Policy-making for Sydney's airport needs : a comparative and historical perspective
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Sanders, Will
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Urban Research Program. Research School of Social Science. Australian National University.
Abstract
This paper focuses on the decision made by the Hawke government
in March 1989 to build a third runway at Sydney (Kingsford Smith)
Airport (KSA), subject to normal environmental impact procedures.
It notes that this decision was commonly hailed as a policy-making
success and that past government procrastination over the
construction of a third runway has been conversely seen as policymaking
failure. The paper questions these perceptions of failure
and success both by recounting the history of policy-making for
Sydney's airport needs and by setting the Sydney experience in
comparative international perspective. It argues that current
congestion at KSA is only in small part a consequence of past
government procrastination over runway development and that it is
in much larger part a consequence of both unpredicted changes in
the various sectors of the aviation industry and a rather passive
traffic management and pricing approach adopted by the federal
government's aviation authorities. It further argues that in the
light of international experience, procrastination over runway
development at KSA can be seen for many years to have been a
significant policy-making success, and indeed can still be so seen
today. One of the current benefits of not having runway
construction at KSA nearing completion is that the aviation
authorities and aviation industry users in Sydney may be induced
to make both more efficient and equitable use of the existing
runway facilities at KSA than they have done in the past,
particularly during peak hours.
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Australia (CC BY-NC 3.0 AU)
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