The commercial airports in Nevada (Las Vegas and Reno) receive adequate funding from the Federal Aviation Administration Airport Improvement Program (AIP), and along with passenger facility charges and other airport generated revenue have the ability to expand capacity and maintain their facilities to an acceptable level. During the past 3 years, both airports have completed significant expansions and renovations – a new Terminal 3 in Las Vegas ($2.4 billion) and a $27 million terminal renovation in Reno. Nevada’s 26 General Aviation (GA) airports included in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems however, are typically inadequately funded for capacity improvements, operations staff, and maintenance functions because of their limited local funding sources. GA airports can serve as a lifeline to communities supporting fire-fighting, businesses, charities, medical organizations, law enforcement, farmers, and other crucial services. Recent estimates from a GA airfield pavement condition study show that the Nevada GA airports are in need of $56 million of pavement maintenance and repair over the next 5 years.
GA airports are typically each eligible for AIP entitlement funds of $150,000 annually and can also receive state apportionment and discretionary funding from the FAA. However, the airport sponsors are required to provide local matching funds in the amount of 6.25% in order to obtain the 93.75% in federal funding. In 2005, $500,000 was included in the state budget for the Nevada Aviation Trust Fund in order to facilitate the capture of $9.5 million in federal funds which resulted in significant airport improvements with an estimated economic impact of over $20 million. However, no additional budget has been allocated to the Trust Fund since 2005.
Increase the appropriations to the Nevada Aviation Trust Fund to leverage federal funding grants and allow GA airports in Nevada to provide more matching funds to add capacity or provide proper maintenance for their airports.
A: Exceptional, B: Good, C: Mediocre, D: Poor, F: Failing, ?: Incomplete
Each category was evaluated on the basis of capacity, condition, funding, future need, operation and maintenance, public safety, resilience, and innovation
Aviation
30 public-use airports
Bridges
36 of the 1,853 bridges are structurally deficient
Bridges
$10.70 million in bridge funds came from the Federal Highway Bridge Fund in 2011
Dams
85% of the state regulated dams have an Emergency Action Plan
Dams
150 high hazard dams
Drinking Water
$5.6 billion in drinking water infrastructure needs over the next 20 years
Energy
4.444 gigawatt-hours of renewable energy every year, ranking it 23rd
Hazardous Waste
1 sites on the National Priorities List
Levees
103 miles of levees
Public Parks
$18.8 million of unmet needs for its parks system
Rail
2 freight railroads covering 1,192 miles across the state, ranking 39th nationally by mileage
Roads
4,085 of the state’s 38,567 public roads are major roads, and 2% are in poor condition
Roads
$417.0 million a year in costs to motorists from driving on roads in need of repair, which is $242 /yr per motorist
Schools
$2.5 billion in estimated school infrastructure funding needs
Transit
65.1 million annual unlinked passenger trips via transit systems including bus, transit, and commuter trains
Wastewater
$2.9 billion in wastewater infrastructure needs over the next 20 years
March 03, 2017
As the President’s repeated in his address to Congress his pledge to dramatically increase infrastructure spending to the tune of $1 trillion, various Congressional Committees
March 01, 2017
On Tuesday night, President Trump addressed a joint-session of Congress for the first time in his presidency. Infrastructure was among the many issues he discussed.
February 28, 2017
U.S. motorists set a new record for vehicle miles travelled (VMT) in 2016, driving over 3.2 trillion miles, an increase of 70 billion miles from
February 17, 2017
Romantic dates, the Grammy awards and celebrating black history are not the only milestones of this week; the Oroville dam crisis in California and the