
Officials from the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA) met with the offices of Ohio Senators Bernie Moreno and Jon Husted Dec. 18, 2025, to express opposition to the proposed closure of Cleveland’s Burke Lakefront Airport (KBKL).
The meeting comes after Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb and Cuyahoga County Executive Chris Ronayne sent a letter to Ohio’s Congressional delegation, asking them to circumvent the city’s FAA grant obligations, which currently require the airport to remain open until the late 2030s.
“We appreciate the offices of Senators Moreno and Husted for taking the time to meet with us and hear our concerns on this important issue,” said AOPA Great Lakes Regional Manager Kyle Lewis.
Meanwhile, a letter from the Center for Cleveland raises concerns about the integrity of the city’s closure-focused studies and the feasibility and cost of redevelopment without extensive environmental remediation, according to AOPA officials.
AOPA played a role in organizing the Lakefront Airport Preservation Partnership, which has joined dozens of local pilots, companies, and schools — as well as the Cleveland National Air Show — that would be impacted by the airport’s closure. The Air Show, which attracts up to 100,000 spectators every year, is one of the oldest and most established annual air shows in the country.
Separately, the Center for Cleveland, a local non-profit, bipartisan organization that advocates for the future of the city, sent a letter to leaders of the U.S. Department of Transportation and FAA, in addition to the city’s congressional delegation. In it, center officials explain why the closure would not help the city’s residents, raises concerns about the studies commissioned by the city, and details how the airport’s closure could cost the city dearly down the road.
In its eight-page letter, the Center makes dozens of points, including that:
- The airport is a vital link for the city’s hospitals, including the Cleveland Clinic, and is the hub for transporting critically ill patients and organs.
- The airport sits on an old landfill with “potentially profound levels of waste” that would cost hundreds of millions of dollars to remove, and possibly more. The Center noted it is “laughable” to think a developer would pay this cost before breaking ground on any new construction.
- The two studies commissioned by the city are one-sided. The Center notes that the mayor promised “an honest conversation about the future of Burke,” but then commissioned studies that examined only closure scenarios and explicitly excluded the extensive environmental remediation that would be required.
- The mayor’s claim that other airports can absorb the traffic and infrastructure from the airport is “nonsensical,” noting that it would add congestion, compromise safety, and “negatively impact the nation’s air system and airlines’ on time performance.” The Center also noted that without new investment, forcing traffic and infrastructure to other airports “does not in any way ‘strengthen’ the ‘overall aviation system.’”
- That the airport gives the city a unique edge when trying to attract business to Cleveland as it is something “that almost no other US city has.”
“The Center for Cleveland, which is known for taking an objective look at issues affecting the city and its residents, clearly articulates why the Burke Lakefront site can’t feasibly be redeveloped, why studies commissioned by the city were designed to examine the closure rather than the airport’s full potential, and why the airport must remain operational for the city to remain competitive,” said AOPA’s Lewis. “Cleveland should be looking to the future, and AOPA and the Lakefront Airport Preservation Partnership continue to invite Mayor Bibb and County Executive Ronayne to sit down with us and talk about what the future of Burke could look like.”

Why in the world would the city want to tear down an historic asset that brings money into the city’s coffers.
It’s not like people are beating the doors down to get into the city.
Burke airport like the former Meigs airport makes life simpler for those folks with access to aircraft. Cleveland Clinic, the downtown area, yep; even the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Richard Daley can have a lifetime of painful bleeding hemorrhoids for all I care about him after that stunt.
Used for flights to Clevelands Clinic//Rock&Roll Hall of FAME..even Curtsey Car
The Rock&Roll Hall of Fame and museum is just a short walk away from the airport. Or, you could land at CLE, rent a car, make a really long drive to the other side of Cleveland, and try to find a parking space.
Nice piece of land. Get rid of that airport and they can develop it. Happens frequently.
That happened in Chicago. They destroyed the runway in the middle of the night.
Megs Field.
What a shame. A beautiful airport near downtown and over water approaches from either end. No residential homes to fly over. No encroachment. I would think noise abatement would be at a minimum. Makes no sense to me. I landed there once years (late 60’s) ago in my dads 1947 Luscombe 8A. I can still remember my approach to landing that wild ground looping Luscombe on 6R. It felt like the 100′ X 5157′ runway was swallowing up my little Luscombe that was use to grass runways in Pennsylvania. The airport also offers major services and closing it shuts them down and takes away opportunities to get work performed or visit downtown. I say keep it open!
I noticed that no one commented on BKL having customs. There are flights into the USofA that have to stop at BKL for customs clearances before going to the destination airport (because the destination airport does not have customs). And I would expect that BKL is cheaper for this than is CLE, or CAK (Akron Canton — assuming it has customs), etc.
Just my observations from back when I lived in NE Ohio some 20 years ago.
Let’s hope they follow the law and don’t tear up the runway in the middle of the night like Chicago did with my old favorite airport, Meigs Field. I used to wave to Mr. Merrill C. Meigs himself as he kept current in his Bonanza, albeit with a safety pilot on board. He was in his 80s then…