Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Stratford wants to buy airport

- By Mike Mavredakis and Brian Lockhart

STRATFORD — Mayor Laura Hoydick sent a letter this week to state and Bridgeport officials asking them to hold off on selling Sikorsky Memorial Airport to the Connecticu­t Airport Authority to give Stratford a chance to buy it.

The letter was sent to Gov. Ned Lamont, Bridgeport Mayor Joe Ganim, Bridgeport City Council President Aidee Nieves and the Sikorsky Airport Commission. Though owned by Bridgeport, Sikorsky is located over the border in Stratford’s Lordship neighborho­od. Hoydick is the only non-Bridgeport representa­tive on the commission.

“We strongly object to a state takeover of our local, independen­tly operated airport; moreover, any change in ownership and management should occur following a fair and transparen­t competitiv­e bidding process,” the mayor said in her letter. “Stratford has a proud history in the aviation industry, and we firmly believe Sikorsky Memorial Airport is a regional asset that should remain under local control and not be managed by bureaucrat­s 70 miles away in Windsor Locks.”

The town has been interested in the airport for four years and the situation has come to a head, said Hoydick, a Republican. Hoydick also issued a news release about her interest in acquiring the airport just hours before a Sikorsky Airport Commission meeting Friday evening.

At that meeting the panel discussed the terms of a sale of the airport to the Connecticu­t Airport Authority. Any sale of the airport would need backing from the commission and the Bridgeport City Council.

The commission went into an hour-plus long closed executive session before tabling a vote on the CAA “term sheet” or framework for a potential sale contract. Hoydick’s letter was not discussed since it was not named as a reason to enter executive session, according to Nieves.

“I read the letter,” Nieves said. “I haven’t had a moment to really have the conversati­on with Mayor Ganim about it.”

Nieves has previously stated that she is in favor of leasing the airport to CAA, but not selling it to them.

Sikorsky will need major upgrades to get back to servicing commercial airlines and is currently operating solely private, business and charter planes. The airport does not currently have an operationa­l passenger terminal.

The authority has said it is willing to spend up to $10 million for the airport. Hoydick said Stratford plans to pay for the acquisitio­n through bonding, which will be paid for through collected tax revenue.

“If the City of Bridgeport is interested in selling the airport, then it is the time for the Town of Stratford to take ownership of the Sikorsky Memorial Airport. We will ensure capable management commensura­te with the concerns of the region and surroundin­g community, and the sensitive environmen­tal assets located there,” Hoydick said in a release Friday. “The future of Stratford and the future of the airport are intertwine­d, and Stratford would like the fair and proper opportunit­y to direct this shared destiny.”

The intention of the town is to purchase the airport and lease it out to a profession­al operator, Hoydick said.

Daniel Roach is an aide to Ganim, a Democrat, who has for the past few years been assigned to work on expanding passenger service at Sikorsky and has been negotiatin­g the takeover by the state authority.

Roach said Hoydick’s interest will be discussed at the airport commission meeting. But, he noted, Bridgeport is not legally obligated to consider it.

“There’s no obligation to bid this out,” Roach said, noting the state authority’s “massive” investment would go well beyond the potential $10 million purchase price and involve tens of millions in additional future investment at the site.

Roach recalled Hoydick broaching Stratford purchasing Sikorsky “four to five years ago, briefly, but then nothing since.”

“We weren’t expecting this,” he said.

Hoydick’s chief of staff Michael Downes rebuffed that statement. He said the town has been in “constant contact” with Roach and has held “a number of meetings” with him on this topic. He also said the mayor has spoken to Bridgeport City Council members about this “all the way along” the process.

Kevin Dillon, executive director of the Connecticu­t Airport Authority, said he was surprised to see Hoydick’s letter on Friday.

“It is quite late in the game,” he said.

Dillon said the CAA wants to see the property developed, no matter who the owner of it is — whether that’s CAA, Bridgeport or Stratford. He noted in addition to the sale price it would take “tens of millions of dollars to bring that airport up to standards for air service operations.”

He also said that CAA has an opportunit­y to work with an airline carrier that has expressed interest in the property should CAA become the operator there. Should this opportunit­y disappear due to delays in process, CAA will no longer be interested in the airport, he said.

While Dillon declined to identify this carrier, Hearst Connecticu­t Media has previously reported that Breeze Airways is interested in doing so. Breeze is a Utah-based airline company

focused on “new nonstop flights and lower fairs at smaller cities such as Bridgeport (and) routes ignored by other larger airlines,” Eric Fletcher, Breeze’s director of legal and community affairs said in May 2021.

“Put your offer on the table, demonstrat­e how you have the expertise to run it and let’s get on with the developmen­t of the airport,” Dillon said. “Our interest is to make sure we have a viable airport system here in the state. We have an asset that has wallowed for years. It’s time to get on with the developmen­t of that facility. Either Bridgeport needs to do it, Stratford needs to do it or the CAA needs to do it.”

Should the town buy Sikorsky, it intends to model itself after how Tweed Airport’s revitaliza­tion has been run in New Haven.

 ?? Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? The control tower at Sikorsky Memorial Airport in Stratford
Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media The control tower at Sikorsky Memorial Airport in Stratford

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States