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23 February 2019
11 February 2019
Heathrow Airport: Flight Path Consultation
Below is a guide to the consultation by SE Londoners, for SE Londoners responding to the Heathrow Airport flight path consultation.
• Heathrow is planning for a third runway in 2026 and, whether or not that goes ahead, it is redesigning all its flight paths. Where you live in London probably affects how you view this. We each have until 4th March to complete their online questionnaire. If you’ve ever been woken by planes from before 5am, or had use of your home disturbed by planes overhead many miles from Heathrow, this is a chance to join everyone else in having your say.
• Please don’t be put off from saying anything by the length or detail of what Heathrow says. It’s doesn’t need to take long and it seems important that SE London interests are properly represented by each of us.
• Thinking about how Heathrow and London City airports affect our environment by flying over us, we’ve made some suggestions as to how SE Londoners might want to respond to individual questions. If you use these, great, if you don’t agree or have additional points that’s fine too.
• We hope that our suggestions bring out a lot of the key points for our area and that this might be helpful for those who don’t want to spend too much time on this.
• For each of Heathrow’s questions we’ve put a few brief comments from a SE London point of view, with suggestions as to what you might say. Our comments are in the yellow boxes on the following pages.
• Worth noting that there is significant opposition to Heathrow from London Councils and environmental groups, but the principles established in this consultation are expected to be used whatever happens so it seems worth getting our SE London voices heard.
• Links to the Consultation and Other Useful Sources
• The link to the online Heathrow consultation is here:- https://afo.heathrowconsultation.com/
• Heathrow is planning for a third runway in 2026 and, whether or not that goes ahead, it is redesigning all its flight paths. Where you live in London probably affects how you view this. We each have until 4th March to complete their online questionnaire. If you’ve ever been woken by planes from before 5am, or had use of your home disturbed by planes overhead many miles from Heathrow, this is a chance to join everyone else in having your say.
• Please don’t be put off from saying anything by the length or detail of what Heathrow says. It’s doesn’t need to take long and it seems important that SE London interests are properly represented by each of us.
• Thinking about how Heathrow and London City airports affect our environment by flying over us, we’ve made some suggestions as to how SE Londoners might want to respond to individual questions. If you use these, great, if you don’t agree or have additional points that’s fine too.
• We hope that our suggestions bring out a lot of the key points for our area and that this might be helpful for those who don’t want to spend too much time on this.
• For each of Heathrow’s questions we’ve put a few brief comments from a SE London point of view, with suggestions as to what you might say. Our comments are in the yellow boxes on the following pages.
• Worth noting that there is significant opposition to Heathrow from London Councils and environmental groups, but the principles established in this consultation are expected to be used whatever happens so it seems worth getting our SE London voices heard.
• Links to the Consultation and Other Useful Sources
• The link to the online Heathrow consultation is here:- https://afo.heathrowconsultation.com/
Question Number
|
Our Recommendation
|
Additional Information
|
1a
|
Yes
|
It seems essential
that Heathrow does have a noise objective.
|
1b
|
“In its noise
objective, LHR should put the health and well-being of London’s overflown
communities as a high priority. Cost benefit to the wealthy airline industry
is a lower priority than the long-term health and wellbeing of millions of
overflown Londoners.”
|
|
2c
|
“We would like
rotation/alternation of airspace and runways so that early morning wake-ups
do not happen more than, say, once per week. They are currently from around
05:00am in SE London.
There should be
managed dispersal or several rotating routes in each noise envelope and these
should be as far apart from each other as is possible.
For weekends and
evenings we seek the longest durations of respite possible to allow enjoyment
of open windows and the outdoors.”
|
|
3a
|
“No”
|
Click on your
preference, but we feel none of these options works well for SE Londoners and
we think the answer should be “No”. We explain why in 3b.
|
3b
|
“Westerly operations
means all Heathrow arrivals
will pass over north east and south east London including the very early
morning flights from before 5am which wake us up and the evening flights
which spoil enjoyment of the outdoors and continue to 11.30 at night.
We feel it essential
that flights are dispersed more fairly between east and west, and a westerly
operations preference will disadvantage SE London and anywhere east of the
airport.
Westerly operations
also overfly the low altitude route of London City Airport in our area,
meaning that we are given no respite from one or the other.”
|
|
3c
|
“Yes”
|
We think prolonged
periods of single direction operation day after day require intervention if
wind strength and direction allow.
|
3d
|
“This flexibility
provides a particularly useful way for Heathrow to avoid periods of
simultaneous overflights with London City Airport.
It also may prevent
SE London having the early morning wakeup flights day after day when winds
are set in one direction for days on end, and allow Heathrow to provide
relief and sharing of impact.”
|
|
3e
|
“We feel strongly
that London City and Heathrow Airports should immediately begin planning
flight paths together, co-ordinating operations and directional planning very
closely to avoid crossing of flight paths and double overflight of SE London
communities as both airports increase flight numbers.”
|
|
4a
|
Probably “Option 2”
|
|
4b
|
“These early morning
start times are for communities near to the airport, SE London overflight
will be approximately 10 minutes earlier. We think the later the better for
everyone’s undisturbed sleep but there is not much difference here.”
|
From Heathrow’s
presentations we believe that Option 1 will allow rotation so that we will
get 2 weeks out of 3 with no flights 05.50am over SE London which is better,
in those weeks, than we get now.
|
4c
|
“There must be
opportunity to commence operations much later than this if the 3rd
runway goes ahead.
Airline industry
business objectives to accommodate early morning flights cannot and must not
be at disproportionate cost to the health and wellbeing of the communities
over which they fly.
We think it
unreasonable for SE London, many miles from Heathrow, to endure any
overflights before 06:30 am.”
|
|
5a
|
“We believe Heathrow
should have and enforce the most stringent of aircraft environmental
standards that will protect overflown Londoners as much as possible from
commercial aircraft noise and pollution.
London Heathrow
should adopt a world leading position on this issue.”
|
|
5b
|
“We feel that the
currently proposed night flight ban of 6.5 hours is inadequate on health and
well-being grounds.
Our preference would
be for a night flight ban of 8 hours duration.”
|
|
6
|
“Much of SE London (e.g.
Sidcup, Mottingham, Catford, Forest Hill, Dulwich, Herne Hill, Stockwell,
Vauxhall) are overflown by both London City and Heathrow planes, sometimes at
the same time. The two airports should work together now on revising both
airports’ flight path design so that crossing of flight paths is minimised,
and simultaneous overflight ended.
Heathrow planes
should fly higher whenever crossing London City flight paths, so that London
City planes can fly higher than the current 2000ft.”
|
This is about three
runways, from 2026.
The main local
factor we think is the interaction with London City flight paths over SE
London as both airports have strong growth plans that affect SE London.
|
7
|
“Much of SE London (e.g.
Sidcup, Mottingham, Catford, Forest Hill, Dulwich, Herne Hill, Stockwell,
Vauxhall) are overflown by both London City and Heathrow planes, sometimes at
the same time. The two airports should work together now on revising both
airports’ flight path design so that crossing of flight paths is minimised,
and simultaneous overflight ended.
Heathrow planes
should fly higher whenever crossing London City flight paths, so that London
City planes can fly higher than the current 2000ft.”
|
This is about two
runways as at present.
The points about
double airport overflight in SE London seem the same as in Q6, whether
Heathrow has two or three runways.
To repeat, the main
local factor we think is the interaction with London City flight paths over
SE London as both airports have strong growth plans that affect SE London.
|
8
|
“Fly higher for
longer in South London – flights arriving over most of SE London need to be
higher than proposed in order to reduce noise and create additional space for
the low flying London City planes beneath.
As a general
principle disperse flights fairly over all London communities so that noise
and environmental impact is shared.
Concentrated flight
paths should be separated as widely apart as possible with frequent rotation
to give periods of relief to those on the ground.”
|
|
9
|
You may wish to consider any of the following issues:
Aircraft noise
disturbance
•
Enjoyment of outdoors – loud enough to stop conversation. Summer
evening activities
•
Enjoyment of indoors too, when doors/windows are open
•
Early morning wakeups from before 5 am (Heathrow)
•
Late night arrivals to 11.30pm (Heathrow)
Concentrated flight
paths using new technology
•
Across the world have created noise
corridors, replacing aircraft dispersal and sharing of noise
•
Create high frequency of overflights, same homes every time - London
City 15 per hour at peak
Low altitude
•
Low flights create louder disturbance. London City only 2000ft over SE
London. Heathrow higher over SE London, but much bigger, louder planes.
Environmental
pollution
•
Low at ground level in east London, but will increase as the two
airports expand
|
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