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Aspen Residents Vote To Continue County Control of Airport
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Ballot measure would have ceded decisions on runway expansion to residents
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In a letter sent on October 17, the FAA had warned the county board that the ballot measure, if approved, would be in violation of federal grant assurances.
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A measure on the ballot that would have ceded control of Colorado’s Aspen/Pitkin County Airport to county voters instead of county officials was rejected by voters on November 5. The measure essentially removed from the county board of commissioners the ability to authorize and use state or federal grants to expand or relocate any runway at the airport beyond the dimensions existing as of Jan. 1, 2024, unless approved by Pitkin County voters.

In a letter sent on October 17, the FAA had warned the county board that the ballot measure, if approved, would be in violation of federal grant assurances.

“Pitkin County, the Sponsor of Aspen/Pitkin County Airport, is obligated to comply with FAA Grant Assurances, as recipients of over $119.6M in FAA grant funding since 1982. Specifically, Grant Assurance #5, Preserving Rights and Powers, states that Pitkin County ‘will not take or permit any action which would operate to deprive it of any of the rights and powers necessary to perform any of all of the terms, conditions, and assurances in the Grant Agreement without the written approval of the Secretary…'”

The AOPA supported local stakeholders in this effort and said the rejection of the ballot measure “was in the best interests of both the local community and aeronautical users.”

"As we continue to work with airport tenants, airport administration, and the community to resolve airport-related concerns, it will be important for all to understand the critical nature of working together and within the bounds of what we can control," said AOPA Northwest Mountain regional manager Brad Schuster.

"The FAA letter was particularly noteworthy in that it was issued prior to the ballot measures being voted on. Failure to get airport development plans in line with FAA standards would have jeopardized future FAA airport maintenance and development funding—and could have been a violation of federal law if local voters had chosen to support the ballot measures."

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Newsletter Headline
Aspen Residents Vote for County Control of Airport
Newsletter Body

A measure on the ballot that would have ceded control of Colorado’s Aspen/Pitkin County Airport to county voters instead of county officials was rejected by voters on November 5. The measure essentially removed from the county board of commissioners the ability to authorize and use state or federal grants to expand or relocate any runway at the airport beyond the dimensions existing as of Jan. 1, 2024, unless approved by Pitkin County voters.

In a letter sent on October 17, the FAA had warned the county board that the ballot measure, if approved, would be in violation of federal grant assurances.

“Pitkin County, the sponsor of Aspen/Pitkin County Airport, is obligated to comply with FAA grant assurances, as recipients of over $119.6 million in FAA grant funding since 1982. Specifically, ‘Grant Assurance #5, Preserving Rights and Powers’ states that Pitkin County ‘will not take or permit any action which would operate to deprive it of any of the rights and powers necessary to perform any of all of the terms, conditions, and assurances in the Grant Agreement without the written approval of the Secretary.’”

AOPA supported local stakeholders in this effort and said the rejection of the ballot measure “was in the best interests of both the local community and aeronautical users.”

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Voters rejected a ballot measure that risked violating federal grant assurances.
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