Hartford Courant

Push to close Brainard

Hartford wants to close Brainard Airport for redevelopm­ent.

- By Kenneth R. Gosselin Hartford Courant

HARTFORD — As political pressure to close Hartford-brainard Airport mounts, those who want the century-old airfield to stay open say it could become a strong economic driver all its own, attracting new businesses that help revitalize the city.

All the talk of potential closure, however — the latest this month as the Hartford City Council passed a resolution urging the airport’s closure in favor of redevelopm­ent — is hurting efforts to attract more companies tied to the aviation industry, said Lindsey Rutka, who

operates the Hartford Jet Center at Brainard.

Rutka, who has a long-term

lease to develop land around the runway, said he’s had multiple conversati­ons with potential companies in recent years that could propel economic developmen­t sought by the city, just in a different way.

“It is very difficult with the city and everyone else, with the lack of support and pressuring to close the airport to have these multiple and thriving businesses willing to come,” Rutka said.

He declined to name the companies he’s been in discussion with, but options range from building on electrical system repair already at Brainard to upholstery and life-preserver manufactur­ing and even aviation insurance, Rutka said.

But those who are pushing to close the airport see a bigger, regional economic prize: 200 acres prime for redevelopm­ent into housing, entertainm­ent, retail and commercial space and a marina.

The Hartford City Council’s resolution urging a shutdown of Brainard is non-binding, but its members unanimousl­y joined Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin, who first campaigned in 2015 on closing the airport, and state Sen. John W. Fonfara, D-hartford, an outspoken advocate of closure.

Hartford City Councilman James Sanchez said it’s past time for a change in the use of the airfield.

“It is in the best interest of the city of Hartford and the Greater Hartford community, for environmen­tally-friendly, economic opportunit­ies that will create hundreds, if not thousands of jobs, and we can enjoy our natural resource, which is the Connecticu­t River,” James Sanchez, the Hartford city councilman who sponsored the closure resolution, said.

Statistics from the Connecticu­t Airport Authority, which oversees operations at Brainard, paint a sobering picture of the decline in activity at the same airport where Charles

Lindbergh launched his 1927 heroes tour after making his transatlan­tic flight.

Between 2010 and 2020, the annual number of takeoff and landings declined by 30%, falling from 71,009 to 49,549, according to the CAA.

Sanchez said there also is now a move to build grassroots support for a closure, as a petition circulates in Hartford among neighborho­od revitaliza­tion zone organizati­ons, town committees and other community groups.

At the heart of the issue is that Brainard, operated by the quasi-public Connecticu­t Airport Authority, is largely exempt from local property taxes, barely bringing in $400,000 a year to city coffers. With redevelopm­ent, property taxes could rise to $1.6 million annually, by some estimates, if the airport were in private hands.

Fonfara says the issue is bigger because redevelopm­ent could attract more people — especially young people sought out by employers — to move to not only Hartford but surroundin­g towns.

Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion said it has a goal of doubling the population of Hartford and other cities in the state, and this would be a step in the right direction, Fonfara said. But it also would benefit the suburbs, he said.

People “will want to live in the region because people can point to this that this is something that you can do here, besides working 9-to5, whether you are working at home or working at the office,” Fonfara said.

An even larger economic developmen­t opportunit­y for the area may rest in combining the airport property with the neighborin­g trash burning plant, which is being shut down in 2022, Fonfara said. The cost of environmen­tal cleanup, however, could present a high hurdle in moving forward.

There are no formal plans, but some have been drawn up in the past two decades. Redevelopm­ent would likely take years.

The future of this latest push to close Brainard — an issue debated ever since the 1950s, when a large runway at the airport was taken for redevelopm­ent into what is now Brainard Road — is uncertain.

The CAA, which also oversees four other general aviation airports in the state and the much larger Bradley Internatio­nal Airport, said it does not intend to petition the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to close the airport.

The CAA’S top executive said the CAA does not have millions of dollars it would likely cost, including repaying federal grants, conducting a study to determine if Brainard has outlived its usefulness and the likelihood of claims that would result from tenants who have leases at the airport.

“I certainly recognize the city’s concern here,” Dillon said. “It’s a large piece of property in the city of Hartford, and they are not deriving the tax revenue or the return that they think they should. So, I’m not going to dispute that feeling on their part.”

But Dillon said the CAA has studies that show Brainard does contribute economical­ly to the region. One legislativ­e study in 2016, pegged $43 million in statewide economic activity annually and more than 100 private sector jobs at the airport itself, and recommende­d future investment.

To make the airport a stronger economic catalyst, the city would have to work with the CAA on reaching a resolution on tree removal and trimming to meet FAA requiremen­ts for taking off and landing as well as an extension of the runway.

“It’s got to be one or the other, right?” Dillon said. “Either you have to work with us to try to use this as an economic asset for company relocation and company retention, or, OK, let’s sit down and talk about what is going to be the future of Brainard Airport with the full understand­ing that the CAA is not in a position to close it.”

Dillon said one alternativ­e could be the state condemning the property, but that, too, would be a costly undertakin­g.

Critics of Brainard say it is mostly the domain of recreation­al users. And while that is partly true — there are three flight schools based at the airport — Rutka said the generaliza­tion ignores other functions of the airport.

Brainard is a hub for public safety aircraft, including homeland security; it is integral to the transport of organ donations; and it is often a stop for performers at such venues as the Xfinity

Theater, Rutka said.

Marc Diwinsky, president of the 36-member Connecticu­t Flight Club, based at Brainard, said it isn’t practical to simply relocate the smaller single- and twin-engine airplanes to Bradley, just 15 miles away in Windsor Locks. For one, it is much more expensive.

“Bradley is too busy,” Diwinsky said. “There is just too much going on there.”

Diwinsky said Brainard also is just the right size for air transporta­tion that may seem fanciful right now — air taxis, electric-powered airplanes, even flying cars. (A flying car is being developed and tested in Europe.)

Alternativ­es to more traditiona­l modes of transporta­tion may make it easier to commute longer distances by air in the future but still live in the Hartford area, Diwinsky said.

“Eventually, we are going to have flying cars, other ways of getting around, and airports are going to be a vital asset, Diwinsky said. “You’re not just going to take off in your yard.”

 ??  ?? “This is where I started my dream as a kid to fly,” says Air Force veteran Jesse Branche while working on an airplane at V.I.P. Avionics. Branche has been working at the airport for“over 30 years.”
“This is where I started my dream as a kid to fly,” says Air Force veteran Jesse Branche while working on an airplane at V.I.P. Avionics. Branche has been working at the airport for“over 30 years.”
 ?? MARK MIRKO PHOTOS/HARTFORD COURANT ?? With the Hartford skyline in the background, a secured plane rests on the tarmac at Brainard Airport.
MARK MIRKO PHOTOS/HARTFORD COURANT With the Hartford skyline in the background, a secured plane rests on the tarmac at Brainard Airport.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States