By
Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_enclave
A Civil Enclave is an area allotted at an airport belonging to
the armed forces, for the usage of civil aircraft and civil aviation related
services.
Civil enclaves are common in countries like India,
Sri Lanka, and Pakistan
where a part of an Air force
base, almost invariably a legacy of World War II vintage, is allotted
for domestic air traffic instead of building a new civilian airport. These
airports usually have a curfew (mostly after sunset) during which civil
aircraft are not permitted to operate. Many reserve morning hours for
military flight training. Some civil enclaves adopt an altitude restriction,
i.e. one below which a civilian aircraft cannot descend while over-flying
the enclave. The curfew system may result in airport congestion while
the altitude restriction can cause long detours and greater fuel consumption.
Air
Traffic Control at civil enclaves is usually entrusted to the armed
forces or it may be a joint civilian-military crew. In some countries
security is the responsibility of military personnel; in others, civil
security authorities such as the Transportation
Security Administration in the United
States retain responsibility for all civilian aviation security. It
is generally accepted that the military receives revenues from civil use
of ATC services if they own and operate them, but in some countries it
is not clear as to whether capital expenditure for improvements such as
runway expansion is the responsibility of the military or civilian authorities.[1]
One example in India is Goa's Dabolim
Airport.
The term "civil enclave" is rarely used in the United
States, which nonetheless has several shared military-civilian facilities,
usually referred to in Federal
Aviation Administration records as shared-use airports or joint-use
facilities. One example is Northwest
Florida Regional Airport (a joint-use facility) in Fort
Walton Beach, Florida, which utilizes the runway and ATC services
of Eglin
Air Force Base. Charleston
International Airport (a shared-use airport) in South
Carolina uses the runways and services of Charleston
Air Force Base. Both civil airports, however, operate their own passenger
terminals and taxiways. Charleston also has private fixed
base operators on the civilian side of the field catering to the general
flying public (Okaloosa is closed to almost all general
aviation).
The obverse, a military enclave, is quite common in the United
States, though never referred to as such in that country. Many Air
National Guard operations take place at smaller regional airports
run by civil authorities. Airports containing ANG enclaves include McGhee
Tyson Airport in Knoxville,
Tennessee, Harrisburg
International Airport in Pennsylvania
and Kalamazoo-Battle
Creek International Airport in Michigan
among many others; virtually every state without a major Air
Force Base has military operations present in at least one civilian
airport. Ahmedabad's Sardar
Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport is an example of a military
enclave in India.
External
links
See
also
- International airport
- Regional airport
- Domestic airport
This
article is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation
Published in April 2009.
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