Wе must determine whether the doctrine of federal preemption prevents the State of California from directing a political subdivision to impose a curfew on aircraft flights. In making our determination, we interpret the Supreme Court’s decision in
City of Burbank v. Lockheed Air Terminal, Inc.,
The political subdivision which asserts the invalidity of the state’s attempted imposition of a curfew is the San Diego Unified Port District. The Port District owns and operates San Diego International Airport, Lindbergh Field. Lindbergh Field is the principal airport serving San Diego, and is near the downtown area. Five million passengers pass through the airport each year. This volume of traffic requires frequent jet flights, which produce jet noise that has vexed local residents for some years.
The Port District has attempted to accommodate the needs of commerce and the quiet of San Diego residential areas, by, among other things, unilaterally imposing a midnight to 6:00 a. m. curfew on all commercial jet takeoffs. In addition, the curfew allows only jets meeting strict noise standards to land during those hours.
In spite of these efforts, the State of California, through its Department of Transportation [CalTrans], has attempted to impose a more restrictive curfew through regulations authorized by state statute. See Cal.Pub.Util.Code § 21669 (West Supp. 1981).
These would require the measurement of noise at all affected airports and forbid operation of those airports which exceed a preset noise levеl. See 21 Cal.Admin.Code § 5000-5080.5 (1977). 1 Airports which routinely exceed this level cannot operate without a variance issued under procedures established by the regulations. Id. § 5062. 2
Lindbergh Field is in this category, and in January of 1977 the Port District applied *1309 for a variance permit pursuant to CalTrans’ regulations. 3 A state administrative law judge granted the permit, subject to six conditions. The fourth condition lies at the heart of this lawsuit and provides:
Respondent San Diego Unified Port District is to retain the existing curfew .... Respondent is to extend this existing curfew to the extent that commercial air carriers will not be permitted to take off between the hours of 11:00 p. m. and 7:00 a. m. and commercial air carriers will not be permitted to land between the hours of 11:00 p. m. and 7:00 a. m. unless such aircraft meet FAR Part 36 requirements
Not willing to extend its curfew another two hours, the Port District sought to enjoin enforcеment of the condition. It has contended that federal control of both airspace management and the sources of aircraft noise preempts CalTrans’ ability to place such a condition on the variance.
After an initial procedural phase,
4
including the intervention of the Air Transportation Association of America,
5
the district court rendered its decision.
Relying primarily on
City of Burbank v. Lockheed Air Terminal, Inc.,
I. Preemption and the Underlying Federal Policy
The Port District’s attack on condition four rests primarily on the ground that federal law preempts state regulation of airspace management and control of the source of aircraft noise. 7 This preemption, it is claimed, renders CalTrans powerless to *1310 require the Port District to accept condition four.
The district court agreed and issued a preliminary injunction in favor of the Port District. On appeal, a preliminary injunction will not be reversed unless the lower court abused its discretion or based its decision on erroneous legal premises.
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Comm’n
v.
National Football League,
CalTrans directs its arguments at the latter half of this test, claiming that the district court erred in relying on the City of Burbank case. To assess this claim, we inquire first into the applicable preemption doctrine..
The supremacy clause, U.S.Const., Art. VI, Cl. 2, invalidates any exercise of state power that unduly frustrates or obstructs the objectives of legitimate national policy.
Chicago & North Western Transp. Co. v. Kalo Brick & Tile
Co.,-U.S.-, -,
In assessing any claim brought under this clause, we start from the position “that the historic police powers of the states [are] not to be supersеded ... unless that was the clear and manifest purpose of Congress.”
Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator Corp.,
Where, as here, Congress has not enacted an explicit preemption clause,
8
state authority may still be displaced if an intent to preempt is “implicitly contained in [the federal statute’s] structure and purpose.”
Jones,
Such an intent has been inferred when the state regulations could not be enforced “without impairing the federal superintendence of the field .. . . ”
Florida Lime & Avocado Growers, Inc. v. Paul,
Preclusion of state regulation is possible even in cases where the regulated entity can feasibly comply with both state and federal mandates.
See Ray v. Atlantic Richfield Co.,
The key to the scope of federal preemption is the intent of Congress in enacting the applicable federal legislation.
Malone,
Congress formulates the policies of the national government in its acts and resolutions. Our task is to interpret applicable congressional acts and to define the national policy to discern whether a given state regulation or, for that matter, any state regulation, could be compatible with the attainment of the national policy’s objectives.
Jones,
The state regulation in question is easily defined. The state, through its police power, has sought to regulate and restrict aircraft flights directly by requiring the Port District to adopt a more extensive curfew than the Port District itself thought necessary and appropriate.
The interpretation and definition of applicable federal policies is more difficult. National policies with respect to aviation and noise are sufficiently complex that we must consider what is implicit in the federal regulatory scheme, its underlying assumptions, intended purposes, and desired effects.
Jones,
Much of this task has been performed by the Supreme Court. In
City of Burbank v. Lockheed Air Terminal, Inc.,
At issue was a city’s imposition, under its police power, of an 11:00 p. m. to 7:00 a. m. curfew on the operation of Hollywood-Burbank Airport, owned and operated by Lockheed. Lockheed sought to enjoin the city’s ordinance, asserting that federal regulation and administrative action had preempted such legislation.
The Supreme Court affirmed this court’s and the district court’s finding of preemption. After extensively surveying the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 and the Noise Control Act of 1972, the Court found that Congress unequivocally intended that the federal government have “full control over aircraft noise, pre-empting state and local control,”
id.
at 633,
The district court held correctly that
City of Burbank
controls here. Here, as in
City of Burbank,
a governmental entity was attempting to impose a mandatory curfew on an unwilling airport proprietor. Its authority for the curfew derived from the police power, again as in
City of Burbank.
12
Condition four would affect many flights,
13
whereas the
City of Burbank
curfew affected only one flight per week.
Id.
at 626,
CalTrans disagrees. It asserts initially that City of Burbank is no longer good law because subsequent congressional and administrative actions evince a retreat from the pervasive federal regulation considered in City of Burbank. Second, it argues that, even if City of Burbank is good law, California fits within an exception desired by Congress and recognized by the Court.
II. Federal Regulation following City of Burbank
Justice Douglas concluded
City of Burbank
by stating that the Court was “not at liberty to diffuse the powers given by Congress to FAA and EPA by letting the States or municipalities in on the planning. If that change is to be made, Congress alone must do it.”
CalTrans asserts that the passage of the Quiet Communities Act of 1978, Pub.L.95-609, 92 Stat. 3079 (1978), 14 demonstrates Congress’ intent to reject total federal control of the source of aircraft noise and to involve local governments in the national effort to abate such noise. In essence, this Act provides for a nationwide quiet communities program administered by local government and funded by the federal treasury.
In particular, CalTrans relies on section two of the Quiet Communities Act, which amends the 1972 Noise Control Act relied upon in City of Burbank. This section gives the Environmental Protection Agency discretion to disburse funds to local governments for the purpose of:
[Developing abatement plans for areas around major transportation facilities (in- *1313 eluding airports, highways, and railyards) and other major stationary sources of noise, and where appropriate, for the facility or source itself; .... (emphasis added)
42 U.S.C. § 4913(c)(1)(C) (Supp. III 1979).
CalTrans cites the italicized portion of the statute and argues that Congress has explicitly authorized local governments to regulate the “source” of aviation noise unless such regulation would be in direct conflict with existing federal regulation. We disagree. '
The success of CalTrans’ argument rests on a strained interpretation of the statute. First, it interprets “sources” in the last phrasе to include transitory sources such as airplanes. This is contrary to the statutory scheme, which distinguishes transportation facilities, such as railyards and airports, from stationary sources, such as factories.
Second, CalTrans construes “abatement plans” to include the control of the sources of aircraft noise. This construction was rejected in City of Burbank and, as we discuss below, is inconsistent with other parts of the same statute.
Finally, CalTrans’ argument that “where appropriate” means “where possible” or “where not in direct conflict with a federal regulation” begs the pivotal question of this appeal, namely, what scope of state regulátion is left unpreempted by federal law. If Congress desired the result CalTrans advocates, it could have drafted thе statute to avoid these strained constructions.
Instead, in subsection (c)(1), Congress stated that “no actions, plans or programs hereunder shall be inconsistent with existing Federal authority under [the Noise Control Act of 1972] to regulate sources of noise in interstate commerce.” This prohibition was written against the background of City of Burbank’s holding that federal authority preempted local control of the sources of aviation noise. We hold that Congress intended to continue such preemption. 15
CalTrans’ attempt to interpret the Quiet Communities Act as a blank check for local control of aviation noise stems, in part, from interpreting City of Burbank so broadly as to forbid any state control over aviation noise. This reading confuses controlling the source of noise with mitigаting its effects.
An object causing noise can be controlled directly, either by restricting its use or by prescribing noise emission standards. See, e. g., 14 C.F.R., Part 36 (1980). Quite independently of source control the effects of noise may be mitigated. Examples of such steps are compensating those adversely affected, 16 using the zoning power to assure *1314 harmonious development, 17 baffling existing noise, 18 or resettling those affected by the noise. 19
As we read
City of Burbank,
Congress has preempted only local regulation of the source of aircraft noise. Local governments may adopt abatement plans that do not impinge on aircraft operations.
20
See Air Transp. Ass’n of America v. Crotti,
The
City of Burbank
Court spoke only of noise “control” preemption,
This interpretation of
City of Burbank
is consistent with its underlying rationale. The Court acknowledged that “[cjontrol of noise is of course deep-seated in the police power of the states,”
As the Court in
City of Burbank
noted, Congress foresaw that local regulation of airspace use and the sources of aviation noise would “severely limit the flexibility of FAA in controlling air traffic flow,”
In
Air Transp. Ass’n of America v. Crotti,
Brief discussion of three points in the district court decision illustrates its consistency with the result we reach. 24 It used the distinction between direct and indirect con *1316 trol of aircraft noise to invalidate California’s attempt at direct noise regulation. Id. at 64-65. Other regulations permitted proprietors to choose a variety of methods to reduce noise. Although a curfew was one option, it was not specifically mandated as it has been here. 25 The court stated that efforts to impose curfews via the state’s police power might be suspect but, since the program did not unambiguously require this, it refrained from ruling on the matter. Id. at 65.
Finally, the court observed in a footnote that the power of states to regulate political subdivisions was well established. Id. at 64 n.2. CalTrans places inordinate interpretive weight on this dictum.
The observation that a state has a power in no way implies any doubt about equally well-settled limits to that power, such as federal preemption. The
Crotti
decision nowhere intimidated that the power to regulate subdivisions was unlimited by the Constitution.
Cf. National Aviation v. City of Hayward,
Our analysis of the pertinent state and federal regulations leads us to conclude that the curfew imposed by condition four impinges on airspace management by directing when planes may fly in the San Diego area,
City of Burbank,
It is asserted, however, that even if City of Burbank is still a correct statement of federal policies, CalTrans fits within a recognized exception to its holding. We next consider that argument.
III. City of Burbank's Proprietor Exemption
The
City of Burbank
Court recognized that Congress singled out airport proprietors and gave them special, although undefined, leeway in controlling the sources of aircraft noise directly.
City of Burbank,
CalTrans asserts it is a proprietor of Lindbergh Fiеld and that the proprietor exception is broad enough to encompass CalTrans’ regulations. We need not address the scope of the exception as CalTrans is not a proprietor within the meaning of City of Burbank.
The origin of the proprietor exemption appears in a letter by the Secretary of Transportation addressed to the Senate Commerce Committee regarding the 1968 amendments to the Federal Aviation Act. The letter, concurred in by the Committee, stated in part that the “proposed legislation . . . will not prevent airport proprietors from excluding any aircraft on the basis of noise considerations.” S.Rep.No.1353, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. 7 (1968), reprinted in [1968] U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 2688, 2693.
The rationale for this exception is clear. Since airport proprietors bear mоnetary liability for excessive aircraft noise under
Griggs
v.
Allegheny County,
It has not been demonstrated that, under the current allocation of powers, CalTrans would be liable for excessive aircraft noise from Lindbergh Field under
Griggs.
There, the question was whether the county, as owner and operator of an airport, was liable for uncompensated takings of air easements necessary for the airport’s operation. The other candidate for liability was the United States, due to its control of all navigable airspace. The Court found that the county was liable for the easements.
Among the bases given in
Griggs
for constitutional liability, or proprietorship for
City of Burbank
purposes, were the county’s ability to obtаin the necessary approach easements,
28
and its status as promoter, lessor, and operator of the airport.
29
Griggs,
These criteria (ownership, operation, promotion, and the ability to acquire necessary approach easements) comprise a federal definition of proprietors for preemption purposes. To the extent that state law provides these qualities, we inquire into the Port District’s status under state law.
The California Legislature created the Port District in 1962. San Diego Unified Port District Act, 1962 Cal.Stats., Ch. 67, 1st Ex. Sess., codified in Cal.Harb. & Nav. Code, App. I (West 1978 & Supp. 1981). The Act granted the Port District power to: operate and promote an air terminal, id. § 4, govern itself, id. § 21, sue and be sued, id. § 23, hold real property and make contracts, id. §§ 25, 31, condemn private property for public uses, id. § 21, as well as tax property for Port District purposes, id. §§ 41, 45, 49.5.
California has also granted the Port District power to acquire air easements to alleviate the effect of aircraft noise on local residents. 30 Further, should the Port District desire to expand or begin new construction, the state provides for a limited relocation and compensation program for affected area residents. 31
Under state law then, the Port District is the owner, operator, and promoter of San Diego Airport. It has the power to acquire *1318 air easements for the airport’s use and may be sued in its own right. In short, it bears every earmark of proprietorship as recognized in City of Burbank.
The state concedes this, but denies that the above analysis establishes the Port District as the sole proprietor of the airport facility. 32 California contends that, by virtue of the state’s inherent power over its political subdivisions, CalTrans is also a proprietor.
California’s extensive grant of powers to thе Port District fatally undercuts this argument. The state has seen fit to grant the Port District lands,
33
the ability to sue and
*1319
be sued, and the power to operate and plan the airport. The district court found that, due to this delegation of authority, the state had no primary liability.
City of Burbanks proprietor exception looks to who will pay for the taking of air easements. The state, through the Port District Act, has unequivocally stated that the Port District and the residents of its constituent cities will foot the bill. 35 Since CalTrans bears no liability for excessive aircraft noise at Lindbergh Field, it is not now a proprietor under federal law, and cannot avail itself of City of Burbanks footnote 14. 36
Moreover, state law precludes the argument that CalTrans and the district are dual proprietors. Section 21632 of the California Public Utilities Code provides:
[CalTrans] shall not acquire any airport . . . owned or controlled by a political subdivision . . . without the consent of the political subdivision.
This constitutes a procedural barrier that the state has erected to its acquisition of Lindbergh Field and, derivatively, to the assumption of proprietorship status.
CalTrans makes the final argument that, since the state could install CalTrans as operator and proprietor of Lindbergh Field by statute, the state can exercise the lesser power of assuming the 'proprietor’s function of direct flight regulation. The argument fаils because it confuses the existence of power with its exercise. The state cannot confer proprietor status on CalTrans simply by a course of dialectics when its own political system forbids that result.
The judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. These regulations provide both substantive provisions setting the level of permissible noise, 21 Cal.Admin.Code §§ 5001-5014 (1977), as well as a procedural mechanism for the enforcement of those levels, id. §§ 5020-5080.5.
The regulations seek to measure ambient aviation noise under the Community Noise Equivalent Level Standard [CNEL], Id. § 5006(f) (1977). CNEL represents a scientific effort to quantify an average person’s daily dosage of noise, but by no means is the only available standard. See 41 Fed.Reg. 51,522, 51,524 (1976).
. The district court found that most major California airports must routinely apply for a variance.
. An earlier variance was granted after hearings in 1975-76. Clerk’s Record at 1142-51.
. The court below initially denied the injunction without prejudice until the Federal Aviation Administration had reviewed the proposed curfew, pursuant to the state administrative law judge’s order.
. The Air Transportation Association of America [ATAA] intervened as of right. Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(a)(2). Its complaint alleges that, in addition to being preempted, the proposed curfew violates the commerce clause. Since this case may be disposed of by preemption, we do not reach the commerce clause issues.
. The United States has adopted a somewhat peculiar position. It urges neither affirmance nor reversal but states that, in its opinion, this case turns on questions of state law, and it would be inappropriate for it to take a position. The United States does urge, however, that we definitively name the proprietor of Lindbergh Field, at least for purposes of the federal government’s certification program. See note 32 infra.
. In the court below, CalTrans also claimed immunity under the Eleventh Amendment and asserted that the Port District lacked standing. It has abandoned these claims. While a state may waive immunity under the Eleventh Amendment,
Mills Music, Inc. v. Arizona,
While there are broad dicta that a political subdivision may never sue its maker on constitutional grounds,
see id.,
We need not resolve this question, however, because the court below granted the ATAA the
*1310
status of an intervenor as of right. If the ATAA has standing, then we have jurisdiction to hear the case.
City of South Lake Tahoe,
. By contrast, many types of aviation regulation are expressly and exclusively federal. For example, states may not regulate the “rates, routes or services of any air carrier” registered under federal law, 49 U.S.C. § 1305 (Supp. Ill 1979), and the federal government has declared it is “to possess and exercise complete and exclusively national sovereignty in the airspace of the United States.” 49 U.S.C. § 1508(a) (1976).
. See generally Wiggins, Federalism Balancing and the Burger Court: California’s Nuclear Law as a Preemption Case Study, 13 U.C. Davis L.Rev. 1 (1980); Note, A Framework for Preemption Analysis, 88 Yale L.J. 363 (1978); Note, The Preemption Doctrine: Shiñing Perspectives on Federalism and the Burger Court, 75 Colum.L.Rev. 623 (1975).
. In surveying the applicable legislative history, the Court quoted,
. The Court also stated that “the pervasive nature of the scheme of federal regulation of aircraft noise leads us to conclude that there is preemption.”
City of Burbank,
In any event, it is clear that
City of Burbank
did not rest solely on pervasive regulation. Indeed, the national character of the subject matter was said to be “the critical issue.”
City of Burbank,
. The noise regulations seek to regulate unwanted noise for the public good, 21 Cal.Admin.Code §§ 5005, 5010 (1977), and apply not just to municipal airports, but to “all existing and future potential airports in California which are [open to the public.]”
Id.
§ 5004. This purpose, and the regulations’ almost universal application, are both hallmarks of the police power.
See, e. g., New Orleans Gas Co. v. Louisiana Light Co.,
Moreover, the CNEL regulations have been held to be promulgated pursuant to California’s “police power control.”
Air Transp. Ass'n of America v. Crotti,
. At least five arrivals and four departures daily would be affected directly by the curfew, without accounting for the effect on connecting flights. Clerk’s Record at 616, 618, 821.
. Codified in 42 U.S.C. §§ 4905, 4910, 4913, 4918, 6901, 6903, 6907, 6913, 6922, 6923, 6925-28, 6947, 6961, 6962, 6964, 6972, 6973, 6977, 6981-6984; 49 U.S.C. § 1431 (Supp. III 1979).
. We note that other congressional acts subsequent to City of Burbank indicate a continuing intent to preclude local regulation. For example, the Aviation Safety and Noise Abatement Act of 1979, Pub.L,No.96-193, 94 Stat. 50 (1980) (to be codified in scattered sections of 49 U.S.C.) provides for the establishment of a national aviation noise measurement system, arguably superseding local systems such as CNEL. Id. § 102 (to be codified in 49 U.S.C. § 2102).
Once this system is in place, the Act provides for procedures under which airport proprietors may secure federal immunity from excessive aircraft noise liability. Id. § 107 (to be codified in § 49 U.S.C. § 2107). Although we believe that the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, Pub. L.95-504, 92 Stat. 1708 (1978) (codified in scattered sections of 49 U.S.C.) is not directly applicable because of its economic objectives, we note that Congress expressly preempted any state regulation affecting “rates, routes or services of any air carrier . . . . ” Id. § 4(a), 49 U.S.C. § 1305(a) (Supp. III 1979) (emphasis added). These acts are some indication that Congress has not changed its collective mind regarding the wisdom of forbidding local regulation of the sources of aircraft noise. Indeed, the Aviation Safety and Noise Abatement Act of 1979 may indicate exactly the opposite.
.
See, e. g., Greater Westchester Homeowners Ass'n v. City of Los Angeles,
. See, e.
g., Wright v. County of Winnebago,
.
See, e. g., Air Transp. Ass’n of America v. Crotti,
. See, e. g., Noise Reg. Rep. (BNA), No. 158, at A-3 (1980); id., No. 162, at A-8 to A-10 (1980).
. See, e. g., S.Rep.No.1353, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. 7 (1968), reprinted in [1968] U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 2698, 2694 (“Of course, the authority оf units of local government to control the effects of aircraft noise through the exercise of land use planning and zoning powers is not diminished by the bill.”) Against this background, the Quiet Communities Act continues the joint participation alluded to. But see Aviation Safety and Noise Abatement Act of 1979, Pub.L.96-193, § 107, 94 Stat. 53 (1980) (to-be codified in 49 U.S.C. § 2107) (indicating increased federal regulation).
. Despite these -considerations, CalTrans argues that the agencies entrusted by Congress to regulate aircraft noise have abdicated their duties, thus removing City of Burbank's predicate of pervasive federal regulation. In the void purportedly so created, CalTrans asserts state regulation may occur. We find this argument without merit from both factual and theoretical points of view.
In 1976, for example, the United States Department of Transportation issued its report on federal aviation noise abatement policy. It stated: “The federal government has preempted the areas of airspace use and management, air traffic control, safety and the regulation of aircraft noise at its source," U. S. Dep’t of Transp., Federal Aviation Admin., Aviation Noise Abatement Policy 34 (1976) (emphasis added) [(hereinafter “Noise Abatement Policy”)].
The same report concluded that ”[s]tate and local governments may protect their citizens through land use controls and other police power measures not affecting aircraft operations.” Id. (emphasis added). See also id. at 31-32.
CalTrans argues, however, that this report adopts the dictum from
Air Transp. Ass’n of America v. Crotti,
The correct interpretation of this language from Crotti is discussed below, see pp. 1314-1316 infra. The main point, however, is that this asserted state authority to coerce is nowhere mentioned in those sections of the report which outline the differing functions *1315 of proprietors and local governments. See Noise Abatement Policy, supra, at 34.
Other federal agencies have agreed with the report’s conclusion that direct control of the source of aircraft noise is federally preempted. See Environmental Protection Agency, Model Noise Control Ordinance § 6.2.8(b) (1979); Environmental Protection Agency, Report on Aircraft-Airport Noise to the United States Senate Committee on Public Works, 93d Cong., 1st Sess. 56-59, 96-97 & 105 (1973); Civil Aeronautics Bd., Implementation of Preemption Provisions of the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978), 44 Fed.Reg. 9948, 9951 (1979).
CalTrans is not helped even if we accept the factual validity of its initial assertion. It falls considerably short of undercutting the regulatory predicate of City of Burbank so as to override the presumption of continued validity that we must accord to the definitive interpretation of federal statutes by the Supreme Court.
. The proposition that the federal government has preempted the area of flight control regulation to eliminate or reduce noise has been accepted without contrary authority by numerous courts which have addressed the subject.
See City of Blue Ash v. McLucas,
. The court invalidated single event noise level standards [SENEL], which imposed penalties on the owner of any aircraft that exceeded a preset noise level.
See Air Transp. Ass’n of America v. Crotti,
. We give weight to the reasoning of the Crot-ti decision to the extent it is persuasive, but it does not bind us. In any event, we find Crotti fully consistent with our analysis.
When a district court is convened as a statutory three-judge panel, it still is sitting as a district court for purposes of stare decisis.
Lewis v. Rockefeller,
An unappealed decision of a statutory three-judge court has the same precedential weight for other courts of the district or circuit as any district court decision.
Farley v. Farley,
Because of the parties’ extensive discussion of Crotti, we add these remarks and those in *1316 text to explain why the decision is not binding on this appeal and why our holding is fully consistent with Crotti.
. In Crotti, the state argued in its brief, made part of the record in this case, that the regulations were not mandatory upon proprietors, but only suggestive. As the state put it, “[S]hould a proprietor choose to act using its unpreempt-ed powers ... that is the business of the proprietor. The state has nowhere directed that proprietary power be used.”
.
British Airways Bd. v. Port Authority of New York,
. As stated in the Noise Abatement Policy, supra note 21, at 50:
Thе airport proprietor is closest to the noise problem, with the best understanding of both local conditions, needs and desires, and the requirements of the air carriers and others that use his airport. The proprietor must weigh the costs the airport and the community must pay for failure to act, and consider those costs against any economic penalties that may result from a decision to limit the use of the airport through curfews or other restrictions for noise abatement purposes.
.
See British Airways Bd. v. Port Authority of New York,
.
See also Lenoir v. Porters Creek Watershed Dist.,
. Cal.Pub.Util.Code § 21652 (West Supp. 1981); Cal.Code Civ.Proc. § 1240.110 (West Supp. 1981); Senate Legislative Committee Comment to Public Utilities Code section 21652, reprinted in 58 West’s Annotated California Codes, Public Utilities 120 (West Supp. 1981).
. Cal.Gov’t Code §§ 7260-7276 (West 1980 & Supp. 1981). Cf. Cal.Pub.Util.Code §§ 21690.-20-.29 (West Supp. 1980) (Los Angeles Airport Relocation Program).
. The identity of the proprietor or proprietors of Lindbergh Field has significance beyond City of Burbank’s footnote 14. The federal government, appearing amicus curiae, desires to know who the proprietor is for its certification process under 49 U.S.C. § 1432 (1976). Section 1432 certificates are issued to airport operators who meet minimum safety standards, and enable the FAA to enforce its safety regulations. Currently, the Port District is the only entity listed as a proprietor under this certificate procedure. Clerk’s Record at 685.
. CalTrans asserts that the tidelands on which Lindbergh Field sits are subject to a public trust of which California is both the settlor and the representative of the beneficiаries. See
City of Coronado v. San Diego Unified Port Dist.,
From this premise, CalTrans makes two arguments: first, that its capacity under this trust allows it to direct the activities conducted on the land subject to the trust; and second, that the State Aeronautics Act, which authorizes the regulations at issue here, must be read as a pro tanto amendment of the Port District’s original tidelands grant.
An inquiry into the scope of California’s rights under the tidelands trust theory,
see generally, Marks v. Whitney,
CalTrans’
pro tanto
amendment theory suffers a similar fate. In addition to not resolving the question of
Griggs
liability, the authorities cited by CalTrans and the state are of no help. The state asserts that
People ex rel. San Francisco Bay Conservation & Dev. Comm’n v. Town of Emeryville,
In
Emeryville,
for example, the legislature had created a special commission especially for the administration of tidelands in the San Francisco Bay area. In upholding an injunction in favor of the special commission and against Emeryville, the titleholder of the lands, the court held that the legislature retained the power to amend tidеland grants when to do so would serve the “general statewide interest.”
Here, by contrast, the tidelands are not mentioned in the State Aeronautics Act, nor does it appear in that act that the legislature intended to use its power over California’s tidelands to achieve the objectives of the legislation.
Mailon
involved similar facts. There, the City of Long Beach sued to recover profits from natural resources located in the tidelands. The state legislature had by state law allocated them to the state, and the California Supreme Court held that the legislature had the power to make that amendment to the initial grant оf the tidelands.
Neither case contains language supporting the proposition that each of the many acts of the California legislature automatically affects the terms of every tidelands grant made since 1850. The result would be utter chaos, and we do not attribute that to California’s legislature.
The cases cited by CalTrans and amici are better read to stand for the proposition that legislation may specifically alter a municipality’s tidelands grant. Here, the scope of the trust would not allow CalTrans to direct the Port District’s activities because we have not been shown that the state legislature specifically exercised its power over the Port District’s tidelands when enacting the State Aeronautics Act.
Further, the legislature addressed itself to the particular lands at issue here when it created *1319 the Port District in 1962. It said that the Port District “shall hold such lands in trust for the uses and purposes and upon the conditions which are declared in this act.” Cal.Harb. & Nav.Code, App. I, § 14 (West 1978).
The uses, purposes and conditions included the “acquisition, construction, maintenance, operation, development and regulation of ... air terminal facilities” and the promotion of “commerce, navigation, fisheries and recreation ... . ” Id. § 4. See also id. § 87. The terms of this grant have not been explicitly amended since the Port District’s creation, and we decline to do so now.
. The cities of Chula Vista, Coronado, Imperial Beach and National City select one commissioner each to sit on the Port District’s governing board. San Diego, due to its relative size, selects three commissioners for a total of seven. Cal.Harb. & Nav.Code, App. I, § 16 (West 1978).
. It may by true that California could assume liability for excessive noise at Lindbergh Field, but we deal in actualities and not possibilities. California has four methods for its political subdivisions to pay judgments, see Cal.Gov’t Code §§ 970-991.2 (West 1980 & Supp. 1981). Absent these, a subdivision may declare bankruptcy under Chapter Nine of the Federal Bankruptcy Act to eradicate its debt. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 901-946 (Supp. III 1979).
Nowhere is it mandated that the state will be ultimately liable for the Port District’s judgments. The Port District, without further and uncertain state action, bears alone the brunt of aircraft noise liability. As such, it is the proprietor for purposes of City of Burbank’s footnote 14.
. In its reply brief CalTrans argued, for the first time, that this interpretation of federal law would render it unconstitutional under
National League of Cities v. Usery,
Under these circumstances we may not consider the question.
Levy v. Urbach,
