Stark wrote:People buy homes near airports and then complain about the noise. It's yet more 'I didn't do my research so I'm going to blame someone else' stuff.
Or they are deliberately misled (although it's usually the case they are happy to believe the lies).
Case in point: Chicago Midway airport. Originally it was an onion farm surrounded by other farms where the crops didn't give a fuck about the noisy airplanes because, even though it has ears, corn can't hear. By 1927 it was an airport. Had jets flying out of it in the 1960's, sort of hard to miss. Then they opened O'Hare and the commercial flying moved there. So developers snapped up the land around Midway, they even drew up elaborate plans for the land the airport was on, told buyers that the airport was
definitely going away in a few years - look at this development plan for the land! See, it's going to happen! - and sold homes built right up to the fence line.
Then in the 1980's commercial jet traffic came back to Midway and the airport was even busier than before.
So a lot of people sued, the developers said nothing was in writing/
caveat emptor, and the airport has a major, major safety issue. To a lesser extent, we have the same problem with all the airports around here - the developers build houses right to the fence line, tell people the airport will go away, and the result is a mess. Tell me, how do you NOT notice a B-737 going by overhead? Even deaf people can feel the vibrations!
I
love airplanes, but I wouldn't live as close to an airport as a lot of people do - not because of the noise, but because accidents happen and I don't want even a small airplane driving through my living room.