DEKALB
TAXPAYERS NOT WELL-SERVED BY PDK COST-BENEFIT STUDY
May 1998
PDK Watch, a coalition of neighborhood groups, notes the
following serious flaws in the Cost-Benefit Study of
DeKalb-Peachtree Airport (PDK), completed in 1997 by RKG
Associates of Durham, New Hampshire.
The fiscal benefit-to-cost ratio of 7 to 1 presented in
the report is incorrect. That ratio
completely ignores an estimated cost of $75,000,000 for the
airport buyout and soundproofing of residential communities
most seriously impacted by airport noise, a program to which
DeKalb County has committed itself. Inclusion of those buyout
and soundproofing costs would give a benefit-to-cost ratio of
0.6 to 1, or simply stated, for each dollar invested
in PDK only sixty cents comes back to the general revenue
fund. It should be noted that the consultant was
specifically required by the request for proposal to include
this cost.
The cost-benefit study assumes the value of airport
property at $60,000 per acre. However, land surrounding the
airport is currently selling at between $200,000 and $400,000
per acre for recent development projects. As only one
example, DeKalb County paid more than $200,000 per acre to
buy property immediately adjacent to the airport. These sales
figures in the hundreds of thousands for land surrounding the
airport could be expected to rise much higher if this prime
real estate within the perimeter and adjacent to MARTA were
not regularly impacted by the existing airport use. The
study's failure to use realistic land values seriously
undercuts its credibility.
Although the Request For Proposal for the cost-benefit
study specified that the highest and best use of PDK Airport
land should be calculated, the study focused on possible
industrial use and single-family use for the airport, rather
than on the more economically productive possibilities of
commercial and multiple-family use. The DeKalb County CEO and
Chamber of Commerce are aggressively attempting to develop
the commercial potential of the International Village
bordering the airport, and there is new commercial (not
industrial) construction throughout the area. Ignoring the
more productive commercial possibilities for development in
the area contradicts the Chamber's goal of making the Village
a destination for commercial, residential, and recreational
activity.
The study states that the nearly 800-acre airport directly
supports 762 on-site jobs, or approximately one job per acre,
and directly or indirectly contributes to 7,357 jobs in
DeKalb County. These numbers pale, however, in comparison to
the jobs that could be produced by an alternative use. For
example, just one nearby office building bordering the
airport--the new IRS building--will employ more than 3,200
persons. One could easily envision new developments similar
to nearby Century Center that could generate far more jobs
than the airport now purportedly supports.
The study indicates that the districts identified as
Chamblee-Buford Highway, Doraville, and Northlake/Lakeside
have lagged behind the region in terms of residential sales.
The Dunwoody area near PDK has underperformed the larger
Dunwoody neighborhood. Those who live in the surrounding area
have suffered a loss of $67,600,000. One would think that
such evidence would encourage DeKalb County's administration
to take steps to control further airport growth. However, at
the public hearing for the cost-benefit study, the consultant
referred to these problems as "isolated pockets"
that presumably could be ignore.
Despite the negative airport impacts identified in this
study, airport and county administration are now laying the
groundwork for further expansion of the airport. PDK Director
Lee Remmel has proposed, for example, to change the County
Comprehensive Plan to redefine PDK Airport as a state and
regional resource rather than as a county airport, as it now
exists. This change would encourage further airport growth on
existing property and on land to be acquired in the future.
Mr. Remmel's immediate plans call for expansion of the
airport onto land being bought out for noise abatement
purposes; he want to install two 20-unit T-hangars in the
Clairmont Road area. This contradicts current county policy
that new property acquired by PDK Airport shall not be used
for further expansion of airport operations.
Proposals for airport expansion presented in the study are
deeply disturbing to those who are committed to a positive
and vital relationship between residential and commercial
developments in DeKalb County. Four expansion scenarios can
be found in Appendix L of the study. Each can be completed
individually to expand the airport incrementally. The study
does not consider the additional negative impact such
expansion would produce.
In conclusion, it is clear that this misleading
cost-benefit study is a seriously flawed document that cannot
be relied upon in making sound economic policy decisions
regarding PDK Airport or the surrounding communities.
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