December 28, 2006

Tacoma Narrows

Tacoma Narrows Airport could be on a new financial flight path next year. A private party is negotiating with the City of Tacoma to buy the 43-year-old general-aviation facility on the Gig Harbor peninsula. City Manager Eric Anderson declined this week to name the prospective buyer or discuss a possible purchase price for the airport and adjacent properties. But he did say the suitor, an out-of-state company with experience in airport operations, is "willing to pay more than the county."

Pierce County offered earlier this year to take over the airport in a $4 million deal. The county would have paid about $3 million for the facility and assumed responsibility for about $1 million in safety zone costs, County Councilman Terry Lee, R-Gig Harbor, said this week. Lee thought he could have persuaded the County Council to go as high as $3.5 million, plus the $1 million safety-zone expense. That would have covered the $3.5 million the city loaned itself for airport operations. But the two governments never reached an accord, and any thought of doing business with the county is on hold while the city negotiates with the private buyer, Anderson said. Trying to get the most money for the property is "simply a matter of due diligence," he added.

The facility long has been a drain on city finances. Figures released in May showed a two-year operating deficit of $550,000. Estimates on the value of the airport and adjacent land vary widely. "The numbers that have been kicked around run from $3.5 million to $20 million, depending on how you look at the properties and their future uses," Anderson said. He hopes to wrap up negotiations by the end of February.

Lee was deeply disappointed. "I do believe the appropriate owner is Pierce County," he said.
The airport is a city-owned island in the unincorporated Gig Harbor area. It has long generated ill will among neighbors, who complain about aircraft noise and worry the 5,002-foot runway might be lengthened to accommodate even larger planes. The city's 20-year plan does not contemplate such an extension. Although Lee thinks "the general-aviation airport provides a great service," he had hoped the county could transform some of the unimproved property into trails for hiking and horseback riding, an off-leash dog park and other recreational uses.
Now he's thinking about negotiating with a private owner for some of those amenities.

Nearby resident Carl Geist, who serves on a commission formed to resolve the rift between the city and the county, isn't opposed to a private sale.

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