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San Diego International Airport ALUCP Update

The current Airport Land Use Compatibility Plan (ALUCP) for San Diego International Airport (SDIA) was adopted by the San Diego County Regional Airport Authority in 2014. In 2023, the Authority started work on updating the SDIA ALUCP to reflect the new Airport Layout Plan and airport activity forecasts, in accordance with the Caltrans Division of Aeronautics California Airport Land Use Planning Handbook.

Check back for more information or sign up below to receive email updates during the SDIA ALUCP update process.


About the ALUCP

An ALUCP provides guidance on appropriate land uses surrounding airports to protect the health and safety of people and property within the airport vicinity. At the same time, an ALUCP protects the public investment in the airport by limiting encroachment of new incompatible land uses which might restrict airport operations.

An ALUCP establishes standards for the compatibility of newly proposed land uses and substantial expansion or reconstruction of existing land uses in the airport vicinity. Otherwise, it has no effect on existing residences or businesses. An ALUCP also has no effect upon airport operations or on-airport development.


Resources

WHAT IS THE ALUC?
The ALUC is the governing body designated by state law to produce ALUCPs in accordance with State transportation agency and statutory guidance through a collaborative, community outreach process. Since it was created to operate San Diego International Airport by act of the California Legislature in 2003, the Board of the San Diego County Regional Airport Authority has also been the ALUC for San Diego County. Prior to that time, the ALUC function was handled by SANDAG, the San Diego Association of Governments, a regional transportation planning agency.
WHAT IS IN AN ALUCP?

An ALUCP is based upon guidance in the California Airport Land Use Planning Handbook published by the Caltrans Division of Aeronautics. Each ALUCP designates an Airport Influence Area (AIA) whose geographic extent is based upon the length and orientation of airport runways and the directional flows, operating hours, and fleet mix of aircraft using the airport. Within the AIA are land areas of compatibility based on noise, safety, airspace, and overflight factors defined by Handbook and FAA standards.

DOES EVERY AIRPORT HAVE AN ALUCP?

All 16 public-use and military airports within San Diego County have adopted ALUCPs.  Private airports and helipads are not subject to the State mandate for ALUCPs.

WHAT DOES AN ALUCP DO AND NOT DO?

An ALUCP establishes policies and standards of noise, safety, and airspace compatibility for the appropriateness of land uses in the vicinity of the 12 public-use and four military airports in San Diego County. ALUCPs only apply to land outside airport boundaries and do not govern aircraft in flight or airport ground operations, master planning, or potential expansion. 

HOW DOES THE ALUCP PROCESS WORK?

The ALUC has no permit authority of its own, but state law mandates the referral of local agency land use projects, plans, and regulations to the ALUC to determine their consistency with the adopted ALUCP. A local agency includes any city, the unincorporated county, school district, community college district, or special district (such as utility or maintenance district) that has land use permitting authority. The local agency then incorporates that determination and any conditions into the project design, plan, or regulations.

DO LOCAL AGENCIES HAVE TO FOLLOW THE ALUCP?

By state law, once an ALUCP is adopted, affected local agencies must modify, as applicable, their general/master plan and zoning code to be consistent with the ALUCP. Alternatively, the local agency may refer all land use projects, plans, and regulations to the ALUC for a consistency determination of each action. The local agency may instead choose to overrule the ALUCP entirely or in part, as well as any individual ALUC determination of consistency, by a two-thirds vote of its governing body (such as a city council or school board) if it makes certain statutory findings and notices them within a specified timeline.

HOW DOES THE ALUCP IMPACT LANDOWNERS AROUND THE AIRPORT?

ALUCPs do not apply to existing land uses. Even if existing uses do not meet ALUCP compatibility criteria, they may continue to exist so long as they remain the same and are not intensified. ALUCPs only apply to newly proposed development or redevelopment of property within the AIA.

WHEN DID THE ALUCP REQUIREMENT COME INTO BEING?

The California Legislature mandated that each county create an ALUC with the authority to adopt ALUCPs in 1970. SANDAG was the original ALUC for San Diego County, and it adopted ALUCPs for certain airports during its tenure as the ALUC. With advances in technology, changes in airport operations and fleets, and revised guidance from Caltrans, ALUCPs are amended and replaced.

WHAT IS THE AICUZ?

The Air Installations Compatible Use Zones (AICUZ) study is a document prepared by the Department of Defense for military airfields. It establishes standards of compatibility for land uses based upon noise exposure contours and accident potential safety zones. By state law, the ALUCP for a military airport must be consistent with the noise and safety compatibility standards established by the AICUZ, so the ALUC must revise an applicable ALUCP when a new AICUZ is released.


Stay Updated

The San Diego County Regional Airport Authority will use a variety of communication methods to ensure the public is kept aware of progress. To receive email updates, please sign up here.

For questions:
Call - (619) 400-2464
Email - ALUCPcomments@san.org