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East Hampton Airport

Town of East Hampton Airport (IATA: HTO[2], ICAO: KJPX, FAA LID: JPX) (prior to May 19, 2022 its name was East Hampton Airport and its codes were KHTO/HTO) is an airport located in the Wainscott section of East Hampton, New York, just west of East Hampton Village.[1] The airport is owned and operated by the Town of East Hampton.[1][3]

Town of East Hampton Airport
Summary
Airport typePrivate (in litigation)
Owner/OperatorTown of East Hampton
ServesEast Hampton, New York
LocationWainscott, New York
Elevation AMSL55 ft / 17 m
Coordinates40°57′34″N 072°15′06″W / 40.95944°N 72.25167°W / 40.95944; -72.25167
Websiteehamptonny.gov/airport
Map
JPX
Location of airport in New York
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
10/28 4,255 1,297 Asphalt
16/34 2,060 628 Asphalt
Statistics (2007)
Aircraft operations31,612
Based aircraft89

Effective May 19, 2022, the airport went from a public to a private airport according to FAA records. However, enforcement of the change of the private rules was delayed by a temporary injunction at the request of aviation users of the airport. On October 19, 2022, Paul J. Baisley, Jr., Presiding Justice of the Supreme Court Civil Parts of the 10th Judicial District in Suffolk County, New York, made the order permanent because the town did not analyze the proposed restrictions under New York's State Environmental Quality Review Act or submit a study in compliance with the federal Airport Noise and Capacity Act of 1990. The town is debating whether to appeal the ruling. In the meantime the new codes and the FAA documents indicating it is a private airport remain in place.[4]

The airport, which opened in 1937, predates all of the major airports on Long Island including those in New York City and has long been used by celebrities, Wall Streeters, and the wealthy visiting the Hamptons. The airport's commercial commuter traffic is mostly between East Hampton and New York City, which is 100 miles away.

The airport codes changed on May 19, 2022, from KHTO to KJPX. The airport name also changed from East Hampton Airport to Town of East Hampton Airport.[5] This was part of a plan to convert the airport from a public airport to a Town-owned private airport and the FAA description of the airport now says it is private. The move to restrict general aviation use was blocked by a last-minute restraining order to sort out numerous legal suits. However the code and name change were approved by the FAA and put on official maps.[6]

The move to privatize the airport would permit the airport to get prior permission for aircraft to fully use the airport's facilities. The closure is aimed at controlling a dramatic increase since 2014 in commuter helicopter traffic after Blade made it much easier for individuals to book seats on chartered helicopters at a set price and schedule.[7] The town allowed FAA grants to expire in September 2021 and that cleared the way for the Town rather than the FAA to govern the airport. The Town earlier had lost court cases to impose its rules including a curfew since the FAA rules prohibited the move. The move avoids the calls to close the airport altogether.

Helicopter flights take 32 minutes between Manhattan and the airport while driving time from Manhattan via the Long Island Expressway and the two-lane Montauk Highway can take 3 hours or more.[8]

History edit

1930s edit

Construction began in 1936 on an original 209-acre plot (which quickly expanded to 260 acres). At the time it was the second largest airport in terms of size on Long Island. Only Roosevelt was bigger. It predates LaGuardia Airport (1939); John F. Kennedy International Airport (1941), Francis S. Gabreski Airport (1943); Long Island MacArthur Airport (1944), and Naval Weapons Industrial Reserve Plant, Calverton (1956). Suffolk County, New York sold the land to East Hampton for $1 at the urging of East Hampton Supervisor Perry B. Duryea Sr.[9] The Works Progress Administration granted $45,000 of the original $100,000 of building the airport.[10] The WPA request was made by the town after being petitioned by the East Hampton Business Men's Club.

In 1937 the East Hampton Star speculated Juan Trippe, who had a house on the ocean near the airport and had shown interest in the airport, might be considering it for a base for Pan American Airways trans-Atlantic service.[11]

The original airport had no water, electricity, telephones or buildings.[12]

The first terminal was a World War I barracks towed by mule from Camp Upton.[13]

Shortly after opening the opening the Hampton Air Service began to offer scheduled flights between the airport and Holmes Airport (near the Bulova headquarters near Laguardia Airport today).[14]

1940s edit

In 1943, plans were made to expand the airport to 700 acres.[15]

During this time, those spotted at the airport included Henry Ford II, W. Averell Harriman, Gary Cooper and Clark Gable.[12]

In 1945, Charlotte Niles and Margaret Lowell Wallace (Women's Airforce Service Pilots WASPS) became the operators of the airport after a hangar belonging to Tripp.[16] Niles said her father was William White Niles who was an attorney for the Wright Brothers.[12] They arranged for numerous improvements including a concrete hangar.

1980s edit

In the 1980s, East Hampton Air, and Montauk-Caribbean Airways competed for scheduled service to New York. They were joined by Trump Air on May 28, 1989. In 1990 all three services were discontinued.[13]

In 1989, East Hampton in the Beaux Arch '89 project invited architects to submit a design for a new terminal to replace the shack terminal. More than 100 entries arrived. After the town decided not to build the winner, litigation ensued and in 1994 the current terminal was built.[13][17][18]

1990s edit

On August 28, 1999, Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton held a fundraiser at the airport hangar.[19] The Clintons had begun spending their vacations in East Hampton in 1998 after Hillary Clinton began considering a run for the U.S. Senate. During the times Marine One was parked at the airport.

2000s edit

 

The advent of the BLADE Urban Air Mobility app by Hamptons resident Robert S. Wiesenthal in 2014 had a major effect on helicopter service. The app made it possible to book individual seats at scheduled times at a set price rather than going through the trouble of finding a chartered helicopter and then finding others to split the cost of the charter.[20] Although Blade's logo is emblazoned on many of the helicopters, Blade does not own or operate the helicopters. They are owned by third-party vendors.[20]

Management of the airport is experiencing considerable upheaval since 2014 when the app Blade made it much easier for travelers to book seats at set price and schedule on chartered helicopters. This led to a 43% increase in helicopter traffic going from 6,706 flights/year in 2015 to 9,577 in 2019.[21] This in turn brought about a substantial number of noise complaints both in the immediate vicinity as well as along the length of routes from New York City to the airport. Blade in January 2022 was charging between $700 and $795 for the 100 mile trip. There were calls to close the airport. Parallels have been made with Santa Monica Airport which experienced similar problems and is now slated to close in 2028. East Hampton hired Cooley LLP which advised Santa Monica in that case.[22]

In January 2022, the Town announced its plans to temporarily close the airport in February and open it a few days later as a private town-owned airport that would require local permission for aircraft to use the airport. The Town in the past had tried unsuccessfully to control the helicopters but was thwarted in court cases regarding curfews. Courts decided that the FAA which provided funds for the airport rather than the Town controlled the rules of the airport. The town allowed the FAA grants to expire on September 21, 2021.[23][7]

East Hampton Supervisor Peter Van Scoyoc and the entire slate of Democratic candidates was re-elected in November 2022 and his approach to privately operating the airport was seen as a compromise to keep the airport open. The FAA had advised Van Scoyoc that in order to keep the airport open under its previous operation it would have required the Town to get permission from all airport operators in order to implement new rules. By temporarily closing the airport the Town could impose its new rules.[8]

The plan to keep the airport open but restrict the helicopters but permit local aircraft was called by the New York Post "aerial class warfare Hamptons-style — pitting millionaires against billionaires."

Among the billionaires who use the airport are Steve Cohen, Eric Schmidt, Robert Kraft, and Ronald Perelman.[7]

Among the options are that helicopters could get permission to use the airport but with stricter rules available about times and flight rules.

As helicopter and seaplane traffic increased large swathes of the rural North and South Forks of Long Island complained of helicopter noise levels comparable to those encountered close to major commercial airports.[24][25][26][27][28]

Facilities and aircraft edit

The airport handled 31,464 flights in 2019 (86/day) with 11,228 being pistons; 9,577 helicopters; 6,140 turboprops; 4,505 jets; 14 unclassified. Monthly flights increased from less than 1,000 in January (33/day) to almost 8,000 in August (266/day) .[21]

 
Aircraft parked at East Hampton Airport in August 2017.

East Hampton Airport covers an area of 570 acres (231 ha) at an elevation of 55 feet (17 m) above mean sea level. It has two active runways with asphalt surfaces: 10/28 is 4,255 by 100 feet (1,297 x 30 m) and 16/34 is 2,060 by 75 feet (628 x 23 m).[1]

Airlines and destinations edit

AirlinesDestinations
Blade Seasonal charter: New York–Skyport
Tailwind Air Seasonal charter: New York–Skyport

HeliFlite founded in 1998, offers on-demand charter service, helicopter management, fractional ownership and a 25-hour HeliCard™ product; it operates a fleet of twin engine & dual piloted Bell 430 and Sikorsky S76 executive class helicopters.[citation needed]

Trump Air provided regularly scheduled helicopter service in the late 1980s and early 1990s; the last scheduled fixed-wing airline was East Hampton Airlines, which now offers chartered service.[citation needed]

Other uses edit

Marine One was based at the airport for one week in August 1998 and 1999 during week-long visits by Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton to the Georgica Pond home of director Steven Spielberg. Clinton conducted a fundraiser in a hangar at the airport in 1999.[citation needed]

The PBS children's television show It's a Big Big World was taped at Wainscott Studios which is the industrial park associated with the airport.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d FAA Airport Form 5010 for HTO PDF. Federal Aviation Administration. Effective November 15, 2012.
  2. ^ "IATA Airport Code Search (JPX: East Hampton)". International Air Transport Association. Retrieved August 9, 2023.
  3. ^ (PDF). Town of East Hampton. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 14, 2014. Retrieved June 15, 2013.
  4. ^ Thurber, Matt (October 26, 2022). "Injunction Keeps East Hampton Airport Available to Public". Aviation International News.
  5. ^ "Airport | East Hampton Town, NY".
  6. ^ "East Hampton Airport remains open after judge blocks closure". May 20, 2022.
  7. ^ a b c Kesslen, Ben (January 19, 2022). "East Hampton to temporarily close airport, reopen under private control". New York Post.
  8. ^ a b Huber, Mark (November 3, 2021). "Election Likely Seals Fate of East Hampton Airport". Aviation International News.
  9. ^ "East Hampton Airport Taxes". Times Union. November 24, 1936. p. 1.
  10. ^ "East Hampton Airport Taxes". Times Union. November 24, 1936. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
  11. ^ "The East Hampton Star. (East Hampton, N.Y.) 1885-current, December 16, 1937, Image 2". No. 1937/12/16. December 16, 1937. p. 2 – via nyshistoricnewspapers.org.
  12. ^ a b c "28 Jul 1946, 125 - Daily News at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ a b c Rattiner, Dan (August 15, 2014). "East Hampton Airport: From Humble Beginnings to Noise and Controversy – Dan's Papers". www.danspapers.com.
  14. ^ "The East Hampton Star. (East Hampton, N.Y.) 1885-current, September 23, 1937, Image 7". No. 1937/09/23. September 23, 1937. p. 7 – via nyshistoricnewspapers.org.
  15. ^ "East Hampton Airport Expansion". Daily News. October 31, 1943. p. 139 – via newspapers.com.
  16. ^ "Clipped From Daily News". Daily News. July 28, 1946. p. 125 – via newspapers.com.
  17. ^ Slesin, Suzanne (June 29, 1989). "The East Hampton Intercontinental Airport Contest". The New York Times.
  18. ^ Rattiner, Dan (June 14, 2020). "1989: How Trump Helicopters to the Hamptons Led to a New Airport Terminal". www.danspapers.com.
  19. ^ Limited, Alamy. "U.S. first Lady Hillary Clinton and her husband, U.S. President Bill Clinton reacts to the crowd at a Democratic National Committee fundraiser at East Hampton Airport in New York, August 28. The Clintons arrived here for a weekend of Democratic National Committee fundraisers and then they resume their summer vacation next week. LSD/JP Stock Photo - Alamy". www.alamy.com.
  20. ^ a b Head, Elan (December 16, 2020). "Helicopter booking service Blade goes public, with an eye toward future eVTOL ops". Vertical.
  21. ^ a b . Archived from the original on January 17, 2022. Retrieved January 17, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  22. ^ Lynch, Kerry (April 30, 2018). "East Hampton Eyes Airport Restrictions, Mulls Closure". Aviation International News.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on January 17, 2022. Retrieved January 17, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  24. ^ Pilgrim, Joanne (August 28, 2014). "Outcry Over East Hampton Airport Noise". The East Hampton Star.
  25. ^ Bellafante, Ginia (August 29, 2014). "Never Rich Enough". The New York Times.
  26. ^ Bernstein, Jacob (July 25, 2014). "Where Snarl Meets Roar: Airport Noise is Raising Hackles in the Hamptons This Summer". The New York Times.
  27. ^ Belson, Ken; Newman, Maria (July 10, 2007). "Schumer Calls for Limits on Helicopters to Hamptons". The New York Times. Retrieved August 14, 2009.
  28. ^ Karni, Annie (July 3, 2007). "New Hamptons Transit Airs on Side of Luxury". The New York Sun. Retrieved August 14, 2009.

External links edit

  • Official website on the Town of East Hampton website
  • FAA Terminal Procedures for JPX, effective October 5, 2023
  • Resources for this airport:
    • FAA airport information for JPX
    • AirNav airport information for KJPX
    • ASN accident history for JPX
    • FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker
    • NOAA/NWS weather observations: current, past three days
    • SkyVector aeronautical chart, Terminal Procedures

east, hampton, airport, town, iata, icao, kjpx, prior, 2022, name, codes, were, khto, airport, located, wainscott, section, east, hampton, york, just, west, east, hampton, village, airport, owned, operated, town, east, hampton, town, iata, htoicao, kjpxfaa, jp. Town of East Hampton Airport IATA HTO 2 ICAO KJPX FAA LID JPX prior to May 19 2022 its name was East Hampton Airport and its codes were KHTO HTO is an airport located in the Wainscott section of East Hampton New York just west of East Hampton Village 1 The airport is owned and operated by the Town of East Hampton 1 3 Town of East Hampton AirportIATA HTOICAO KJPXFAA LID JPXSummaryAirport typePrivate in litigation Owner OperatorTown of East HamptonServesEast Hampton New YorkLocationWainscott New YorkElevation AMSL55 ft 17 mCoordinates40 57 34 N 072 15 06 W 40 95944 N 72 25167 W 40 95944 72 25167Websiteehamptonny gov airportMapJPXLocation of airport in New YorkRunwaysDirection Length Surfaceft m10 28 4 255 1 297 Asphalt16 34 2 060 628 AsphaltStatistics 2007 Aircraft operations31 612Based aircraft89Source Federal Aviation Administration 1 Effective May 19 2022 the airport went from a public to a private airport according to FAA records However enforcement of the change of the private rules was delayed by a temporary injunction at the request of aviation users of the airport On October 19 2022 Paul J Baisley Jr Presiding Justice of the Supreme Court Civil Parts of the 10th Judicial District in Suffolk County New York made the order permanent because the town did not analyze the proposed restrictions under New York s State Environmental Quality Review Act or submit a study in compliance with the federal Airport Noise and Capacity Act of 1990 The town is debating whether to appeal the ruling In the meantime the new codes and the FAA documents indicating it is a private airport remain in place 4 The airport which opened in 1937 predates all of the major airports on Long Island including those in New York City and has long been used by celebrities Wall Streeters and the wealthy visiting the Hamptons The airport s commercial commuter traffic is mostly between East Hampton and New York City which is 100 miles away The airport codes changed on May 19 2022 from KHTO to KJPX The airport name also changed from East Hampton Airport to Town of East Hampton Airport 5 This was part of a plan to convert the airport from a public airport to a Town owned private airport and the FAA description of the airport now says it is private The move to restrict general aviation use was blocked by a last minute restraining order to sort out numerous legal suits However the code and name change were approved by the FAA and put on official maps 6 The move to privatize the airport would permit the airport to get prior permission for aircraft to fully use the airport s facilities The closure is aimed at controlling a dramatic increase since 2014 in commuter helicopter traffic after Blade made it much easier for individuals to book seats on chartered helicopters at a set price and schedule 7 The town allowed FAA grants to expire in September 2021 and that cleared the way for the Town rather than the FAA to govern the airport The Town earlier had lost court cases to impose its rules including a curfew since the FAA rules prohibited the move The move avoids the calls to close the airport altogether Helicopter flights take 32 minutes between Manhattan and the airport while driving time from Manhattan via the Long Island Expressway and the two lane Montauk Highway can take 3 hours or more 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 1930s 1 2 1940s 1 3 1980s 1 4 1990s 1 5 2000s 2 Facilities and aircraft 3 Airlines and destinations 4 Other uses 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit1930s edit Construction began in 1936 on an original 209 acre plot which quickly expanded to 260 acres At the time it was the second largest airport in terms of size on Long Island Only Roosevelt was bigger It predates LaGuardia Airport 1939 John F Kennedy International Airport 1941 Francis S Gabreski Airport 1943 Long Island MacArthur Airport 1944 and Naval Weapons Industrial Reserve Plant Calverton 1956 Suffolk County New York sold the land to East Hampton for 1 at the urging of East Hampton Supervisor Perry B Duryea Sr 9 The Works Progress Administration granted 45 000 of the original 100 000 of building the airport 10 The WPA request was made by the town after being petitioned by the East Hampton Business Men s Club In 1937 the East Hampton Star speculated Juan Trippe who had a house on the ocean near the airport and had shown interest in the airport might be considering it for a base for Pan American Airways trans Atlantic service 11 The original airport had no water electricity telephones or buildings 12 The first terminal was a World War I barracks towed by mule from Camp Upton 13 Shortly after opening the opening the Hampton Air Service began to offer scheduled flights between the airport and Holmes Airport near the Bulova headquarters near Laguardia Airport today 14 1940s edit In 1943 plans were made to expand the airport to 700 acres 15 During this time those spotted at the airport included Henry Ford II W Averell Harriman Gary Cooper and Clark Gable 12 In 1945 Charlotte Niles and Margaret Lowell Wallace Women s Airforce Service Pilots WASPS became the operators of the airport after a hangar belonging to Tripp 16 Niles said her father was William White Niles who was an attorney for the Wright Brothers 12 They arranged for numerous improvements including a concrete hangar 1980s edit In the 1980s East Hampton Air and Montauk Caribbean Airways competed for scheduled service to New York They were joined by Trump Air on May 28 1989 In 1990 all three services were discontinued 13 In 1989 East Hampton in the Beaux Arch 89 project invited architects to submit a design for a new terminal to replace the shack terminal More than 100 entries arrived After the town decided not to build the winner litigation ensued and in 1994 the current terminal was built 13 17 18 1990s edit On August 28 1999 Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton held a fundraiser at the airport hangar 19 The Clintons had begun spending their vacations in East Hampton in 1998 after Hillary Clinton began considering a run for the U S Senate During the times Marine One was parked at the airport 2000s edit nbsp The advent of the BLADE Urban Air Mobility app by Hamptons resident Robert S Wiesenthal in 2014 had a major effect on helicopter service The app made it possible to book individual seats at scheduled times at a set price rather than going through the trouble of finding a chartered helicopter and then finding others to split the cost of the charter 20 Although Blade s logo is emblazoned on many of the helicopters Blade does not own or operate the helicopters They are owned by third party vendors 20 Management of the airport is experiencing considerable upheaval since 2014 when the app Blade made it much easier for travelers to book seats at set price and schedule on chartered helicopters This led to a 43 increase in helicopter traffic going from 6 706 flights year in 2015 to 9 577 in 2019 21 This in turn brought about a substantial number of noise complaints both in the immediate vicinity as well as along the length of routes from New York City to the airport Blade in January 2022 was charging between 700 and 795 for the 100 mile trip There were calls to close the airport Parallels have been made with Santa Monica Airport which experienced similar problems and is now slated to close in 2028 East Hampton hired Cooley LLP which advised Santa Monica in that case 22 In January 2022 the Town announced its plans to temporarily close the airport in February and open it a few days later as a private town owned airport that would require local permission for aircraft to use the airport The Town in the past had tried unsuccessfully to control the helicopters but was thwarted in court cases regarding curfews Courts decided that the FAA which provided funds for the airport rather than the Town controlled the rules of the airport The town allowed the FAA grants to expire on September 21 2021 23 7 East Hampton Supervisor Peter Van Scoyoc and the entire slate of Democratic candidates was re elected in November 2022 and his approach to privately operating the airport was seen as a compromise to keep the airport open The FAA had advised Van Scoyoc that in order to keep the airport open under its previous operation it would have required the Town to get permission from all airport operators in order to implement new rules By temporarily closing the airport the Town could impose its new rules 8 The plan to keep the airport open but restrict the helicopters but permit local aircraft was called by the New York Post aerial class warfare Hamptons style pitting millionaires against billionaires Among the billionaires who use the airport are Steve Cohen Eric Schmidt Robert Kraft and Ronald Perelman 7 Among the options are that helicopters could get permission to use the airport but with stricter rules available about times and flight rules As helicopter and seaplane traffic increased large swathes of the rural North and South Forks of Long Island complained of helicopter noise levels comparable to those encountered close to major commercial airports 24 25 26 27 28 Facilities and aircraft editThe airport handled 31 464 flights in 2019 86 day with 11 228 being pistons 9 577 helicopters 6 140 turboprops 4 505 jets 14 unclassified Monthly flights increased from less than 1 000 in January 33 day to almost 8 000 in August 266 day 21 nbsp Aircraft parked at East Hampton Airport in August 2017 East Hampton Airport covers an area of 570 acres 231 ha at an elevation of 55 feet 17 m above mean sea level It has two active runways with asphalt surfaces 10 28 is 4 255 by 100 feet 1 297 x 30 m and 16 34 is 2 060 by 75 feet 628 x 23 m 1 Airlines and destinations editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message AirlinesDestinationsBladeSeasonal charter New York SkyportTailwind AirSeasonal charter New York SkyportHeliFlite founded in 1998 offers on demand charter service helicopter management fractional ownership and a 25 hour HeliCard product it operates a fleet of twin engine amp dual piloted Bell 430 and Sikorsky S76 executive class helicopters citation needed Trump Air provided regularly scheduled helicopter service in the late 1980s and early 1990s the last scheduled fixed wing airline was East Hampton Airlines which now offers chartered service citation needed Other uses editMarine One was based at the airport for one week in August 1998 and 1999 during week long visits by Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton to the Georgica Pond home of director Steven Spielberg Clinton conducted a fundraiser in a hangar at the airport in 1999 citation needed The PBS children s television show It s a Big Big World was taped at Wainscott Studios which is the industrial park associated with the airport citation needed References edit a b c d FAA Airport Form 5010 for HTO PDF Federal Aviation Administration Effective November 15 2012 IATA Airport Code Search JPX East Hampton International Air Transport Association Retrieved August 9 2023 Airport Location and Hours of Operation PDF Town of East Hampton Archived from the original PDF on September 14 2014 Retrieved June 15 2013 Thurber Matt October 26 2022 Injunction Keeps East Hampton Airport Available to Public Aviation International News Airport East Hampton Town NY East Hampton Airport remains open after judge blocks closure May 20 2022 a b c Kesslen Ben January 19 2022 East Hampton to temporarily close airport reopen under private control New York Post a b Huber Mark November 3 2021 Election Likely Seals Fate of East Hampton Airport Aviation International News East Hampton Airport Taxes Times Union November 24 1936 p 1 East Hampton Airport Taxes Times Union November 24 1936 p 1 via newspapers com The East Hampton Star East Hampton N Y 1885 current December 16 1937 Image 2 No 1937 12 16 December 16 1937 p 2 via nyshistoricnewspapers org a b c 28 Jul 1946 125 Daily News at Newspapers com Newspapers com a b c Rattiner Dan August 15 2014 East Hampton Airport From Humble Beginnings to Noise and Controversy Dan s Papers www danspapers com The East Hampton Star East Hampton N Y 1885 current September 23 1937 Image 7 No 1937 09 23 September 23 1937 p 7 via nyshistoricnewspapers org East Hampton Airport Expansion Daily News October 31 1943 p 139 via newspapers com Clipped From Daily News Daily News July 28 1946 p 125 via newspapers com Slesin Suzanne June 29 1989 The East Hampton Intercontinental Airport Contest The New York Times Rattiner Dan June 14 2020 1989 How Trump Helicopters to the Hamptons Led to a New Airport Terminal www danspapers com Limited Alamy U S first Lady Hillary Clinton and her husband U S President Bill Clinton reacts to the crowd at a Democratic National Committee fundraiser at East Hampton Airport in New York August 28 The Clintons arrived here for a weekend of Democratic National Committee fundraisers and then they resume their summer vacation next week LSD JP Stock Photo Alamy www alamy com a b Head Elan December 16 2020 Helicopter booking service Blade goes public with an eye toward future eVTOL ops Vertical a b Archived copy Archived from the original on January 17 2022 Retrieved January 17 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Lynch Kerry April 30 2018 East Hampton Eyes Airport Restrictions Mulls Closure Aviation International News Archived copy Archived from the original on January 17 2022 Retrieved January 17 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Pilgrim Joanne August 28 2014 Outcry Over East Hampton Airport Noise The East Hampton Star Bellafante Ginia August 29 2014 Never Rich Enough The New York Times Bernstein Jacob July 25 2014 Where Snarl Meets Roar Airport Noise is Raising Hackles in the Hamptons This Summer The New York Times Belson Ken Newman Maria July 10 2007 Schumer Calls for Limits on Helicopters to Hamptons The New York Times Retrieved August 14 2009 Karni Annie July 3 2007 New Hamptons Transit Airs on Side of Luxury The New York Sun Retrieved August 14 2009 External links editOfficial website on the Town of East Hampton website FAA Terminal Procedures for JPX effective October 5 2023 Resources for this airport FAA airport information for JPX AirNav airport information for KJPX ASN accident history for JPX FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker NOAA NWS weather observations current past three days SkyVector aeronautical chart Terminal Procedures Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title East Hampton Airport amp oldid 1169532266, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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