miles from where the aircraft starts its takeoff (the so-called brake
release point). By the time the aircraft passes over the microphone it has attained
some altitude, perhaps 1500 to 2000 feet. For landings the microphone is only about
1.25 miles from the plane as it descends, and the aircraft is usually lower in altitude,
maybe 400 feet. Also, when landing the plane has its flaps and landing gear down
and these appendages create noise. It's referred to as flying in a "dirty"
condition as opposed to the "clean" condition when taking off, wheels and
flaps up. Hence, when landing the noise level figure is higher as in the example,
85 dBA. However, it is the takeoff that we hear the most noise. It's all in how one
defines the reference points.
Initially, jet aircraft noise was not considered a problem as there were so few jets
flying. Over the years, though, the Federal Government realized that noise was becoming
a problem and required the manufacturers to decrease the level of noise emanating
from the engines and airframe. First we had Stage 1 like the old Boeing 707, then
Stage 2, epitimized by the Boeing 727, 737-100, the 747's, and the DC-9's. In 1990,
the Federal Government mandated that all Stage 2 commercial aircraft over 75,000
pounds be phased out by January 1, 2000, and be replaced with Stage 3 designs. Currently, the international aviation industry is moving towards Stage 4 designs which will reduce noise a little further, although most presently manufactored commercial aircraft already meet the new standards. Top of Page
Population affected by the airports. National Airport
operations impacts over 800,000 people (using 1990 census data). These are the people
who live in the areas adjacent to the airport or the Potomac River Corridor. Are
all of these people affected equally? The answer is no for several reasons. First,
of the 800,000 people, those living closest to the River and nearest the airport
will hear more noise. People living several miles away will hear less noise. Second,
not everyone is annoyed by aircraft noise. The official Government figure is that
12 to 15 percent of a local population are highly annoyed by aircraft noise. A new
look at the original research, however, says that at 65 DNL, the number of highly
annoyed people is more like 27 percent. Another recent study quotes figures as high
as 70 percent.
When Dulles International Airport is included, the total number of people impacted
rises to 935,000. Dulles is located in a more rural area, although from 2000 to the
present, that has rapidly increased in population due to the development of new communities
around Dulles.
Factors that affect the level of noise. Other
factors affect the amount of aircraft noise one will hear. Wind direction can increase
the noise if the prevailing wind blows from the aircraft towards the recipient. Aircraft
orientation can increase the noise or decrease the noise depending on which way the
rear of the aircraft is pointing. Humidity also affects the amount of noise one perceives.
The time of year increases or decreases the level of noise. Here in the Washington
area, in the late Spring through to the middle of the Fall, the noise is somewhat
attenuated because the folliage absorbs some of the noise. When the leaves drop off
the trees, the noise will be perceptively higher. Top of Page
Noise abatement procedures - Noise abatement procedures
can help reduce the impact of jet aircraft noise on citizens living near the airport
or along the flight paths. For National Airport, flights are directed to follow the
Potomac River, Anacostia Rivers or over the south Arlington area. Planes using Runway
1 fly to the 10 mile DME (Distance Measuring Equipment - indicates the distance to/from
the airport) to the northwest or if using Runway 19, to the 5 mile DME to the south.
For aircraft using Runway 3, they would fly up the Anacostia River to the 5 mile
DME. Alternately, instead of flying northwest up the river when the weather is bad,
northbound departures may follow the compass heading of 328 degrees once reaching
the Georgetown Reservoir. Under IFR (Instrument Flight Rules) conditions, radar vectors
are used together with VOR (VHF omni-directional range) guidance. Propeller-driven
aircraft are directed to follow the river where possible until reaching altitudes
of 1500 feet for single or twin-engine aircraft and 2000 feet for four engine aircraft.
For landings, aircraft will also follow the river corridors.
The noise abatement procedures for jet aircraft incorporate a power reduction at
1500 feet altitude when reaching the 2 mile DME point to the north, or the 3 mile
DME point to the south. The specified thrust cutback at that point is calculated
using aircraft performance to maintain the requested 500 feet per minute climb-out
at maximum weight on a hot day. This reduced rate of climb is maintained until the
aircraft reaches the 10 mile DME point (north direction) before any additional power
is added. Propeller aircraift have no climb profile restrictions.
It should be remembered that the noise abatement procedures are not mandatory,
but are in the official category of "advisory"; which means that the pilots
and air controllers can ignore them at their convenience. If they are ignored too
often, the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority (MWAA) should file a complaint
with the offending airline or with the FAA. Top of Page
Nighttime operations
There is no nighttime curfew at National Airport. There are, however, nighttime noise
limits for arrivals and departures, and these remain in effect from 10 p.m. to 7
a.m. There is a 30 minute grace period for late arrivals. The noise limits are: for
takeoff, 72 dBA. for landings, 85 dBA. The following aIrcraft meet these limits.
MD-90, some verisons of the A319, 320, and Boeing 757, and the regional jets (the
small 50 to 70 seat aircraft). The MD-80 may land but not take off. It should be
noted that as more airlines convert from Stage 2 aircraft to the above type of aircraft,
residents may see more flights leaving in the 5 to 7 a.m. time period. There are
currently no Stage 2 aircraft or "hush-kitted" aircraft using National Airport (as of July '08).
As part of the National Airport noise abatement procedures, aircraft that violate
the 10 pm to 7 am noise restrictions, like taking off before 7 am with an unapproved
aircraft, may be fined up to $5000. There are about 5 - 10 violations per year, and
after a review of the circumstances, fines may be collected from those airlines.
Dulles Airport, because of its 10,000 acre size which is large enough to provide
a buffer for the surrounding communities, does not have any noise abatement procedures.
The airport operates 24 hours a day using any type aircraft.
Noise measurements
Noise is measured using a logarithmic scale. Examples are: if the noise power
doubles, that would be a 3 decibel (expressed as dB) change; if the power goes up
by a factor of four times, that would be a 6 dB increase; for an increase of 10 times,
the decibel change would be 10 dB, and for 100 times, 20 dB. One can see that logarithmic
scale compresses the measurements and makes them appear to be less than they actually
are. When you hear someone say that it is only a 3 dB increase in noise, it means
they have doubled the noise power and you will probably noticed it, particularly
at night when the ambient noise is quieter. During the day, especially in an urban
setting, it may be harder to distinquish a 3 dB increase.
What are some benchmarks for sound level?
- Normal conversation - 45 to 50 dBA (The "A" mean that the sound measurement
follows the human ear frequency response curve, roughly 60 to 3000 hertz)
- A food blender at 3 feet - 90 dBA
- A vacuum cleaner at 10 feet - 70 dBA.
These sounds levels are the peak noise level. For aircraft, the term used is SEL
(single event level). Different types of aircraft produce different levels of peak
noise. The Concorde produces a SEL of 112 dBA while regional jet aircraft produce
only about 67 dBA. A difference of 45 dB is an enormous number, specifically a factor
of 31,623 times. Making sense of a day's worth of noise data is not easy if one is
trying to create an easy-to-use metric. To simplify the noise measuring task, Government
scientists created the Leq (equivalent noise level). The Leq basically takes each
noise event and devolves it into a one second event with an appropriate amplitude.
They then sum all these one second events for the day (24 hours) creating an average
for the day. However, the Government recognized that nighttime air traffic would
disturb people's sleep so they applied a 10 dB "penalty" to the Leq for
the nighttime hours from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. This number, which is also an average,
they called the Day Night Level or DNL (sometimes you will see it written in its
older form, LDN). Top of Page
The 65 DNL noise threshold
In 1978, the Federal Government via the FAA established a noise threshold which
it thought residents should be expected to tolerate. This threshold level was set
at 65 DNL which is, of course, a 24 hour average. It was agreed that if the DNL exceeded
65 dB, the airport operator or local government could implement mitigation procedures
such as buying out residents living within the 65 DNL contour (analogous to elevation
contours on a map), or sound proof the owner’s home. The 65 DNL number was selected
primarily on technological and economic grounds, not on what was good for the residents'
health. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) argued that for people's health
and peace of mind, the threshold should be no higher than 55 DNL. The EPA lost that
argument for the following reasons. In 1978, aircraft technology was such that an
airport's fleet of aircraft could not achieve any better performance than 65 DNL
(over 24 hours). Also, the Government knew that if they used a lower threshold, especially
the 55 DNL the EPA wanted, it would have to spend hundreds of billions of dollars
to either buy up homes or provide noise insulation for homes, schools, and hospitals.
Since that time, the 65 DNL number has been used as the benchmark for receiving Federal
funds, although the FAA has softened its stand recently and will consider lowering
the threshold to 60 dB in special cases. After the 1978 decision, the American National
Standards Institute (ANSI) codified the threshold levels for human activities. The
standard covering noise threshold levels is ANSI S3.23. It should be noted that the
standard specifies that thresholds above 65 DNL is incompatible with residential
living. The Washington area has three communities which are living with noise above
65 DNL on a yearly basis, but as yet have received no mitigation funding because
they have not thought to ask for it.
Noise monitoring
Many large airport operators place noise monitoring equipment within the community
to assess the changes in average noise levels. This gives the citizens a crude measurement
of the noise impact they are living with. The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority
has such a system. It has 32 -- soon to be increased to 40 -- noise monitoring stations up and down the Potomac River,
within Washington D.C. and around Dulles Airport. There are 20 stations monitoring
National Airport traffic, and 12 -- being increased to 20 in early 2009 -- monitoring Dulles traffic. Each station is basically
a microphone mounted on a pole and a processor. The microphone collects all sounds,
community as well as aircraft. It cannot distinguish between community noise and
aircraft noise. The data is collected for 24 hours and transmitted by telephone lines
to the Airports Authority which then runs the data through another processor. This
processor tries to identify from the noise data if there are any aircraft present
by "listening" to noise above an empirically selected threshold (typically
70 dBA). If a sound exceeds this threshold for 10 seconds, it is likely to be an
aircraft, and is then compared to actual radar data, obtained a few days later from
the FAA, to confrim that it is an aircraft. If, however, the aircraft sound falls
below the threshold for an instance during the 10 seconds, the sound is assumed to
have been made by community activity. Unfortunately, this system ignores the potential
for reflected noise sounds which can cancel the actual aircraft sound when it reaches
the microphone thus creating a "hole" during the 10 second measuring time.
The "hole" negates that aircraft event. CAAN believes that the system's
lack of sophisication may be unduly penalizing communities; that is, it is reporting
community noise levels higher than they actually are, and conversely, reporting a
lower level of aircraft noise than it should be. This fact has been presented to
the FAA and our Airports Authority by CAAN and others, but no official action has
been taken. Top of Page
Noise Measurements for the Washington D.C. Area
CAAN has been analyzing the Airports Authority's (MWAA)
published data for the last 10 years and recompiled this data in a form that can
be more readily understood by the each affected communtiy. The data shown in Table1
below give the noise data for the previous three years for aircraft noise expressed
in DNL (Day Night Level) for each noise monitoring station. Readers should realize
the three year average is itself an average; that is, MWAA publishes the average
for each month (itself an average of each day in the month) and then that average
is averaged once again. This means that the DNL numbers you see in the table are
thrice removed from the reality of what you actually heard on any past date. Therefore
these readings are only an indicator of the true situation. Nevertheless, they are
the numbers which MWAA and the FAA use to determine if a community will be considered
for noise mitigation. To be considered for noise mitigation,
the DNL average for the year from aircraft noise alone (not from community or community plus aircraft noise) must be 65
DNL. As the table below shows, over three years, there are three communities which
meet that criteria, four if only the last years' data is used. These communities
can request noise mitigation from MWAA and should do so if the majority of the residents
object to aircraft noise.
The table also shows the aircraft noise level for the last
year alone (a year for this data runs from October through Septmenber). Based on
this one year criteria, Chain Bridge has moved from below 65 DNL to above 65 DNL.
In other communities, some have had higher noise levels this past year while in others
the noise level decreased.
The fifth and sixth columns of the table show how the noise
levels have flucuated over the past two years. Readers will notice that in some communities
the noise went up during the '98 - '99 year and down in the '99 -'00 year. Others
went up or down both years. Several communities had dramatic changes in the past
year. Cabin John in Maryland had over 6 dB drop while Dumbarton and Aldie in Virginia
had 8 dB increases. Last year the Mt. Vernon citizens raised a loud cry of protest
about the aircraft noise levels in their area. When the politicians and other community
leaders picked up their cause, the FAA responded with "adjustments" to
the flight paths. Their noise level then dropped by 11 dB. Strong citizen action
can make a difference.
Finally the table shows that, contrary to FAA pronouncements
that aircraft noise is decreasing, noise is actually increasing for some Washington
area communities, and in some cases substantially (e.g. 8 dB). With Dulles Airport
increasing the number of flights significantly, residents around Dulles can expect
more noise, even though the aircraft are supposedly getting quieter. To make it worse
for citizens around Dulles, two new runways will be added, one by 2006 and a second
a few years later.
The table reveals that 14 communities had increases in noise
this past year, 15 had decreases, and three were basically unchanged (defined as
less than one quarter dB change). The year before, the noise went up in 14 communities,
down in the other 11 with 7 unchanged; but the mix was different.
In the table below, the names in blue are for National Airport noise monitoring stations. Those in magenta are for the Dulles Airport noise
monitoring stations. The DNL values in red are stations where the aircraft noise is 65 or greater, and those
in yellow are stations
where the DNL values lie between 60 and 65 dB. Top of Page
AUGUST 2005: CAAN HAS LOOKED AT THE MOST RECENT YEARLY
NOISE LEVELS AVAILABLE AND COMPARED THEM TO THE 2000 FIGURES, THE YEAR PRECEDING
THE 2001 TERRORISTS ATTACKS. THE NOISE LEVEL FOR SOME COMMUNITIES HAS INCREASED AS
MUCH AS 4.3 dB (2.7 TIMES THE NOISE). HOWEVER, OTHER NOISE STATIONS HAVE DECREASED
BY AS MUCH AS 9.4 dB (A NOISE REDUCTION OF OVER EIGHT TIMES). TABLE 2 MAKES
THE NOISE STATION COMPARISONS. SOME OF THESE REDUCTIONS MAY BE ATTRIBUTED
TO FEWER FLIGHTS DUE TO THE 9/11 ATTACKS AND PEOPLE'S RELUCTANCE TO FLY, SOME TO
THE FINANCIAL PROBLEMS THE AIRLINES ARE HAVING AND STILL OTHERS TO CHANGES IN RUNWAY
USAGE.
Washington area communities which would like to learn more
about their noise situation should contact CAAN via our email.
TABLE 1
| Station Number |
Station Name |
36 Month Avg in DNL |
Last yr Avg in DNL |
Oct'98-Sep'99 Noise diff. dB |
Oct'99-Sep'00 Noise diff. dB |
Distance from Airport in miles |
|
1 |
Chevy Chase, Md |
54.9 |
58.3 |
4.21 |
4.57 |
9 |
|
2 |
Cabin John |
61.2 |
55.9 |
–0.23 |
–6.47 |
9.8 |
|
3 |
Langley Forest |
52.4 |
52.2 |
–0.89 |
–0.39 |
10.1 |
|
4 |
Potomac Palisades |
61.8 |
59.8 |
–1.78 |
–1.51 |
5.7 |
|
5 |
Chain Bridge |
64.4 |
66.6 |
–0.28 |
4.19 |
6.4 |
|
6 |
Georgetown |
60.1 |
57.8 |
–0.14 |
–3.04 |
4.3 |
|
7 |
Rosslyn |
64.4 |
62.6 |
–0.80 |
–2.02 |
3.2 |
|
8 |
Old Town |
66.3 |
68.3 |
1.71 |
2.87 |
2.4 |
|
9 |
Springfield |
51.5 |
50.5 |
– 1.96 |
0.04 |
7.9 |
|
10 |
Fort Foote |
61.4 |
60.0 |
– 0.06 |
– 2.01 |
5.3 |
|
11 |
Marlan Forest |
55.8 |
55.9 |
0.48 |
– 0.04 |
6.4 |
|
12 |
Tantallon |
54.9 |
55.9 |
– 0.30 |
1.97 |
9.4 |
|
13 |
Countryside |
53.7 |
56.4 |
– 0.07 |
5.88 |
8.5 |
|
14 |
Arcola |
66.1 |
66.2 |
0.27 |
0.03 |
2.6 |
|
15 |
Sterling |
60.5 |
62.4 |
– 3.35 |
5.12 |
4.6 |
|
16 |
Reston, VA |
61.3 |
62.2 |
1.29 |
0.88 |
3.5 |
|
17 |
DC Southwest |
61.6 |
63.6 |
0.14 |
2.20 |
1.5 |
|
18 |
Friendly |
60.8 |
56.1 |
– 5.21 |
– 1.94 |
7.5 |
|
19 |
North Mt. Vernon |
59.2 |
53.0 |
– 11.64 |
1.99 |
8.6 |
|
20 |
Dumbarton |
55.9 |
59.5 |
0.68 |
8.30 |
7.1 |
|
21 |
Sully Station |
60.2 |
61.0 |
2.03 |
– 0.30 |
5.5 |
|
22 |
Avenel |
57.7 |
59.2 |
– 2.12 |
4.56 |
13.7 |
|
23 |
Great Falls |
54.0 |
51.5 |
– 7.35 |
1.97 |
17 |
|
24 |
Floris |
61.1 |
60.8 |
1.13 |
– 0.67 |
2.3 |
|
25 |
Chantilly |
64.7 |
64.3 |
0.24 |
– 0.56 |
2.6 |
|
26 |
Broad Run Farms |
49.9 |
53.1 |
0.25 |
6.28 |
8.1 |
|
27 |
Ashburn |
57.8 |
55.9 |
– 2.14 |
– 1.34 |
6 |
|
28 |
Aldie |
55.1 |
58.2 |
– 0.75 |
8.34 |
10.7 |
|
29 |
Union Mill |
54.2 |
54.1 |
7.97 |
– 2.58 |
8.5 |
|
30 |
London Towne |
60.2 |
56.9 |
3.72 |
– 6.81 |
7.2 |
|
31 |
DC Southeast |
60.8 |
60.4 |
0.64 |
– 0.98 |
1.3 |
|
32 |
Bolling AFB |
66.9 |
65.6 |
0.06 |
– 1.93 |
1.3 |
TABLE 2
|
Station number |
Station Name
Nat'l in blue/Dulles in magenta |
Year 2000 Noise levels in DNL (dB) |
Year from April 2004 to March 2005 in DNL (dB) |
Difference between 2000 and 2005 in DNL (dB) |
|
1 |
Chevy Chase |
58.3 |
58.8 |
+ 0.5 |
|
2 |
Cabin John |
55.9 |
58.7 |
+ 2.8 |
|
3 |
Langley Forest |
52.2 |
54.1 |
+ 1.9 |
|
4 |
Potomac Palisades |
58.9 |
58.1 |
- 0.8 |
|
5 |
Chain Bridge |
66.6 |
58.2 |
- 8.4 |
|
6 |
Georgetown |
57.8 |
56.1 |
- 1.7 |
|
7 |
Rosslyn |
62.6 |
59.9 |
- 2.7 |
|
8 |
Old Town |
68.3 |
58.9 |
- 9.4 |
|
9 |
Springfield |
50.5 |
52.7 |
+ 2.2 |
|
10 |
Fort Foote |
60.0 |
58.0 |
- 2.0 |
|
11 |
Marlan Forest |
55.9 |
54.1 |
- 1.8 |
|
12 |
Tantallon |
55.9 |
58.3 |
+ 2.4 |
|
13 |
Countryside |
56.4 |
53 |
- 3.4 |
|
14 |
Arcola |
66.2 |
68.2 |
+ 2.0 |
|
15 |
Sterling |
62.4 |
57.0 |
- 5.4 |
|
16 |
Reston |
62.2 |
58.3 |
- 3.9 |
|
17 |
Southwest DC |
63.6 |
56.7 |
- 6.9 |
|
18 |
Friendly |
56.1 |
56.6 |
+ 0.5 |
|
19 |
North Mt. Vernon |
53.0 |
48.0 |
- 5.0 |
|
20 |
Dumbarton |
59.5 |
57.7 |
- 1.8 |
|
21 |
Sully Station |
61.0 |
55.9 |
- 5.1 |
|
22 |
Avenel |
59.2 |
60.2 |
+1.0 |
|
23 |
Great Falls |
51.5 |
51.4 |
- 0.1 |
|
24 |
Floris |
60.8 |
54.6 |
- 6.2 |
|
25 |
Chantilly |
64.3 |
61.5 |
- 2.8 |
|
26 |
Broad Run Farms |
53.1 |
51.0 |
- 2.1 |
|
27 |
Ashburn |
55.9 |
58.6 |
+ 2.7 |
|
28 |
Aldie |
58.2 |
54.7 |
- 3.5 |
|
29 |
Union Mill |
54.1 |
45.9 |
- 8.2 |
|
30 |
London Towne |
56.0 |
54.5 |
- 1.5 |
|
31 |
DC Southeast |
60.4 |
60.0 |
- 0.4 |
|
32 |
Bolling AFB |
65.6 |
69.9 |
+ 4.3 |
Table 3 shows the average noise
levels for the year April 2005 through March 2006. It also shows that there is only
one noise station with DNL noise levels greater than 65 dB and that is again Arcola,
VA which is west of Dulles runway 12/30. However, the Bolling AFB noise station has
been inoperative for the whole year, and it usually usually exceeds the 65 dB level.
So the noise levels from Arcola and Bolling AFB remain the two prime offenders. For
stations with noise levels between 60 dB and 65 dB, one can see that there is now
only one, quite an improvement from the year 2000 levels. Progress has being made
in reducing the noise levels for many communities over the last year, some rather
dramatic, like Avenel (—11.2 dB), Dumbarton (—8.5 dB), and Chevy Chase (—7.5 dB).
However, before we cheer, there were some communities which had increases in noise
level, like Broad Run Farms (+6.9 dB, almost five times its previous noise level)
and Springfield (+4.3 dB, about 2.7 times the noise). It should be noted that no data from the noise monitoring stations has been available because the entire system has been off-line. A new system is currently (Fall 2008) being installed and should be ready for use by early 2009. Top of Page
TABLE 3
|
Station number |
Station Name
Nat'l in blue/Dulles in magenta |
Avg. noise level per station from Apr. 2004 thru Mar. 2005 in
DNL (dB) |
Avg. noise levels per station from Apr. 2005 thru Mar. 2006
in DNL (dB) |
Difference between 04/05 and 05/06 in (dB) |
|
1 |
Chevy Chase |
58.8 |
51.3 |
-7.5 |
|
2 |
Cabin John |
58.7 |
55.7 |
-3.0 |
|
3 |
Langley Forest |
54.1 |
55.2 |
1.1 |
|
4 |
Potomac Palisades |
58.1 |
57.7 |
-0.4 |
|
5 |
Chain Bridge |
58.2 |
57.8 |
-0.4 |
|
6 |
Georgetown |
56.1 |
56.4 |
0.3 |
|
7 |
Rosslyn |
59.9 |
59.9 |
0.0 |
|
8 |
Old Town |
58.9 |
58.9 |
0.0 |
|
9 |
Springfield |
52.7 |
57.0 |
4.3 |
|
10 |
Fort Foote |
58.0 |
56.6 |
-1.4 |
|
11 |
Marlan Forest |
54.1 |
54.2 |
0.1 |
|
12 |
Tantallon |
58.3 |
52.1 |
-6.2 |
|
13 |
Countryside |
53.0 |
52.7 |
-0.3 |
|
14 |
Arcola |
68.2 |
69.7 |
1.5 |
|
15 |
Sterling |
57.0 |
58.1 |
1.1 |
|
16 |
Reston |
58.3 |
57.3 |
-1.0 |
|
17 |
Southwest DC |
56.7 |
57.2 |
0.5 |
|
18 |
Friendly |
56.6 |
52.3 |
-4.3 |
|
19 |
North Mt. Vernon |
48.0 |
47.7 |
-0.3 |
|
20 |
Dumbarton |
57.7 |
49.3 |
-8.5 |
|
21 |
Sully Station |
55.9 |
56.5 |
0.6 |
|
22 |
Avenel |
60.2 |
49.0 |
-11.2 |
|
23 |
Great Falls |
51.4 |
53.9 |
2.5 |
|
24 |
Floris |
54.6 |
55.7 |
1.1 |
|
25 |
Chantilly |
61.5 |
60.7 |
-0.8 |
|
26 |
Broad Run Farms |
51.0 |
57.9 |
6.9 |
|
27 |
Ashburn |
58.6 |
54.1 |
-4.5 |
|
28 |
Aldie |
54.7 |
53.8 |
-0.9 |
|
29 |
Union Mill |
45.9 |
48.3 |
2.4 |
|
30 |
London Towne |
54.5 |
53.5 |
-1.0 |
|
31 |
DC Southeast |
60.0 |
61.7 |
1.7 |
|
32 |
Bolling AFB |
69.9 |
0.0 |
no data for a year |
Noise mitigation funding
There are two sources of money to implement noise mitigation, Airport Improvement
Program (A.I.P.) funds and Passenger Facility Charge (PFC) funds. The A.I.P. funds
come from Congress via its appropriation/ authorization process. However only a small
portion of the Transportation budget is allocated for noise mitigation, less than
10 percent. To obtain A.I.P. money, the airport operator - MWAA in our case - must
submit a plan to the FAA for the specific mitigation action it wishes to take. After
a long approval process, the project is put on a waiting list with many other fund
requests. Eventually, the project may merit funding if other projects do not take
precedence. Currently, there is a long waiting list to obtain this type of money.
PFC funds are derived from the passenger ticket fee which presently is $4.50 per
ticket. The money is collected by the airlines at each airport and given to the airport
operator. The airport operator - for us MWAA - can then use it to expand facilities
or use it for noise mitigation. In either case, MWAA must get FAA approval to spend
the money; however, approval is usually pro forma provided the PFC money conforms
to required broad categories. In the past 22 years, MWAA has never applied for A.I.P.
or used PFC funds for noise mitigation.
Communities which are living at 65 DNL or greater due to aircraft noise alone
have to request mitigation funds from the Airports Authority; The Authority will
not initiate action unless it hears from the individual community. Top of Page
Air emissions/water pollution and its control
Jet aircraft discharge large amounts of pollutants and although jet engines have
improved over the years, they are still responsible for considerable air pollution.
For instance, a single 747 takeoff is equivalent to running two million gas-powered
lawnmowers at once. Current Federal laws exempt commercial aircraft from the clean
air laws, so little has been done in the way of monitoring air quality around airports.
As a consequence, as air taffic increases, the EPA has no choice but to clamp down
harder on the other regional industries to keep air quality goals on target.
Now researchers have reported that there appears to be a health threat from these
emissions. Within the past few year, studies have been published that show that
people living within three miles of an airport or its flight paths have higher disease
rates - 20 to 40 percent higher - for such diseases as heart, cancer, asthma and
other respiratory ailments, and pregancy complications.
Water pollution from airport activities are from many different toxic chemicals.
Although airports must conform to the clean water laws, the EPA often grants exemptions,
and pollutants are allowed to run into nearby waterways. At National Airport, deicer
and anti-icing chemicals, at the rate of 100,000 gallons per year, are allowed to
run into the Potomac River. MWAA is currently looking at ways to contain this outflow,
but there is little real estate to build a collection facility. At Dulles International
Airport, there is a holding pond for the collection of chemical runoff; however,
any overflow from this pond will feed into the Potomac River via smaller tributaries.
Monitoring of chemical outflows from these airports has been lax at best, and even
when measurements were taken by the EPA, and chemicals were found to be far above
the Federal limits, nothing was done about it.
Helicopter activity
Helicopters have been an increasing source of noise in the Washington area. The
military, which accounts for 90 percent of the helicopter traffic, have increased
their activity by 40 percent since 1997. Although there are designated routes for
helicopters, not all pilots use them. Also, prohibited areas like Arlington National
Cemetery are often ignored by the FAA and helicopter pilots, even though all parties
agreed to the prohibition in 1992. Tracking the military helicopters flights is not
possible because their flight data is classified and is not sent to MWAA for analysis.
Although there is a helicopter association who works with local goverment agencies,
there is no current mechanism to limit helicopter activity. Helicopters are suppose
to fly at 1000 feet above the ground (except for emergency helicopter operations,
and flying up the Potomac River from National Airport), but often do not obey this
rule. Top of Page
FAA operations
The FAA divides air traffic control into three functional areas, airport tower
operations, TRACON operations, and enroute operations. Each has a specific area of
responsibility.
• Airport Tower Operations. The Tower operators are responsible for the
orderly flow of air traffic into and out of the airport. They are also responsible
for aircraft movements around the airport. Their responsibility zone is anything
within five miles of the airport.
• TRACON Operations. Terminal Radar Control (TRACON) picks up responsibilty for
the departing aircraft from the tower operator and directs it into the Enroute System.
The TRACON air controllers maintain separation of all aircraft within 50 miles of
the airport. It is their job to sequence arriving aircraft to the designated runway.
• Enroute Operations. The enroute system is responsible for air traffic flying
between regions of the country and normally operates from about 17,000 feet to a
typical ceiling altitude of 37,000 feet, although the Concorde flies higher than
that. There are 21 enroute centers across the country and as the aircraft flies from
one area of the country to another, it is handed from one center to the next until
the aircraft reaches the TRACON where its arrival airport is located.
FAA responses to queries.
Many of our supporters are frustrated by the FAA response to the question: "Have
you changed the flight patterns so that I am seeing more planes over my neighborhood?"
Their answer is often, "No, we have not changed any procedures." And their
answer is correct as far as it goes. They have not change their procedures which
are the way they handle aircraft, but they do have wide latitude in where they tell
the aircraft to fly, and that, many times, is what they have done, moved the planes
over to a new route for some period of time. Their reasons for this could be, for
instance, to improve airport capacity, adjust to seasonal weather patterns, or military
activities (not too often). If there is a crush of airline flights trying to take
off within a short time period like the day before Thanksgiving, air controllers
may send the planes out of the noise abatement pattern earlier than the 10 mile DME
(or 5 mile DME to the south), thus flying them over communities which normally do
not experience air traffic. Readers should remember that the FAA is constantly trying
to improve what they call the "safe, expeditious and orderly flow of traffic",
which will improve or minimize the air time for the airlines. Their radar screens
do not show what is on the ground and except for restricted air space, meaning prohibited
airspace like the White House, and their TRACON boundary lines; they are not especially
concerned about the noise in residential communities.
Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments/CONANDA
The Washington area has a regional authority (usually referred to as "COG"
(Council of Governments) which corrdinates intergovernmental activity between the
District, suburban Maryland and suburban Virginia. COG has a committee called the
Aviation Policy Committee (APC) (the old name was Committee on Noise Abatement and
Aviation at National and Dulles Airports (CONAANDA)). This body works to reduce the
impact of noise around the two airports. People living in the Washington area may
call the APC office at 202/962-3355 to learn of their activities. Top of Page
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