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Brockman to Step Down as Airport CEO

The president and CEO of the Memphis-Shelby County Airport Authority (MSCAA) will step down at the end of this year. 

Scott Brockman joined the Airport Authority, which oversees operations of Memphis International Airport (MEM), in 2003. He served as executive vice president and then as the airport’s Chief Operating Officer. In 2014, Brockman was named as the airport’s CEO. 

Brockman. Credit Memphis International Airport

In his 37-year career, Brockman also served in executive roles with Tucson International Airport, Des Moines International Airport, and Sarasota-Bradenton International Airport. 

“Scott’s impact on the success of MEM cannot be understated,” said Michael Keeney, chairman of the MSCAA. “He will leave an ongoing legacy of success, having navigated the airport through significant challenges such as the transition to [origin and destination] operations, the pandemic, and the transformational concourse modernization project.” 

 In his time as CEO, Brockman has overseen a number of historic milestones and projects for the airport including:

• Delta Air Line’s de-hub of the airport in 2013

• Reinventing the airport into an original and destination airport. 

•  Overseeing one of the busiest cargo airports in the world.

• Bringing in new airlines and new destinations to help keep airfare lower. 

• Modernizing Concourse B, a $245 million construction project, that opened in February.

• Competed the $55 million Mission Support Center, which houses airfield operations, maintenance, police, procurement, and warehouse activities. 

The MSCAA board will now begin the process of selecting Brockman’s successor.

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Face ID, Self-Check Baggage, Online Parking Reservations Could Be the Future at Memphis International Airport

Rolling into the parking lot at Memphis International Airport (MEM), the garage arm lifts without stopping to take a ticket. You don’t hunt for a spot. You pull into the spot you reserved and paid for online. 

Inside, natural light spills into the expanded ticketing floor from a massive wall of glass that replaced the gift shops and coffee shops along the airport’s north wall. A buzz of your phone says your airline knows you’ve arrived and have been checked in. 

You scan your face at a baggage kiosk. It prints your claim ticket. You attach it to your bag, and drop it on the appropriate belt and walk away. 

The Transportation Safety Adminstration (TSA) agent scans your face again, no photo identification needed. You walk through a security portal and you keep walking, unless the system has flagged an inadmissible item in your carry on. 

In the concourse, you walk to the coffee shop counter. Without ordering or standing in line, really, the clerk calls your name and hands you your order.    

This is where MEM is headed, as outlined in its proposed new master plan. Lots will likely change before the scenario becomes reality. But airport officials are working fast on it to try and capture some money from the federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which has earmarked $15 billion for airport improvements projects across the country.

Airport officials just published its strategic overview, a document that drives decisions for the next one to three years, explained MEM president and CEO Scott Brockman. The master plan is different, though, setting out goals in the longer term. 

“Obviously, the entire world is going to more technically advanced programs,” Brockman said. “Airports are no different. We are moving towards much more seamless travel.”

Airports around the world are already testing much of the future-sounding tech described above, Brockman said. Airports in the future will likely be easier to traverse, with shorter wait times, fewer human interactions, and more seamless transitions between stages, like from ticketing to security for example. Wireless internet and mobile phones will likely push much of these advancements. 

But physical changes will help push the future at MEM, too, Brockman explained. For example, the north wall of the ticketing floor and the structures there (River City News & Gifts, a temporarily closed Starbucks, and a temporarily closed Maggie O’Shea’s restaurant) would be removed, have their spaces pushed out all the way to the street, and replaced with floor-to-ceiling glass. The stairs and escalators now running through the middle of the ticketing floor would be moved out to the edges of the building. It all “cleans up the lobby,” Brockman said, but also makes it more functional.          

“It gives us the chance to expand the security checkpoint to allow for additional lanes for the TSA, which, then, allows for greater throughput, which cuts down on the amount of time people stand in line,” Brockman said. 

Moving the stairs would also allow for a fifth belt in the baggage claim area. This would allow passengers to spread out, give the airport more flexibility, and “make it a much more pleasurable experience,” Brockman said. 

The master plan includes many more improvements, including a de-icing facility for aircraft. But they’re not cheap. Brockman said the price tag could range from $350 million to $500 million, and reminded that the recent modernization of Concourse C cost $250 million. Brockman also reminded that the airport gets no city or county tax funding and wouldn’t get any for these future improvements.

“That is why we’re really pushing hard to move forward — taking elements of the master plan even before the master plan is published and try to get this funding,” he said. “It’s through the federal government, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. If we can get funding through that program, then we will move this process forward quickly.”   

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Cohen Points to ‘Severe Funding Flaw’ in Airport Virus Aid

Cohen Points to ‘Severe Funding Flaw’ in Airport Virus Aid

Airports across America recently got a slice of a $10 billion federal aid package to soften the blow of the coronavirus pandemic, but one Memphis lawmaker said those slices are far from even.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) designed the packages and doled them out in mid-April. When the totals were published, some of the figures had Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) scratching his head.

Some airports, he said, would get enough funding to float them for “decades.” Others would only get enough money to sustain them for “months.” He pointed specifically to the disparity between Knoxville’s McGhee Tyson Airport (TYS) and Memphis International Airport (Memphis). 

Ninth District Congressman Steve Cohen

“This is peculiar for several reasons including that the McGhee Tyson Airport had 2.5 million passengers in 2019 compared to the 4.6 million passengers that flew through the Memphis International Airport in the same year,” Cohen said in a statement Tuesday. “That does not include Memphis’s air cargo volume, which was 4.47 million metric tons of cargo in 2018.”

The FAA gave commercial service airports across the country — like McGhee Tyson and Memphis International — $7.4 billion to spend “for any purpose for which airport revenues may lawfully be used.”

That money was divvied up based on enplanements (how many passengers got on and off airplanes at the airports) during the 2018 calendar year, debt service obligations, and total amount of reserves.

Another $2 billion pot of money was available for all primary airports — small, medium, or large — and given based on another formula.
Memphis International Airport

In 2018, Memphis International saw more than 4.4 million passengers, an increase of more than 200,000 from 2017.

The Metropolitan Knoxville Airport Authority did not post 2018 passenger numbers for McGhee Tyson on its website. However, officials said 2019 was the 82-year-old airport’s “busiest year” with more than 2.5 million passengers.

After the FAA calculations were made for the CARES Act money, Memphis International (4.4 million passengers) got more than $24.6 million and McGhee Tyson (~2.5 million passengers) got more than $25.8 million.

In a Tuesday letter to the FAA, Cohen asked administrators to review what he called a “severe funding flaw.”

“The purpose of the CARES Act emergency relief is to support U.S. airports that are experiencing severe economic disruption caused by the COVID-19 public health emergency, not to bolster or double smaller airports’ budgets based on an arbitrary formula,” Cohen said. “I respectfully request that the FAA suspend its CARES Act payments to airports immediately until Congress can address this severe funding flaw that is prohibiting adequate support for our nation’s airports.”

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MEM’s finances have been “significantly impacted” by the pandemic, the airport’s president and Chief Executive Officer Scott Brockman said in an April 16th statement. In the meantime, airport officials will significantly cut costs and non-essential capital projects “to address the new budget reality.”

As for the CARES funding, Brockman said he and other airport officials were “grateful” to get the money and the aviation industry will need more down the road.

“The grant funding provides MEM, a nationally critical infrastructure, with short-term financial relief and we will work diligently to apply these funds to areas affected by the loss of revenue,” Brockman said in a statement. “The aviation industry has unprecedented challenges ahead and will need additional assistance from the federal government to help restart the economy and rebuild our future.”

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Spring Breakers Push Airport Traffic

Airport March
Infogram

Spring Breakers Push Airport Traffic

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Memphis International Airport Expands Wi-Fi to Parking Lot

Those awaiting incoming passengers in Memphis International Airport’s cell phone lot won’t have to waste their precious data on games of Candy Crush anymore.

The airport’s free Wi-Fi has now been expanded to include the cell phone lot — the parking area to the right of the main drive that leads to the terminal. That lot has also recently been upgraded with a display of flight arrival times, better lighting, and landscaping improvements.

Basic use of the Wi-Fi is free, but those who wish to use the airport’s Wi-Fi to watch streaming video or upload large files must purchase a premium data package.

“We are committed to improving the customer experience here at MEM, and expanding free Wi-Fi to our cell phone lot gives our guests more options and better access to information,” said Scott Brockman, president and CEO of the Memphis-Shelby County Airport Authority.

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Editorial Opinion

Taking Flight at MEM Again?

Along with the weather and whichever public official is judged most feckless or misguided in a given time-frame (the honor rotates), there is no target more susceptible to local misgivings these days than Memphis International Airport.

Sometimes it’s actually the former main proprietor, Delta, which famously (or infamously) shuttered its hub and pulled dozens of flights out of Memphis, that accounts for traveler malaise; sometimes it’s the fact that the big, new-ish parking facility obscures the long-cherished view of the MIA terminal; sometimes it’s something as simple as the fact that the number of fast-food outlets has shrunk, especially in the airport’s pre-boarding areas where people are used to dropping off their kinfolk.

And sometimes it’s the fact that, as has been widely reported, the facility is about to be downsized, with plans to demolish the airport’s A and C terminals — one of which used to be Delta’s bailiwick, the other of which is still bearing a good deal of traffic.

All of that is the bad news. So, you ask: What’s the good news? Well, to listen to Scott Brockman, the Airport Authority’s executive director since January, there’s a bunch of it, beginning with the fact that, along with the demolition of terminals A and C, the B terminal is about to undergo some impressive expansion and modernization, giving it not only a more spacious look and feel but a sense of being up-to-date, which the 50-year-old airport facility has heretofore lacked.

Best of all, the improvements-to-come, which will cost an estimated $114 million, can be accomplished without incurring any additional debt, says Brockman, who points out that the Airport Authority has a $691 million balance, has reduced its debt load by $300 million in the past decade, and maintains A-level grades with the top three rating services. And that aforementioned ground-transportation facility has upped revenues from parking four-fold.

The areas administered by the Airport Authority (including the FedEx property and DeWitt Spain and Charles Baker airport) still account for one job in four in these parts, Brockman noted in a luncheon talk to members of the Rotary Club of Memphis on Tuesday. And the Memphis facility handles more cargo on a daily basis than any other site besides Hong Kong. Locally originating passenger flights are actually up, not down, in recent months, and new nonstops have been added to Denver, Chicago, Houston Dallas, and Baltimore — not to mention Philadelphia, which Brockman said could become a connecting point to rival Atlanta.

For the record, these are the airlines that provide daily passenger service from Memphis: American, Delta, Frontier, Southwest, United, U.S. Airways, and Seaport. (Even Delta has upped its service somewhat lately, adding non-stops to Cancun on a seasonal basis.) Of these, Frontier and Southwest are the newcomers, and, as one might expect of newbies, they are determined to demonstrate their competitiveness to the traveling public.

We’re willing to take Brockman at his word when he talks of the Airport Authority’s “relentless pursuit of frequent, affordable air service,” but only time will tell. Still, if the former hapless University of Memphis football Tigers seem finally ready to soar again, then so, surely, can Memphis International Airport.

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Memphis Airport Welcomes First Frontier Airlines Flight

The first non-stop Frontier Airlines flight from Denver arrived in Memphis today around 1:15 p.m. Some of the passengers poured out of the plane wearing Elvis-style sunglasses given out on the flight, and even the pilot donned Elvis shades and waved to reporters from the cockpit.

A passenger leaving the first Frontier flight from Denver

  • A passenger leaving the first Frontier flight from Denver

Another passenger from todays arriving Frontier flight

  • Another passenger from today’s arriving Frontier flight

Frontier Airlines had a presence at Memphis International Airport years ago, but it couldn’t compete with Northwest Airlines and eventually pulled service. Now the low-cost carrier is back offering non-stop flights to its Denver hub.

Frontier originally announced they’d start with flights four days a week leaving from the Memphis airport, but reception has been so good, they’ve already announced plans to expand that service to seven days a week.

Frontier is considered a leisure airline and an ultra-low-cost carrier, meaning passengers opt for cheaper tickets with few frills (such as no free drinks, etc.), and they can choose to pay for as many extra services as they wish.

“We will bring the lowest fare into the city we fly into,” said Frontier director of sales Andrea Blankenship during a quick welcoming ceremony before the first flight arrived today.

Scott Brockman and Andrea Blankenship in front of the first arriving Frontier flight

  • Scott Brockman and Andrea Blankenship in front of the first arriving Frontier flight

“We are reinventing ourselves as an [origination and departure] airport, and Frontier offers a tremendous product,” said Memphis Shelby-County Airport Authority president Scott Brockman.

Read more about the airport’s transition from a hub to an O&D airport in the next issue of the Memphis Flyer.

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Memphis International Airport To Downsize Concourses

In about six years, all of the gates at Memphis International Airport will be consolidated into the existing B concourse as part of a “modernization” plan announced during the Memphis Airport Authority’s monthly board meeting Thursday morning.

The $114 million project is an effort to move all of the airline flight operations closer together. Currently, operations are spread over three concourses, and some areas are walled off since Delta removed its hub status and has been steadily reducing flights.

The new floor plan shows what the airport would look like without the south ends of concourses A and C.

  • The floor plan shows what the airport would look like without the south ends of concourses A and C.

Although the airport as a whole will be downsized since the south ends of concourses A and C will be demolished, concourse B will see enhancements. Walkways will be nearly doubled in size to give passengers more room as they move to and from gates, and moving walkways will be installed. The ceilings will be raised, and more windows will be added to provide natural light. During construction, the airport will see seismic upgrades. About 60 airline gates will remain open for future growth.

A view of the new skylighting that will be added to concourse B

  • A view of the new skylighting that will be added to concourse B

Security screening will be moved to concourse B, but a checkpoint at concourse C will remain open for busier times. Ticketing and check-in will continue in concourses A, B, and C, but baggage claim for all airlines will be moved to concourse B. The A and C baggage claim areas will be open for passengers to enter and exit the airport.

Moving walkways would be added to concourse B.

  • Moving walkways would be added to concourse B.

Jack Sammons, chair of the Memphis Airport Authority board, told the board that all of the airlines that operate out of Memphis International have advocated for this change. Removal of the south ends of concourses A and C frees up more taxi space for airplanes, and it will create a livelier B concourse since all concessions would be relocated to that area. Over the past year, a number of airport concession businesses have closed due to the loss of the Delta hub.

Sammons said he recently paid a visit to Southwest Airlines headquarters in Dallas to ask them to bring more flights to Memphis, and he said Southwest expressed support for the airport’s construction plan.

“They want to prune the tree, and the areas on south A and C concourses are the way,” Sammons told the board.

The removal of the south end of the A concourse will begin this year, and the removal of the south end of the C concourse is scheduled for 2015. Relocation of the airlines to concourse B should also begin in 2015. The enhancements of B concourse are scheduled for 2016.

Memphis Airport Authority president Scott Brockman told the board that much of the $114 million price tag would be funded through federal and state grants that are made up of taxes paid on airline fuel and airline tickets. The Airport Authority does not anticipate that the project will require the issuance of any additional general airport revenue bond debt.

“Passengers have a choice. Hundreds go to Little Rock everyday on perhaps the most dangerous highway in America [to fly out of the airport there],” Sammons said. “We want them to know that the Memphis airport is the airport of choice. To do that, you have to have a modern facility.”

Below is a map of the current airport gate layout. The south wings of A and C concourses will be demolished.