BAGUIO CITY
- Baguio Mayor Mauricio Domogan said the city government will
continue to convince Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines and various
airline companies that the local airstrip could still be used for
commercial purposes.
Domogan said CAAP’s statement was that the airport here is
no longer viable as a commercial airfield is “unfortunate” considering that the
city’s airport had operated as a commercial airfield for a long time and that
in the years that it ran as such, no notable accidents occurred in the airstrip
despite the perceived dangers.
“Not a single accident happened in that airport in all the years that it
operated. I recall that there was one accident where a plane crashed in
Itogon but that was due to pilot error and not because of the airport’s
facilities,” the mayor said.
“We will not give up. We will continue to convince CAAP on the
advantages of reviving our airport for commercial purpose the same way that we
will continue to convince commercial airlines to establish franchise line for
Baguio-Manila. We cannot just give up on that,” the mayor stressed.
The CAAP under director-general William Hotchkiss III in a recent
meeting turned down the city’s proposal
for the complete rehabilitation of the Loakan Airport, saying it is no longer
saleable to commercial airlines due to air safety concerns like precarious
terrain and continued presence of clouds.
There was also the problem on the lack of airline franchise to operate
routes from Manila as the slots have been filled up.
The CAAP said the city’s airport can better serve now as an aviation
airfield hosting only ordinary aircrafts and emergency and military planes.
The city government and the Regional Development Council (RDC) last year
appealed to the CAAP and the Department of Transportation and Communication
(DOTC) to modernize the airport facilities to boost the tourism industry in the
region.
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