The merged and newly named Washington–Hoover Airport was in size and roughly square in size. Famed aviator
Wiley Post declared there were better airstrips in
Siberia.
Airways Age magazine, then the publication of record for the aviation industry, reported that Hoover-Washington "provided the national capital with probably the poorest aviation ground facilities of any important city in either the United States or Europe."
Harold Gatty, "Prince of Navigators" (according to
Charles Lindbergh), called it "the worst in the United States in any town of more than 15,000 population. In size, conditions, obstructions, and approach, the field has shortcomings. From the point of view of national dignity, it is a disgrace." He strongly attacked the field's inability to keep the sod runways and taxiing areas properly drained, and said there was no reason why mere rain should close the airport. Several safety hazards had been worsened by the joining of the two airfields. Now the field was actually crossed by Military Road. At first, an airport employee tried to stop traffic with a rope when planes landed. Arlington County officials fined the airport manager for obstructing traffic, and the light was removed. The presence of the road was not the only hazard.
High-tension electrical wires and tall radio towers still lined the field's west side, and a high
smokestack and
U.S. Route 1 were to its south. The Department of Commerce also undertook legal research to identify any obstacles to the closing of the road. But no closure was made at this time. A land-swap that would give the Arlington Experimental Farm most of the old Hoover Field site while giving Washington–Hoover about to the south (thus permitting extension of the runways to a safer length) was proposed in September 1933. The land-swap was completed by April 1935, and the airport spent $10,000 widening the runways and building a
blimp hangar. Samuel Solomon, a D.C. lawyer, was appointed head of Washington–Hoover Airport in October 1933, and began lobbying heavily for Military Road's closure as well. The
Washington Board of Trade threw its weight behind the road closure in March 1934. Arlington County managers said at the same time that they were already planning to move the road. and Arlington County groups began meeting again to determine where the rerouted road would go. But again, no closure was made. The safety situation at Washington–Hoover was very serious. In 1934, a plane attempting to land nearly hit a military truck traveling along Military Road. In August 1935, a passenger airliner with 14 people aboard had to swerve during take-off to avoid hitting a car on the road. A new, glass-walled control tower was also built which markedly improved air traffic control, and the Arlington Experimental Farm permitted Washington–Hoover to reclaim several acres of marshy land northwest of the airport to slightly extend the runways. In September 1935, three years of negotiations bore fruit when the
Potomac Electric Power Company (Pepco) agreed to move its high-tension electrical lines along
Arlington Pike (which hindered the flight path near the northern end of the field). Although Military Road did not close, Congress passed legislation allowing traffic on the highway to be stopped. On January 31, 1936,
Representative John D. Dingell Sr. warned Washington–Hoover Airport that Military Road posed a serious flying hazard. On February 14, airport officials (faced with legal action from Arlington County for obstructing traffic), stopped attempting to close the road using traffic guards, chains, or lights, leading the Department of Commerce to announce it would close the airport if traffic were not stopped. Two days later, the
United States Post Office Department declared it would suspend airmail operations at Washington–Hoover unless the road were closed, leading both houses of Congress to introduce legislation demanding closure and realignment of the road. A fight broke out in the
United States Senate over payment for the road: Some Senators wanted Washington–Hoover's owners to pay $50,000 in exchange for a
quitclaim deed from the War Department. The airport refused, calling this blackmail. Eventually, after several failed compromises, Congress passed and Roosevelt signed federal legislation permitting traffic to be temporarily stopped whenever planes took off or landed, and paying for guards to do the traffic stops. Washington–Hoover officials quickly announced plans to significantly extend one airport runway across the road, allowing far larger plans to land (and land more safely). Amelia Earhart testified before the U.S. Senate in May 1936 that the airport was still unsafe.
Other improvements to facilities and safety The airport continued to expand through the late 1930s, albeit slowly. A new Airmail Building was constructed at the field in August 1936, enabling the Bureau of Air Commerce to move its headquarters to the airport's administration building, and
Central Airlines moved its headquarters to the field. A new radio and
arc lamp control system for planes began installation later that month, and planning began for paving the runways and taxiing strip. The extended runway over Military Road was laid down in mid-September, the radio control system was finished a few days later, and the new runways completed in late October. A new drainage system helped to keep the field dry during wet weather, and the control tower was also expanded again. But in June 1937, Representative
Charles Plumley told the House of Representatives that Washington–Hoover was still unsafe for planes and a "national disgrace." A month later the
Air Line Pilots Association voted not to fly planes to the airfield due to the safety issues there. Two weeks later, short haul air transport between Washington, D.C., and New York City ended due to the dangers at the airport. Members of Congress proposed legislation paying for improvements to the field, but the Air Line Pilots Association declared the field inherently unsafe and demanded its closure. To address these demands, the Washington Board of Trade urged once again in late July that Military Road be closed (even as local motorists asked that the road be upgraded and repaved). The House and Senate again introduced airport improvement legislation in July 1937. This bill, which would have provided for construction of a new Military Road and transferred of the Arlington Experimental Farm to the airport, was vetoed by President Roosevelt. But as this legislation was moving forward, Arlington County and Washington–Hoover Airport reached an agreement in mid-August whereby the county would close Military Road in exchange for a $25,000 payment to help pay for its rerouting. The House of Representatives passed legislation the following day to permit closure of the federal road. The Senate followed suit 10 days later. Again President Roosevelt vetoed the legislation, arguing that it turned federal property over to a private entity without payment in return. In September, the
Bureau of Air Commerce directed all airports in the United States to assume responsibility for directing the take-off and landing of large air transport planes. But Washington–Hoover personnel refused to take on that responsibility, due to the airfield's poor radio and lighting systems. But still the Air Line Pilots Association pressed for the complete closure of Washington–Hoover. ==Push for federalization and boundary issues==