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Businesses support efforts to save
Oceana
Virginia Business
October
2005
When the federal Base Realignment
and Closure Commission (BRAC) set its sights on the
Oceana Naval Air Station in Virginia Beach in late
summer, it offered good news followed quickly by bad.
It didn't recommend closing the base
or shifting the base's jets to another location. Rather
it offered an austere, expensive list of demands that
must be met by March if Oceana is to be spared. The
ultimatums including razing 1,800 houses on the outskirts
of the base, rezoning undeveloped residential lots
and prohibiting any more home construction in high-noise
and crash zone areas.
State and local officials estimate
that purchasing and destroying the residences will
cost at least $367 million. But if city officials don't
comply with BRAC's de-mands, the jets will likely be
moved to Cecil Field Naval Air Station in Jacksonville,
Fla., which was closed in 1999.
"It's patently unfair," says
Ira Agricola, senior vice president of the Hampton
Roads Chamber of Commerce-Virginia Beach, noting that
development encroaches on most Navy bases.
Nonetheless, Agricola says, the business
community encourages local and state governments to
meet BRAC's requirements. Oceana is Virginia Beach's
largest employer with an economic impact of $1.6 billion
annually, so losing the jets would be devastating to
the local economy. The Hampton Roads Planning District
Commission has estimated that 20,000 jobs would be
lost.
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