Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority

Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority
Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority
Abbreviation MWAA
Formation June 7, 1987
Type Airport Authority
Headquarters

1 Aviation Circle
Washington, DC 20001

Phone: 703-417-8600
Region served Washington Metropolitan Area
President/CEO John E. Potter
Affiliations

Operators of Washington Dulles International Airport
Washington Reagan National Airport
Dulles Toll Road

and Constructor of the Metro Silver Line[1]
Staff More than 1,300[2]
Website MWAA - Official Website

Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority ("MWAA" or "Authority") is an independent airport authority, created by the Commonwealth of Virginia and the District of Columbia with the consent of the United States Congress to oversee management, operations, and capital development of Washington, D.C.'s two major airports: Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and Washington Dulles International Airport. The Authority, which is an independent public body corporate and politic,[3] leases the airports from the United States Department of Transportation. The United States government originally built the airports and continues to own the underlying airport property except for property acquired by MWAA subsequent to the lease. The Authority has its headquarters on the grounds of Reagan National Airport in Arlington County, Virginia.[4]

Though commonly considered one of Washington's three major airports, Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport is not part of MWAA but is owned by the State of Maryland, operated through the Maryland Aviation Administration, which purchased then "Friendship Airport" from the City of Baltimore in 1972.

MWAA was also a founding member of the Capital-to-Capital Coalition, the group which successfully advocated for the awarding the right to operate a non-stop flight between Beijing, China and Washington, D.C.[5]

Contents

History

The Authority was created by the Commonwealth of Virginia (1985 Acts of Assembly, Ch 598, as amended) and the District of Columbia (Regional Airports Authority Act of 1985, as amended). On June 7, 1987, Washington Dulles International Airport and Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (formerly known as Washington National Airport) were transferred to MWAA under a 50-year lease authorized by the United States Congress in the Metropolitan Washington Airports Act of 1986, Title VI of Public Law 99-500. Prior to the transfer, the airports were owned and operated by the federal government through the Federal Aviation Administration in the United States Department of Transportation. By operation of the transfer act, all property owned by the FAA at the airports was transferred to the new Authority, with the Federal government retaining title to the lease. The original 50 year lease has been extended to 80 years, expiring in June, 2067. Information about MWAA and the airports is available at MWAA Official Website.

Governing Body

The authority is governed by a 13-member Board of Directors with five members appointed by the Governor of Virginia, three by the Mayor of Washington, D.C., two by the Governor of Maryland and three by the President of the United States.

As of July 2011, the Chair of the Board of Directors is Charles D. Snelling, a presidential appointee, with former Congressman Tom Davis serving as Vice Chair.[6] Leading the Management of the Authority is President and Chief Executive Officer John E. Potter, who took office on July 11, 2011, and Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Margaret E. McKeough. Potter was appointed to the post after a nation-wide search was conducted for a permanent President and CEO after the retirement of then-President and CEO Jim Bennett in April 2010.[7] Former CFO Lynn Hampton was appointed as interim President and CEO on April 13, 2010 for the period while the nation-wide search was being conducted.[8] She was eventually replaced by Potter as President and CEO by the Board of Directors on July 11,2011.[9] Each airport operated by MWAA is under the direction of a Vice President and Airport Manager. Christopher Browne is Vice President and Airport Manager for Washington Dulles International Airport [10] while J. Paul Malandrino, Jr. is Vice President and Airport Manager for Reagan National Airport.[11]

Dulles Access Highway

MWAA's lease encompasses the Dulles Access Highway right-of-way. The Dulles Airport Access Highway serves traffic to and from Dulles Airport only. Since 2008, MWAA owns the Dulles Toll Road, the outer lanes of the right-of-way which were built by the Virginia Department of Transportation, use of which is subject to a toll. However, the inner lanes of the Access Highway are free of charge for drivers going directly between Dulles Airport and the surrounding area.[12]

Police and Fire

The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority has its own, full-service, state (Virginia) accredited police department which patrols airport properties and grounds, including the Dulles Airport Access Highway, the Dulles Toll Road and the area 300 yards surrounding the airports.[13] The Virginia State Police, and Fairfax County police also exercise police power over the airport property within their respective jurisdiction including the Dulles Airport Access Highway and the Dulles Toll Road.[14] Virginia law also grants concurrent jurisdiction to the Arlington County Police for Reagan National Airport.[15]

The Authority also has a full-service Fire & Rescue Department that operates at both Dulles and National Airports. The Authority's Fire & Rescue Department provides a wide range of services to the airports including aircraft rescue firefighting in accordance with the standards of the Federal Aviation Adminsitration, structural firefighting, emergency medical services (basic and advanced life support) and river rescue (at National Airport).[16] The Authority's Fire & Rescue Department will also provide mutual-aid services to the surrounding jurisdictions, as needed, under a Memorandum of Understanding signed by several jurisdictions in Northern Virginia.[17] As an example, firefighters from National Airport were among the first responders to the Pentagon following the crash of American Airlines Flight 77 on September 11, 2001.[18]

Footnotes

External links


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