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A Job for Gump & Don C

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A Job for Gump & Don C

This should be attractive to Gump and Don, who, I know, feel guilty not being real productive. :)


Northway, Alaska, FBO goes on the block
By Dan Namowitz

Job opportunity: The state of Alaska is auctioning buildings and equipment at the Northway Airport along the Alaska Highway, following the failure of the airstrip’s fixed-base operation.

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Minimum bid: $10,000.

Energetic and optimistic entrepreneurs might consider applying to run this remote FBO. Expect a challenge. The notice of the July 15 auction by the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities (DOT&PF) marks just the latest chapter in a saga starting with earthquake damage that shortened the runway, and culminating in the loss of the airport’s ability to dispense—and therefore, sell—fuel, the lifeblood of an FBO.

There is also a matter of legacy fuel contamination. Officials say they are willing to work with the new operator to solve that problem (see the site assessment for details).

Things seemed to be looking up recently when the airport that sits at an elevation of 1,715 feet along the U.S.-Canada border was restored from a 3,850-foot-long gravel surface to 5,100 feet of new pavement, said AOPA Alaska Regional Representative Tom George.

“Unfortunately during this period of turmoil the FBO, which sold fuel, provided space for customs clearance, and operated a restaurant and a small motel became a victim of the changes,” he said in an email.“Traffic diminished during the time it operated as a gravel strip, and the lack of fuel is a serious concern for GA aircraft traveling through the area.”

Tempted to bid? Give Lud Larson a call. He operated the FBO in Northway from 1980 to 1999, but repossessed the facilities in 2009 after his successor failed, he said.

You won’t be bidding against him now for the property, which includes a 6,400-square-foot hangar.

“I’m 74 years old. I can’t go back up there and do it again, and I don’t want to,” he said in an interview.

Still, you might check in with Larson for tips on how to get a fuel truck or other vehicle started when it’s 40 degrees below zero outside. That’s a skill he developed in part from trying to provide fuel service from trucks during a late phase of his effort to make a go of it in Northway.

He also can give you a variety of pointers about running a tough business in a challenging location.

As if the earthquake’s effect of shortening the runway wasn’t bad enough, Larson said Northway’s FBO was left grasping at straws when he could not get permission to relocate an existing fuel system that had the wrong kind of tanks, despite his proposal to install the correct double-walled tanks in the new location. The free-standing fuel installation allowed fuel buyers to fuel up, and then go inside the lodge to pay. Running fuel trucks instead required having someone available to fuel aircraft at all times—and being able to get the trucks running in cold weather.

The fuel system, however, “was a private system that did not meet minimum environmental and safety standards. The owner was not able to bring the system into compliance. DOT&PF was in the middle of an airport repair project and it was agreed to by all parties to remove the dispensers from the apron,” explained a DOT&PF aviation project official. The department “is ready to lease property and is actively seeking a private company to sell fuel at the Northway Airport,” said Linda Bustamante in response to an AOPA query about Northway.

Larson lamented the loss of seven jobs that can’t be replaced in the area as well as the lack of a “functioning airport” in the vicinity.

Now it will pain him to see the Northway Airport Lodge sold “for pennies on the dollar”—a sentiment he expressed in a “To whom it may concern” email to prospective bidders. (“If interested, please check it out. If not, pass this on to others,” his email said.)

George hopes that an upbeat future will emerge—starting with the auction.

“It would seem that it might be in our best interest to let the aviation community know about the auction, in hopes an aviation-friendly individual would consider re-opening the business,” George said. “Despite the challenges, it’s an important location, and historically has been a very popular airport.”
FloatFlyer offline
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Re: A Job for Gump & Don C

Like I posted on Supercub.org...

"A fun way to turn a very large fortune into a very small fortune."

Gump
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Re: A Job for Gump & Don C

Had a customer ask me one time. If I invested a million dollars in your business what would u do ? I told him I would just keep flying till it was gone 8)
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Re: A Job for Gump & Don C

Sucker bet. Shame.

Best possible opportunity there would be a one or two man seasonal operation selling fuel out of a truck with no ties to the facility with its ticking liability bomb. Wouldn't make money that way but you might break even and have tip money for a six pack each night. Which would help you ignore the itching from the mosquito bites.
onceAndFutr_alaskaflyer offline
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Re: A Job for Gump & Don C

Yea. Right. Someone should talk to Greg S or John G. Pretty sure they got the real story from the previous owner regarding the "cleanup" last summer.
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Re: A Job for Gump & Don C

The previous owner bailed because the State DOT was going to require him to assume responsibility/liability for all the POL spilled there since WWII, much of which occurred during WWII, and well before there was a Lodge there. So, while they didn't exactly say he'd have to remediate all that right now, he would have legal responsibility for it as part of renewing his lease. What BS.

Northway was always a good gas stop for me when I was working over in the Nabesna/Chisana Rivers. Gas up and have a gut bomb for the trip back to FAI. The facilities aren't the best, and would need a bit of fixing up, but.....

Northway is the only Customs airport anywhere near the border, and without gas, it means you'll have to stop at ORT for customs, then Tok for gas.

AK DOT/PF runs the airports in AK. There used to be a separate aviation division (barely-like three people or four) but that got eliminated, so now DOT/PF is a bunch of highway people. It's ironic that Alaska, where aviation is so essential, has no separate Aeronautics division....

I hope someone picks up this pig in a poke, and DOT/PF allows them to abandon the tanks and mess without liability.

This was a major Lend/Lease stopover during the war, by the way....fighters and bombers enroute from Great Falls, MT to Fairbanks, AK, where they were turned over to Russian crews, who then flew them to Nome, gassed up, and into Russia the back way over the Bering Strait.

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