SDCFans - The Unofficial Fan Site For Silver Dollar City

General Category => Random Talk => Topic started by: chittlins on March 14, 2013, 06:27:21 PM

Title: SDC and NWA
Post by: chittlins on March 14, 2013, 06:27:21 PM
I'm sure that SDC loves that NWA keeps growing at around 2% every year. Some stats were released this week and actually caught some folks off guard  in just how much it's growing.

Some numbers:

The urbanized area of NWA is now just under 300,000 (that's not MSA area which is larger). NWA will now become a Transportation Management Area with more control over how federal funds for transportation are used in the area.

Forbes Magazine ranked the Fayetteville–Springdale–Rogers area as the second-best area in the United States for recovery from the current United States recession.

Now, that's for 2012. Home sales in 2013 is really taking off again, some are saying you may see total numbers like those before the 08 recession. I've been urged to apply to serve on our planning commission here in Fayetteville but I just don't have the time. But, my friend is the Chair right now and he's seeing subdivision plats coming up again in agenda meetings.

Add the Ft. Smith area into the mix and  you now have 730,000 from one end of the I-540 corridor

I don't know the growth for the Springfield area but it's MSA was around 470,000 for 2010.

As you can see, SDC is enjoying an increasing next door base to pull from in addition to the tourism aspect. This is becoming a home park as much as a tourist destination. You likely see this effect in the increases in attendance during Spring Break and why it opened March 15.

This is great news for our SDC's future.

Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: Junior on March 14, 2013, 08:09:58 PM
If  you want to see what every town square should look like...with shopfronts all rented with unique shopping, restaurants, a museum, a courthouse, a nice little park, just come on down to NW Arkansas and visit Bentonville. Rogers and Fayetteville have nice downtowns, too, but Bentonville has put a huge amount of money into infrastructure because of Crystal Bridges Museum. Also, the new 21C Hotel opened just off the Bentonville square, and it has it's own art gallery as well. I reccomend Flying Fish for Gulf Coast Style seafood, or Table Mesa for unique American and Southwest Style food, and it has a nice bar.  :)   Oh yeah, come on over to my hometown of Pea Ridge and visit Pea Ridge National Military Park. It's a "must see" stop as well!
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: chittlins on March 14, 2013, 09:33:34 PM
Quote from: Junior on March 14, 2013, 08:09:58 PM
If  you want to see what every town square should look like...with shopfronts all rented with unique shopping, restaurants, a museum, a courthouse, a nice little park, just come on down to NW Arkansas and visit Bentonville. Rogers and Fayetteville have nice downtowns, too, but Bentonville has put a huge amount of money into infrastructure because of Crystal Bridges Museum. Also, the new 21C Hotel opened just off the Bentonville square, and it has it's own art gallery as well. I reccomend Flying Fish for Gulf Coast Style seafood, or Table Mesa for unique American and Southwest Style food, and it has a nice bar.  :)   Oh yeah, come on over to my hometown of Pea Ridge and visit Pea Ridge National Military Park. It's a "must see" stop as well!

Fayetteville's is every bit as nice as Bentonville's, but I digress. The parks dept. in Bentonville is headed up by a childhood friend from Marked Tree, from where I grew up between a rice patty and a cotton patch. :D

Table Mesa is also in Fayetteville on Dickson now. As time goes by, most all successful things are eventually are going to have a north and south location.

Junior, I'm waiting to see what the Walmart folks pull out their tails for the Neighborhood Market that's going to go where the Harps was once  in downtown Bentonville.  It's supposed to be three to four stories with office space above the store and a parking deck in the rear. I know their folks have done a couple of new urbanism stores in the DC area and Boston. But they were the 80,000 square ft. store kind not 35,000 sq. ft. kind. My brother in law used to work in their store planning office and he always has neat stories to tell about Sam and their formula stores and towns finally starting min design standards in the late 80's and early 90's.

Fayetteville has over 200 million dollars in new student housing developments with a couple of large ones still to come. The Modus outfit are doing then right and the others are ok and hopefully it'll get the kids out of residential areas. The attendance goal for the U of A now is 28,000. To put that into perspective, in the mid 90's when the boom actually started, it was just shy of 15,000.
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: Gilligan on March 14, 2013, 09:40:38 PM
Quote from: Junior on March 14, 2013, 08:09:58 PM
If  you want to see what every town square should look like...with shopfronts all rented with unique shopping, restaurants, a museum, a courthouse, a nice little park, just come on down to NW Arkansas and visit Bentonville. Rogers and Fayetteville have nice downtowns, too, but Bentonville has put a huge amount of money into infrastructure because of Crystal Bridges Museum. Also, the new 21C Hotel opened just off the Bentonville square, and it has it's own art gallery as well. I reccomend Flying Fish for Gulf Coast Style seafood, or Table Mesa for unique American and Southwest Style food, and it has a nice bar.  :)   Oh yeah, come on over to my hometown of Pea Ridge and visit Pea Ridge National Military Park. It's a "must see" stop as well!

Junior, you paint a great picture.  We will be there in July to visit the museum and check out the area.  We've been wanting to do this for a couple of years, but something always gets in the way. 
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: chittlins on March 14, 2013, 09:47:21 PM
Quote from: Gilligan on March 14, 2013, 09:40:38 PM
Quote from: Junior on March 14, 2013, 08:09:58 PM
If  you want to see what every town square should look like...with shopfronts all rented with unique shopping, restaurants, a museum, a courthouse, a nice little park, just come on down to NW Arkansas and visit Bentonville. Rogers and Fayetteville have nice downtowns, too, but Bentonville has put a huge amount of money into infrastructure because of Crystal Bridges Museum. Also, the new 21C Hotel opened just off the Bentonville square, and it has it's own art gallery as well. I reccomend Flying Fish for Gulf Coast Style seafood, or Table Mesa for unique American and Southwest Style food, and it has a nice bar.  :)   Oh yeah, come on over to my hometown of Pea Ridge and visit Pea Ridge National Military Park. It's a "must see" stop as well!

Junior, you paint a great picture.  We will be there in July to visit the museum and check out the area.  We've been wanting to do this for a couple of years, but something always gets in the way. 

You are going to miss the Rockwell exhibit. :'(
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: Gilligan on March 14, 2013, 11:33:24 PM
Quote from: chittlins on March 14, 2013, 09:47:21 PM
Quote from: Gilligan on March 14, 2013, 09:40:38 PM
Quote from: Junior on March 14, 2013, 08:09:58 PM
If  you want to see what every town square should look like...with shopfronts all rented with unique shopping, restaurants, a museum, a courthouse, a nice little park, just come on down to NW Arkansas and visit Bentonville. Rogers and Fayetteville have nice downtowns, too, but Bentonville has put a huge amount of money into infrastructure because of Crystal Bridges Museum. Also, the new 21C Hotel opened just off the Bentonville square, and it has it's own art gallery as well. I reccomend Flying Fish for Gulf Coast Style seafood, or Table Mesa for unique American and Southwest Style food, and it has a nice bar.  :)   Oh yeah, come on over to my hometown of Pea Ridge and visit Pea Ridge National Military Park. It's a "must see" stop as well!

Junior, you paint a great picture.  We will be there in July to visit the museum and check out the area.  We've been wanting to do this for a couple of years, but something always gets in the way. 

You are going to miss the Rockwell exhibit. :'(

Yup, and that's a bummer!  I just looked it up.  That would be worth seeing!  :(
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: Junior on March 15, 2013, 06:44:41 AM
I forgot to mention the wonderful trails system in the area. You can go from Bentonville southward on a series of walking/bike trails all the way to Fayetteville. One of the best systems in the nation! And yes, the Fayetteville downtown is very nice...if you like nightlife and don't mind elbowing your way around college kids, Dickson Street has a lively bar/club scene with great music. Be sure to see Pinnacle Mall at Rogers, Arvest Stadium at Springdale (home of the Arkansas Naturals) and War Eagle Mill and Beaver Lake are great, too. Remember, from this area it is only 45 minutes to Eureka Springs, and about an hour and a half to two hours to Branson. So much to see and do in one small geographic area. Plan an extra long vacation, and ya'll come on down to see us, hear? ;)
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: DollarCityBoy on March 15, 2013, 11:10:54 AM
I actually work for Arkansas Parks & Tourism.

If you would like me to send you a Vacation Kit or a more specific brochure on an attaction in our great state, just PM me your address and what you would like to receive.
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: chittlins on February 20, 2014, 10:49:20 AM
Some new numbers, NWA will officially surpass 500,000 by late summer. The stats are showing that Benton and Washington Counties are growing at a clip of 23 people a day.     
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: Junior on February 20, 2014, 04:28:50 PM
I have been to the "model" Wal-Mart Supercenter at Pleasant Grove Road in Rogers...I swear early one morning about 7:15, I saw Wal-Mart management and vendors breeding like cockroaches under the clothing racks...that would have to account for at least 2,057 new arrivals to the area since that sighting in 2012! LOL!  ;)  Come on up and get a job in this area...most regular jobs will get ya about $18-$24,000 per year, just enough to barely hang on...but you will make enough to make weekly contributions to the Wal-Mart billions at any of a number of local "model" stores....supercenters, expresses, neighborhood markets, Sam's Club, and even a little tiny Wal-Mart to service the needs of the students at UA/Fayetteville!
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: chittlins on February 20, 2014, 05:32:02 PM
Quote from: Junior on February 20, 2014, 04:28:50 PM
I have been to the "model" Wal-Mart Supercenter at Pleasant Grove Road in Rogers...I swear early one morning about 7:15, I saw Wal-Mart management and vendors breeding like cockroaches under the clothing racks...that would have to account for at least 2,057 new arrivals to the area since that sighting in 2012! LOL!  ;)  Come on up and get a job in this area...most regular jobs will get ya about $18-$24,000 per year, just enough to barely hang on...but you will make enough to make weekly contributions to the Wal-Mart billions at any of a number of local "model" stores....supercenters, expresses, neighborhood markets, Sam's Club, and even a little tiny Wal-Mart to service the needs of the students at UA/Fayetteville!

Junior, that's a bit misleading. Read this, also note that Jonesboro is a draw area for SDC, but being from NEA I can tell you lot's of Jonesboogie's growth is simply folks from surrounding delta towns moving there instead of driving 20 to 40 minutes to and from work.

NW Arkansas Fourth In Nation In Job Growth; Jonesboro Eleventh



By Steve Brawner

January 28th, 2014

The Northwest Arkansas metropolitan statistical area ranked fourth in nonfarm job growth in the nation in 2013, according to preliminary information from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics released Tuesday. Or 11th, depending on how you look at it.

The Northwest Arkansas region averaged 9,580 more jobs in a typical month in 2013 over the same month in 2012, a "moving average" growth rate of 4.56 percent. That's according to information aggregated by Arizona State University's W.P. Carey School of Business and shared Tuesday by the Northwest Arkansas Council. The Bureau ranked 383 metropolitan areas reporting out of 428 total.

The region includes Washington, Benton, and Madison counties in Arkansas and McDonald County in Missouri.

However, Northwest Arkansas ranked 11th with its year-end ranking comparing the end of December 2013 with the end of December 2012. The region grew by 8,900 jobs over that time period.

Jonesboro's moving average ranked 11th in the country with a 3.69 percent growth rate after adding an average of about 1,880 jobs. Jonesboro ranked 14th comparing December 2013 to December 2012.

Other Arkansas areas ranked as follows in the moving average category: Fort Smith, 110th with a 1.69 percent job growth rate; Little Rock-North Little Rock, 158th with a 1.28 percent growth rate; Hot Springs, 326th after shrinking .22 percent; Pine Bluff, 370th after shrinking 1.74 percent.

Comparing December 31sts, Fort Smith ranked much better at 34th, while Little Rock ranked 191st, Hot Springs ranked 342nd, and Pine Bluff ranked 343rd.

Nationally, Midland, Tex., ranked first in moving averages thanks to a 6.15 percent job growth rate, followed by Odessa, Tex., which grew 5.71 percent. Winchester, Va., was third with a 4.62 percent increase.

Over the first 11 months of 2013, the Northwest Arkansas area added 1,299 jobs in health care and social assistance with an average salary of $48,430; 1,181 jobs in management of companies and enterprises with an average salary of $125,393; and 681 jobs in retail trade with an average salary of $27,763.

Mike Harvey, Northwest Arkansas Council chief operating officer, said the job growth has been "broad-based." The Northwest Arkansas Council is a coordinating economic and community development nonprofit agency.

Harvey said the one area that could be improved is manufacturing, where the area gained 86 jobs after losing 8,570 manufacturing jobs over approximately the last 12 years. "To say we pulled off a year where we held our own is pretty exciting to me at this point," he said.

Looking back over those 12 years, the area gained 58,938 jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Those include 10,093 jobs in health care and social assistance, and 9,252 business management jobs.

According to the Council, the region has ranked in the top 20 in percentage growth rate seven times since 1991.
- See more at: http://talkbusiness.net/2014/01/nw-arkansas-fourth-nation-job-growth-jonesboro-eleventh/#sthash.ix69IC3x.dpuf
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: chittlins on February 20, 2014, 05:44:07 PM
Ft. Smith got this news yesterday, but lost out on a Remington Arms facility to Alabama:


$58 Million Medical School Planned For Chaffee Crossing



By Michael Tilley

February 18th, 2014


MTILLEY@THECITYWIRE.COM

58 0

 

Fort Smith could soon be home to Arkansas' first osteopathic medical school and one of just 31 in the U.S., thanks to a more than $58 million investment from the Fort Smith Regional Healthcare Foundation (FSRHF) and a grant of 200 acres from the Fort Chaffee Redevelopment Authority (FCRA).

Officials with the FSRHF, the FCRA and area cities made the announcement during a Tuesday (Feb. 18) afternoon press conference at the River Valley Nature Center at Chaffee Crossing.

The possibility of such a medical school is estimated to have a $100 million annual economic impact on the region.

FSRHF Chairman Kyle Parker told The City Wire that a fully operational school would serve about 600 students, and employ around 65 (full-time equivalent jobs) with an average salary of $103,000. That impact does not include adjunct professors that will be needed for the school, he said.

The school is targeted to accept its first cohort of students in the fall of 2017.

PROJECT HISTORY
Revenue from the 2009 purchase of Fort Smith-based Sparks Health System could be used to help build and operate the medical school. When Naples, Fla.-based Health Management Associates (HMA) acquired Sparks in a deal valued at $138 million, part of the money was used to create the Fort Smith Regional Healthcare Foundation.

Foundation initiatives include supporting scholarships for individuals seeking advanced medical training, the Community Dental Clinic in Fort Smith, health education programs in area schools, and other medical training options.

The osteopathy school plan has had early supporters. The Community Health Centers of Arkansas, which provides medical care in Arkansas' rural areas, supports the idea, according to Tom Webb, executive director of the FSRHF. Endorsements also have come from the Arkansas Osteopathic Medical Association (AOMA), the Arkansas Society of the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians (ACOFP), and the Arkansas Osteopathic Foundation (AOF).

Osteopathic medicine, according to the American Osteopathic Association, the practice is "a complete system of medical care with a philosophy that combines the needs of the patient with the current practice of medicine, surgery and obstetrics; that emphasizes the interrelationship between structure and function; and that has an appreciation of the body's ability to heal itself."

RECENT MOVES
On Tuesday, the FSRHF Board of Trustees voted to move forward with the project and hire a CEO and chief academic officer for the school.

Tuesday afternoon, the FCRA approved providing the school 200 acres near Chad Colley Boulevard, with the land valued at $4 million.

Working with the Arkansas Osteopathic Medical Association (AOMA), the FSRHF has developed several partnerships with regional medical providers. According to the FSRHF statement issued Tuesday, Mercy Health System, Sparks Health System, Cooper Clinic, the Choctaw Nation Health Services Authority and Community Health Centers of Arkansas "have indicated their desire to play integral roles in the clinical rotations and residency education of the proposed college."

"The AOMA is extremely excited about the development of the proposed Arkansas College of Osteopathic Medicine to be located in Fort Smith," Dr. James Baker, president of the AOMA, said in the statement. "We will continue to develop, partner with, and support those providing state-wide resources to help advance the Fort Smith Regional Healthcare Foundation's mission of establishing the school."

THE PROJECT
In his remarks and media interview Tuesday afternoon, Parker said FSRHF Trustee Jim Walcott challenged the foundation to "move the needle" on the effort to "fill gaps in healthcare and provide care for the medically underserved regions in Arkansas and Oklahoma."

The result of Walcott's challenge could be a 200-acre campus built out in several phases. An initial layout drafted by Oklahoma City-based Crafton Tull shows the campus located immediately east of where a proposed third Fort Smith high school is located. The site is on both sides and just south of the Chad Colley Boulevard entrance into Chaffee Crossing. The plan calls for 87 acres on the west side of the boulevard and 113 acres on the east side.

The first phase of the medical school campus includes a 60,000-square foot building, several smaller buildings, a campus green, main entry, and a proposed pond. A second phase includes a "village green" area with more buildings.

Future development around the campus includes space for a medical office park and commercial and retail development.

FCRA Executive Director said the school is "highly compatible" with the Chaffee Crossing development goals.

"We are very excited to be a part of the plans to build this osteopathic medical university. Their plans dovetail nicely with our plans for this area. The wooded, open space, walkable-style campus is exactly what we want for Chaffee Crossing," Owen said in the statement.

THE NEED
There are 30 colleges of osteopathic medicine (COMs), offering instruction at 40 locations in 28 states. There is not an osteopathy school in Arkansas, although Arkansas State University in Jonesboro is on its way to creating one. Twenty-four of the COMs are private; six are public. Should the development of an osteopathic school in Fort Smith happen, it would be a private, non-profit institution and not dependent on continuous public funds from the state.

Approximately 60% of practicing osteopathic physicians (DO) practice in the primary care specialties of family medicine, general internal medicine, pediatrics, and obstetrics and gynecology, according to information provided by the FSRHF.

Arkansas ranks 48th in physician accessibility in the United States. The western side of the state, including the Fort Smith region, has been identified as the most underserved area in Arkansas, according to the FSRHF.

"FSRHF was presented the opportunity to increase availability of care within medically underserved areas of the state by addressing the severe shortage of physicians through the development of a college," noted the FSRHF statement.

- See more at: http://talkbusiness.net/2014/02/58-million-medical-school-planned-chaffee-crossing/#sthash.PZSYU33N.dpuf
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: qwed94 on February 23, 2014, 12:32:31 AM
well I admit, I just skimmed thru a long article like that.
However it does sound real nice that Arkansas might be getting such a place. I hope the very best to all of yuns.  As Ive mentioned before. While STL and "burbs" is basically shuttin down shop everywhere. Tis certainly nice to see a neighboring state pick up a bunch of business.

Chitlins, Keep us posted please.  Would be nice to see every Arkansas citizen workin.  (Well it would be nice to see every US citizen workin), but Arkansas is as good of place as any to start.
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: chittlins on February 23, 2014, 07:11:08 AM
I only yammer on about NWA here because outside of Springfield, it's the closest fixed market for SDC. It's success only bodes well for SDC. I don't think 25 years ago the management thought there would be over 500,000and growning in the corner of close by NWA.
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: okiebluegrass on February 24, 2014, 12:40:14 PM
My wife and I want to relocate to the SW MO or NWA area within the next few years. I am a telecommunications analyst and former COBOL programmer. What kind of job opportunities are there in these fields in that area?
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: qwed94 on February 28, 2014, 09:21:58 PM
Okie, I thought you had a gig in Nashville. At least I thought it was you. Did that flop?
Anyway best of luck to ya
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: okiebluegrass on March 03, 2014, 11:00:33 AM
He's out of Nashville but lives in Oklahoma. I'm still playing with him at the moment...

;D Momma always said if you can't say nothing nice, don't say nothing at all...  ;D
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: chittlins on May 23, 2014, 08:01:29 PM
Another Fayetteville startup gaining a little traction

http://www.fayettevilleflyer.com/2014/05/23/blkboxlabs-builds-no-coast-swimsuit-business-with-southern-swim/
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: chittlins on June 21, 2014, 02:16:59 PM
More positive news for SDC and its base market:


Researchers Put Northwest Arkansas 3rd in Future Economic Growth

Published: June 20, 2014


A new report published today predicts Northwest Arkansas will be the third fastest-growing economy among large metropolitan areas in the nation through 2020.

The forecast prepared by IHS Global Insight was released today at the U.S. Conference of Mayors meetings in Dallas. The report shows the economy is expected to grow by 4.2 percent annually through 2020. Only the Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos MSA in Texas (4.4 percent) and Raleigh-Cary in North Carolina (4.3 percent) are expected to grow at a faster rate.

"This report confirms some trends that we already know about the Arkansas economy," said Kathy Deck, a University of Arkansas economist. "That is, the majority of the state's economic output comes from our two largest metropolitan areas and, in particular, the fast rate of growth of Northwest Arkansas means that the state will increasingly rely on the region's success for the state's prosperity. The projected high rate of growth for the gross metropolitan product in Northwest Arkansas is a direct result of the enormous and varied number of infrastructure, education, and community investments that have been made over the past couple of decades."

The full report ( http://nwacouncil.org/uploads/report(2).pdf } shows the Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers MSA (Northwest Arkansas) in 2013 had the nation's seventh fastest-growing economy among large metropolitan areas. It grew 3.8 percent last year, the report shows.


FIGURE 4: REAL GROSS METRO PRODUCT GROWTH
AVERAGE ANNUAL PERCENT CHANGE, 2013-2020
100 LARGEST METRO AREAS
Highest (%)
Austin‐Round Rock‐San Marcos, TX 4.4
Raleigh‐Cary, NC 4.3
Fayetteville‐Springdale‐Rogers, AR‐MO 4.2
Riverside‐San Bernardino‐Ontario, CA 4.2
Durham‐Chapel Hill, NC 4.1
Orlando‐Kissimmee‐Sanford, FL 4.1
Bakersfield‐Delano, CA 4.1
Phoenix‐Mesa‐Glendale, AZ 4.0
Houston‐Sugar Land‐Baytown, TX 4.0
McAllen‐Edinburg‐Mission, TX 4.0
Title: Re: SDC and NWA
Post by: chittlins on October 24, 2014, 09:08:26 AM
XNA to smash previous pre recession enplanement numbers(notice uptick from tourism mentioned.
Should add NWA is now past 500,000 and adding 20 to 25 new residents a day:
The healthy pace of traffic growth at Northwest Arkansas Regional Airport and the Fort Smith Regional Airport did not slow in September, with XNA enplanements up almost 14% and Fort Smith up more than 16% during the month.

September enplanements numbers for the Bill & Hillary Clinton National Airport (Little Rock National Airport) were not available as of Oct. 20. However, the airport has seen enplanement declines during the year. Enplanements for the first eight months of 2014 were 702,284, down 4.99% compared to the same period of 2013. Enplanements in 2013 totaled 1.085 million, down 5.45% compared to 2012.

Labor Day travel may have had a small impact on XNA and Fort Smith numbers. The Airlines for America trade group estimated that 14 million people would travel during the holiday, up 2% compared to 2013 travel.

Enplanement gains also match tourism industry employment gains in Northwest Arkansas and the Fort Smith areas. Employment in the Northwest Arkansas tourism industry set a new record of 22,800 during August, up from 22,600 in July and up from 21,900 during August 2013. The previous record was 22,700 set in June.

Employment in the Fort Smith regional tourism industry set a new record of 9,900 during September, up from 9,800 in July and above the 9,600 in August 2013. The previous record of 9,800 was set in August 2008.

Labor numbers are up nationwide for the tourism industry. Within leisure and hospitality, employment in food services and drinking places was up by an estimated 20,000 in September and has gained 290,000 over the year.

"Travel continues to be a leading force in getting Americans back to work. After losing close to half a million jobs in the Great Recession, the travel industry has added 771,000 jobs and has outpaced job creation in the rest of the economy by 38 percent since the employment recovery began," said David Huether, senior vice president for research and economics at the U.S. Travel Association.

XNA TRAFFIC
Travelers flying out of XNA during September totaled 53,814, up 13.98% compared to the 47,212 during September 2013. For the first nine months of 2014, enplanements at XNA total 484,034, up 11.08% compared to the same period in 2013.

As The City Wire has previously reported, XNA enplanements are on track to set a new record in 2014. The January-September 2014 traffic is up 8.73% compared to the same period in 2007, the year XNA reached record enplanements of 598,886. Enplanements at XNA fell to 540,918 in 2009 after reaching the 2007 high.

For all of 2013, XNA enplanements totaled 579,679, up 2.58% compared to the same period in 2012. The enplanement growth remained stable through the year, with enplanements up 2.42% at the end of the first quarter of 2013. Enplanements at XNA totaled 565,045 during 2012, up just 0.4% compared to 2011. Although slight, the gain prevented XNA from posting two-consecutive years of enplanement declines. XNA's first full year of traffic was 1999, and the airport posted eight consecutive years of enplanement gains before seeing a decline in 2008.

FORT SMITH TRAFFIC
The Fort Smith Regional Airport, served by flights from Atlanta and Dallas-Fort Worth, posted September enplanements of 7,977, up 16.9% compared to September 2013.
Enplanements for the first nine months of 2014 total 68,780, up 7.86% compared to the same period in 2013.

For all of 2013, enplanements at the airport totaled 84,520, down 2.46% compared to the same period in 2012. The decline ended three consecutive years of enplanement gains at the airport.

Based on monthly averages, Fort Smith enplanements could reach more than 91,000 in 2014. The last time enplanements were above 100,000 was in 2005, with 102,607. The last year enplanements were above 90,000 was in 2007, with 99,217.

With 39,723 enplanements for the first nine months of 2014, American Airlines accounts for 57.75% of commercial traffic out of Fort Smith. Delta Air Lines had the remaining market share – 29,057 enplanements – for the first nine months of 2014.

American enplanements out of Fort Smith are up 7.05% for the first nine months of 2014 compared to the same period of 2013, and Delta enplanements are up 8.99%.