|
Watauga
Airspace
Maintaining A No-Fly Zone
Lately, a High Country resident can't throw a stick without
hitting a "concerned citizens" group. But such groups
are certainly nothing new. In fact, the original Concerned
Citizens of Watauga County was formed in the Eighties to combat
that most creeping of menaces to a free society: an airport.
A group interested in promoting more commerce to the region
had proposed a county airport for the Deep Gap area in the
early 1980's. At one point, backers were calling for a public
referendum on the matter, but the state ruled that such a
vote wasn't legal.
That controversy was minor compared to a proposed airport
for the Buck Ridge area near the Blue Ridge Parkway. The county
paid for a feasibility study for the site on the hills above
the Triplett Valley. In 1987, an environmental assessment
was turned in to the county commissioners.
Supporters of the airport cited benefits for tourism and industry.
Opponents chiefly opposed the leveling of another ridge in
order to make a runway, as well as foggy and potentially dangerous
weather conditions. Two hundred acres of hardwood forest would
have been cleared, with valleys backfilled with soil.
The environmental assessment stirred up more controversy in
the already-divisive plan. Sixteen homes were within 1,100
feet of the proposed site. A gravel extension road would have
been paved. The report said, "It is unlikely that the
proposed project will cause significant long term impact on
water resources, water quality, or ground water supply near
the airport."
What was likely the death blow to the airport proposal came
when the Blue Ridge Parkway weighed in against it. Parkway
Superintendent James R. Brotherton presented a 12-point letter,
any of which "is sufficient to warrant our opposition
to the project. Cumulatively, they represent a severe threat
to the scenic beauty of the Parkway and to the visitor experience
we are mandated to provide."
Brotherton wrote "The leveling of the mountain ridge
and the filling of the natural gap (is of concern). The aesthetically
pleasing views will be replaced with a pile of landfill resembling
a landslide.' Based on an estimate of 240 flights per day,
that would have meant "no Parkway visitor would be able
to drive the three-mile stretch without viewing or hearing
a take-off or landing." He concluded, "I feel that
the tourism industry that is being encouraged will be repulsed
by the environmentally insensitive actions proposed."
That opinion eventually belonged an insurmountable majority.
Watauga still has no commercial airport, only an airstrip
in the Bamboo area. The closest airports are in Hickory and
Avery Counties.
|