Wait, so you're telling me you didn't read what I wrote?
It was an hour and a half taxi just escaping LGA. Additionally, it would appear that you believe me to be upset with getting extra credit. I could care less.
My point is that no aerial demonstration team should be able to lock down air transport commerce for an extended period of time (re: 3-4 hours...).
Certainly not upset with extra credit. I
COULDN'T care less. And yeah. I re-read your post... Not sure what I missed there.
Here's my point. You, the facility user, are not the airport authority. The airport authority has the right to close the airport for whatever reason it deems necessary to do so. Had you arrived at the scheduled time, you would not have run into this issue. It is entirely likely that the NOTAM was strategically placed so as to NOT interfere with your scheduled operation. Your being late caused this issue. Who's fault it was that you were late is irrelevant to the airport and I would guarantee that TVC had NO visibility as to the reason you were late. The airport authority is NOT monitoring conditions in LGA. So let's look at this scenario as it has been presented...
Dispatch plans your flight on time, takes note of the NOTAM and confirms that it does not interfere with your arrival time. Release sent, push and hit the typical LGA traffic jam. What SHOULD have happened was the crew and dispatch should have been in communication about when they expect to ACTUALLY leave LGA. LGA sucks, but it generally sucks predictably, so once you get to about 3rd or 4th in line crew and dispatch should be looking at arrival time and comparing it with the status of the airport at that time. Dispatch should have noticed at some point that you guys are getting close to the AD Closed time and placed a call to TVC to alert them BEFORE you were off the ground. With an hour and a half of lead time you'd have stood a LOT better chance of them negotiating with the Navy and have them delay the start of their routine by the 10 minutes you needed to get in. That call was never placed, according to what I've read. So TVC, oblivious to your revised schedule (because it's not their job to monitor your flight) shuts down the airport and the Navy goes about their business. Now here comes you. Cleveland Center notices the AD is closed and throws you into a hold, because you know, the airport is closed. Consider for a moment you would get the same treatment if you showed up at LGA after curfew. Doesn't matter how busy or important the airport is, they close when they close. If you want to negotiate those terms, its incumbent upon YOU, the company, to get on the blower with the airport authority BEFORE it becomes an operational issue and see what can be done.
No reason they can't form up the solos with the diamond, and take a few laps around the pattern at the top of the Delta airspace to accommodate one inbound when it got close and on final.
Sure they could have, but they are under no such obligation to do so. Also, the story gave no indication that TVC was called by the company at any time during this event. I don't know if they were assuming that Cleveland Center was going to plead the case for them (they most certainly will not, ever) or they assumed the airport somehow knew that they were holding for the airport (unlikely, since again it's not their job to monitor movements outside of their airspace)... Just struck me as odd that there was an assumption that their showing up would cause the waters to part for them. Unless the word "emergency" crops up, ATC can't be bothered with your petty requests, no matter whether you are a student pilot or the Queen of England. If you are depending on Command Center to help you, you're barking up the wrong tree. I mean, don't get me wrong, they MIGHT, but that's not their yob, main.
I do agree that it seems a little burdensome to shut down the airport for a 4 hour block when realistically at least half that time will be spent with no aircraft in the air at the airport, but who knows what else was going on there. Perhaps the Navy decided to roll the BBQ smoker out onto the runway and have a picnic, or they rolled those nifty portable blinky X's out and didn't want to have to retrieve them until the show was over.
Anyway, my argument isn't about what the airport should have done for you, but what you should have done for the airport. Proactive dispatching FTW.