22 Years After Deadly Crash Improvements Made At Airport

BRIDGEPORT, CT –Mayor Joe Ganim today joined Mayor John Harkins of Stratford, City Council Members and State Lawmakers to reopen Runway 6-24 at Igor. I Sikorsky Memorial Airport. Mayor Ganim boarded a twin engine Wheels Up jet with City Council members Tom McCarthy, Jeanette Herron and Anthony Paoletto to make the first inaugural landing at the new and improved runway. The ceremony  recognized the more than 20 year effort to re-construct the runway and bring critical safety improvements to the airport, including replacing the South Main Street metal blast fence with a new Engineered  materials Arresting System (EMAS).

“It was an honor to be on the first plane to ever land at the new runway,” said Mayor Ganim. “This partnership with the Town of Stratford proves municipalities united with a common goal can bring a lot of good. It was with our combined effort that Runway 6-24 was successfully completed. The reopening was a long time coming and I know it will only ensure the safety of the many individuals who utilize the Sikorsky Airport on a daily basis.” Runway 6-24 was repaved and equipped with new runway lights. Engineers also included a 300- foot-long EMAS, a paved area made of weak-walled concrete blocks. When an aircraft rolls over it, it collapses to a specified depth, slowing and stopping the plane in a predictable manner and with minimal damage. EMAS ensures a safer landing for aircrafts that overshoot the runway by halting the forward progress. This new feature could have saved the lives of eight individuals who died in a fiery crash on the night of April 27, 1994 when a chartered twin-engine Piper hit the blast fence. The runway itself is still as long as it always was — 4,677 feet. But the EMAS installation required the southern end of Main Street to be reconfigured; this project also elevated the street thus reducing flooding risks. Ninety percent of the $46 million project was paid for by the Federal Aviation Administration, with the state and city of Bridgeport evenly splitting the remaining 10 percent.

Bridgeport News: Clown Sighting

11:39pm–#Bridgeport Connecticut– A Kennedy Drive resident called police that a male in a black hoodie, possibly wearing a clown mask jumped on their back deck and fled.  Earlier police were dispatched to Vincellette and Madison Avenue for a possible clown sighting.  Police are being dispatched as priority one calls for clown calls so if you have been waiting over two hours to see an officer you may want to call back and say a clown was involved.

 

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Trumbull News: Incident At Booth Hill School

1:23pm–#Trumbull Connecticut– WFSB Channel 3 dispatched me to Booth Hill School at 545 Booth Hill Road for a report of a possible man with a rifle in the wooded area near the school.  When I arrived on scene all was calm but there was a Trumbull Police SUV and motorcycle on scene.  Police said they received a third party call of a report of a man dressed in camouflage with a rifle.  When police arrived the did not find anyone.  They said that now that is hunting season and hunters are permitted to hunt in the wooded area behind the school.  The school never did go into a “hard” lockdown” according to police.  For video and any further details see WFSB TV-3.

 

Bridgeport News: Clown Threats….AGAIN

12:26pm–#Bridgeport Connecticut–Great Oak Charter School at 510 Barnum Avenue received a clown threat via social media.  This is starting to get routine even for the police.  The question is, do I continue posting the threats and fuel the clown hysteria?  I just know if it were my kid went to this school I’d like to know  a threat was made.  Thoughts?

 

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