Mixed reactions as second Gatwick runway backed

Jacob Panons
BBC News, South East
Emily Coady-Stemp
BBC News, Crawley
Emily Coady-Stemp/BBC A man with glasses and short, wispy white hair. He is wearing a navy coat.Emily Coady-Stemp/BBC
Ian Brooker, who lives near Three Bridges, says a new runway will be good for the area

Residents across the South East have shared mixed reactions to a second runway at Gatwick Airport being backed by the government.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said she was "minded to approve" the expansion, providing measures to reduce noise were put in place.

Ian Brooker, who lives near Three Bridges, in West Sussex, said he was in favour of the plans due to the additional jobs it could bring to the area.

Meanwhile, campaign group Communities Against Gatwick Noise Emissions (Cagne) said: "We will continue to hold Gatwick's feet to the fire to ensure the local communities of Sussex, Surrey and Kent do not pay for this burden, as well as the planet."

A map showing where the new runway could operate.

Mr Brooker said Gatwick Airport was the main employer in the area.

"The more people that work there, the better," he said.

But Cathy Barclay, from Charlwood, Surrey, said there was a "fairly strong belief" in the area that another runway was not needed.

"If you think of the road and the rail and the housing, everything that supports the infrastructure here, it's tight enough as it is now," she said.

"It would be horrendous."

Emily Coady-Stemp/BBC A woman with tied-up dark hair and blue eyes looking at the camera. She is wearing a dark fluffy turtle neck coat and is standing in row of shops.Emily Coady-Stemp/BBC
Rachel Martin says she has got used to flights going over her home in Horley

Rachel Martin, who lives under a flight path in Horley, says she thinks another runway could make flights more noticeable for those living in the area.

She added that residents would "just have to put up with it if it goes ahead".

The transport secretary's support does not guarantee the expansion will go ahead as it would still need planning permission.

If permission is granted, work would start almost immediately, the BBC understands.

The £2.2bn expansion will be funded through private investment.

Gatwick Airport has until 24 April to respond to demands for it to include measures, such as noise mitigation and having a proportion of passengers travelling to the airport via public transport, in its overall plans before a final decision is made in October.

Cagne added that it welcomed the extension of the deadline until October as it believed "planning hearings left so many questions unanswered".

Meanwhile, union Unite backed the airport having a second runway, but warned it would need "to come with guarantees of well paid, unionised jobs and proper facilities for workers".

Bronwen Jones, development director at Gatwick Airport, said a second runway would be "a win for everyone".

Gatwick Airport is already Europe's busiest single runway airport, with more than 40 million passengers using it last year.

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