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Judge Upholds County Airport Lease Award

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Oct-09-09, 09:23 AM
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A federal judge has dismissed a Westchester County Airport tenant’s constitutional challenge of county administrators’ decision to lease hangar space to one of the county’s large corporations rather than renew the current lease there.


In the wake of Judge Cathy Siebel’s recent decision in U.S. District Court in White Plains, County Executive Andrew J. Spano blasted the aviation tenant’s attorney for filing yet another “frivolous” lawsuit against the county.


The head of the general aviation services company that brought the case in 2008 said the company, 41 North 73 West Inc., which does business at the county airport as Avitat Westchester and Jet Systems, will lose $1 million a year with the loss of one of its two leased hangars to JP Morgan Chase & Co. Avitat’s lease expires in March 2010. The county’s lease award to JP Morgan will leave Avitat, an Exxon Mobil fuel dealer for private and corporate jets, with about 40 percent of its current hangar space.


As recommended by Spano, the Board of Legislators last spring approved a long-term lease to JP Morgan for the approximately 38,000-square-foot hangar, aircraft ramp space and about 13,000 square feet of office space. JP Morgan will pay about $1.1 million in annual rent and can opt to extend the lease for 30 years. The financial services company plans an $18 million hangar renovation using “green” construction materials and building features.
“We’re respectfully disappointed,” Michael W. Dolphin, Jet Systems president and CEO, said of
the court decision. He said the company might appeal the ruling.


The company in its lawsuit claimed county officials violated its constitutional rights to equal protection, due process and free speech during the lease renewal process. It sought to stop the county from denying Avitat a long-term renewal of its hangar lease that began in 2006, four years after Avitat began managing the ’50s-era hangar space for former tenant General Electric. The company contended county officials’ refusal to offer an exclusive renewal, which it claimed was standard practice, was retaliation against Avitat for filing a complaint in 2006 with the Federal Aviation Administration regarding allegedly corrupt practices by a former airport manager. The FAA rejected that claim. 
Spano last spring told legislators the JP Morgan proposal was the best of  four  received by the county. He called the company a “high-quality corporate citizen” with more than 1,000 employees in Westchester and an established record as an airport tenant.

 


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