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Advocates Meet With FAA to Protest Proposed KBKL Closure

By General Aviation News Staff · April 24, 2026 · 7 Comments

Flying into Burke Lakefront Airport. (Photo by GRALISTAIR via Wikimedia)

The Lakefront Airport Preservation Partnership (LAPP) met with FAA Associate Administrator for Airports Daniel J. Edwards April 21, 2026, to express opposition to Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb’s proposed closure of Burke Lakefront Airport (KBKL).

In the meeting, Edwards told the LAPP that safety will be the top priority when examining any potential closure.

“We appreciate Associate Administrator Edwards for taking the time to hear our serious concerns about the proposed closure of Burke Lakefront Airport,” said Kyle Lewis, Great Lakes Regional Manager for the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA). “Mayor Bibb’s proposal to eliminate this important reliever airport, serving 50,000 flights each year, is both unprecedented and a waste of taxpayer resources.”

“The mayor’s staff and the North Coast Waterfront Development Corporation have misled the public and Cleveland City Council for months — and we learned they have also taken their false claims to FAA leadership,” added Lewis. “The mayor’s office has said that other local airports can take on 50,000 more operations each year, that operators at Burke are willing or even excited about moving their operations to other airports, that consolidating much of this traffic at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport would make airspace safer, and that a large number of other public officials support the closure. All of these claims are false and undermine the mayor’s credibility.”

In the meeting, LAPP officials emphasized that it is open to compromise and has encouraged the city to work with the FAA to develop an Airport Master Plan.

“Developing an Airport Master Plan would not only explore all possible uses for the site, but also create a pathway toward making that a reality,” said Lewis. “Much of Burke Lakefront sits on an old landfill and cannot be used for anything other than an airport. The master planning process would not only take those challenges into account, but we believe it would prove what we have said all along — the best outcome for Cleveland is keeping the airport open while exploring the possibility of opening compatible land for new development.”

This week’s meeting comes six days after the Cleveland City Council Transportation and Mobility Committee concluded its fourth hearing on the mayor’s proposed closure of Burke Lakefront, where the North Coast Waterfront Development Corporation presented a survey that claimed most residents want the airport to close.

“Cleveland taxpayers should be appalled,” said Lewis. “When you organize a survey and have a clear agenda, it’s easy to make the results paint the picture that you want. Even city council members didn’t seem to buy the survey results and Cleveland taxpayers shouldn’t either. The corporation and the mayor’s staff have repeatedly misrepresented the statements and positions of others and continue to take any opportunity to twist the truth to fit their own narrative.”

Councilman Charles Slife, who chairs the City Council Transportation & Mobility Committee, invited the LAPP — which includes local businesses, schools, and pilots, in addition to AOPA — to a fifth hearing so council members can hear from airport users and supporters.

“We appreciate Councilman Slife’s invitation to participate in a fifth hearing to set the record straight,” said Lewis. “We look forward to helping Cleveland residents understand how closing Burke Lakefront would do nothing more than hurt the local economy, delay lifesaving care and organ transplants, rob students of lifechanging educational opportunities, and — in the end — waste taxpayer dollars that could be spent creating jobs and inviting needed investment into the city.”

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Comments

  1. Brett says

    April 27, 2026 at 11:12 am

    Don’t be surprised if Mayor Bibbs pulls the same stunt Mayor Daley of Chicago pulled off back in the day. He sent in the bulldozers and tore up the runways … take that pilots and FAA…Done, finished, gone….

    Reply
  2. Jeff Cooper says

    April 27, 2026 at 10:47 am

    Daley closes Meigs.

    Bibbs: “Hold my beer”

    Reply
  3. Nina says

    April 27, 2026 at 6:33 am

    I flew into KBKL last year and living in Chicago, this makes me think if the closure of Miggs Field. It would be so sad to loose this airport.

    Reply
  4. rwyerosk says

    April 27, 2026 at 5:50 am

    The mayor is just another politician that is corrupt and making money for himself and his friends at the expensive of our national airport system….

    Especially that the airport was built on a landfill and can not support any other use…

    Take note, that the airport is right by the water and does not interfere in anyway with homes and the public….and is a safe operation…..

    Transferring 50,000 operations that are lost with the closure of this airport would cause congestion in the air around the surrounding airports and will overfly homes and the public….!

    50,000 operations is a lot to absorb…..but these politicians could care less and when they leave office the the damage would be done……..

    FAA should say NO and hell NO and not allow this to happen…….

    Reply
    • Jerry Sorrell says

      April 27, 2026 at 10:24 am

      Anything of this magnitude requires an environmental impact statement addressing the impacts across the region. There will be area residents who do not want increased air and ground traffic created by the disbursement of 50,000 operations.

      Reply
    • Keith Krebs says

      April 27, 2026 at 10:33 am

      The federal government paid millions to help maintain Burke Lakefront yet Comrade Mayor wants to sell it to garner future real estate cash flows…. Let Cleveland pay the federal government back the money put into this … before they sell it to their condominium building pals! Are they putting corrupt mayors like this liar in jail now?

      Reply
  5. Phillard Milmore says

    April 25, 2026 at 12:01 am

    Not only should it stay open, they should expand their scope and bring regional jet service to the airport. CLE is just terrible, BKL would be faster and more convenient.

    Reply

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