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Topeka Regional Airport

Topeka Regional Airport (IATA: FOE, ICAO: KFOE, FAA LID: FOE), formerly known as Forbes Field, is a joint civil-military public airport owned by the Metropolitan Topeka Airport Authority in Shawnee County, Kansas, seven miles south of downtown Topeka,[1] the capital city of Kansas. The National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015 called it a general aviation airport.[2]

Topeka Regional Airport
Summary
Airport typeMilitary/Public
OwnerMetropolitan Topeka Airport Authority
ServesTopeka, Kansas
Elevation AMSL1,078 ft / 329 m
Coordinates38°57′03″N 095°39′49″W / 38.95083°N 95.66361°W / 38.95083; -95.66361Coordinates: 38°57′03″N 095°39′49″W / 38.95083°N 95.66361°W / 38.95083; -95.66361
Websitehttp://www.mtaa-topeka.org
Map
FOE
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
13/31 12,803 3,902 Concrete
3/21 7,001 2,134 Concrete
Statistics (2017)
Aircraft operations22,418
Based aircraft36

Topeka Regional Airport is used by the University of Kansas (KU) for charter flights for its athletic teams and by schools visiting the KU campus in Lawrence, which is 34 miles (55 km) east of the airport via the Kansas Turnpike. (Kansas City International Airport is 51 miles (82 km) from KU.) The airport had scheduled airline service by multiple carriers until 2014.

Federal Aviation Administration records say the airport had 11,573 passenger boardings (enplanements) in calendar year 2019.[3]

History

Topeka Regional Airport (formerly Forbes Field) is on the site of the Topeka Army Airfield, later Forbes Air Force Base, a former Strategic Air Command (SAC) facility that was transferred to Tactical Air Command in 1964 (while retaining SAC-gained tenants). Forbes AFB closed in 1973 but retained a USAF presence in the form of a SAC-gained Air National Guard installation that was previously a tenant command at Forbes AFB. With the departure of active duty Regular Air Force personnel and units, the remaining military activity was named Forbes Air National Guard Base.

Most of the former base administrative area is now used for offices and an industrial park. The 190th Air Refueling Wing (190 ARW) of the Kansas Air National Guard continues to part of the airport as a military cantonment area and Air National Guard installation known as Forbes Field Air National Guard Base; the wing currently flies and maintains the Boeing KC-135R Stratotanker.

From 1942 to 1973 the following Air Force components supervised the airfield:

In April 1976, except for areas retained by the Air National Guard, most of the former Forbes Air Force Base was turned over to the city of Topeka and Shawnee County. During this transition, all airline flights moved from the Philip Billard Municipal Airport to the newly-established Forbes Field. On June 1, 1976, the original Frontier Airlines (1950-1986) scheduled the first jet out of Forbes Field, a Boeing 737-200. Shortly afterward, the Combat Air Museum was established on the airport.

In 1981 a bond to build a new air terminal was rejected, but approved in 1982. The $5 million terminal was completed in 1985.

The terminal has five airline ticket counters and two rental car counters. Currently Hertz is the only rental car company at FOE. There is one baggage claim carousel. Several charter and military flights use the terminal today.

In 2012 the MTAA Board of Directors renamed the facility to Topeka Regional Airport and Business Center, maintaining the name of the airfield as Forbes Field. Topeka Regional Airport is currently the home of the Kansas Air National Guard's 190th Air Refueling Wing and the 1st Battalion, 108th Aviation Regiment, Kansas Army National Guard.[4]

Historical airline service

Airline service began in the early 1930s by a small mail carrier United States Airways which flew a route between Denver and Kansas City. Flights made stops in Goodland, Salina, and Topeka, Kansas, using a five-passenger Metal Aircraft Flamingo. In the early 1940s, three new airlines began service, flying Douglas DC-3 aircraft through the Philip Billard Municipal Airport near downtown Topeka. Trans World Airlines, (TWA), added Topeka as one of many stops on the carriers' transcontinental route between Los Angeles and New York. Topeka was a stop between Wichita and Kansas City. The carrier later upgraded to Martin 4-0-4 aircraft. Braniff International Airways added Topeka as one of many stops on their mainline route between Chicago and Houston. Topeka was also a stop between Kansas City and Wichita. Continental Airlines added Topeka as a stop on a route between Denver and Kansas City which also included a stop at Salina, Kansas. Ozark Airlines also briefly served Topeka in the early 1950s with a route between Kansas City and Tulsa that stopped in Topeka and two other cities. Ozark and Braniff ended service in 1954, TWA ended in 1958 and Continental ended by 1960. Central Airlines began service in 1958 with DC-3s by picking up the routes to Kansas City and Wichita formerly operated by TWA and Braniff. The carrier then picked up Continental's route to Denver by 1960 using a Convair 240 and became the only airline at Topeka. Central's service continued until the company merged with the original Frontier Airlines in 1967. Frontier then served Topeka using 50-seat Convair 580 aircraft with nonstop flights to Kansas City as well as multi stop flights to Denver, St. Louis, and Wichita. Several air taxi and commuter airlines provided shuttle flights to Kansas City in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including Trans-Mo Airlines, Allen Aviation, Air Associates Inc., and Shawnee Air Commuter.[5]

After moving to the current Forbes Field in 1976, Topeka then saw multiple new carriers, some providing jet service:

Frontier Airlines upgraded their service with Boeing 737-200 jets direct to Kansas City, Denver, and Wichita, and added flights to Chicago O'hare International Airport with a stop in Lincoln, Nebraska. In the early 1980s, Frontier also operated nonstop jets to Manhattan, KS, and Joplin, MO. The carrier introduced the McDonnell Douglas MD80 jet to Topeka shortly before ending all service in 1984.

Capitol Air Service began shuttle flights to Kansas City, Manhattan, and Salina, Kansas, around 1970. From 1987 through 1989, the carrier had a codeshare agreement with the new Braniff Airways and operated as Braniff Express. Capitol Air flew Cessna 402 and de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter aircraft and shut down about the time of the Braniff collapse in 1989.

Trans Central Airlines provided commuter flights to Oklahoma City and onto Dallas/Fort Worth in 1981 and 1982 using Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner aircraft.

The original Midway Airlines, provided Douglas DC-9-10 jet service to Chicago Midway International Airport with a stop in Kansas City from 1982 through 1985. Up to three flights per day were operated.

United Airlines provided mainline jet service in 1986 and 1987 with three daily flights to the carrier's hub at Denver, making one stop at Kansas City or Wichita, and one daily flight to Chicago O'Hare making one stop in Lincoln. Boeing 727 and Boeing 737 jets were used.

Air Midwest began commuter flights to Kansas City in 1981 using Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner II aircraft. Air Midwest went on to operate several codeshare services with major airlines, the first being with Eastern Airlines in 1985. Air Midwest operated as Eastern Express feeding Eastern's hub at Kansas City until 1988 when Eastern dismantled the Kansas City hub operation. By then Braniff had established a hub at Kansas City and Air Midwest became a Braniff Express feeder carrier along with Capitol Air. Within a year Braniff had shut down and Air Midwest reverted to operating under their own branding at Kansas City. Air Midwest also had codeshare agreements with other major airlines, including one with TWA at that carrier's hub in St. Louis. In late 1989, Air Midwest began nonstop flights from Topeka to St. Louis operating as Trans World Express while discontinuing its flights to Kansas City. British Aerospace Jetstream 31 aircraft were used. This service ended in early 1991 as Air Midwest established yet another codeshare agreement at Kansas City with US Airways. Flights to Kansas City were restored, now as US Airways Express using Beechcraft 1900 aircraft. This service was long term and continued until Air Midwest ended Topeka service in November, 2003. Air Midwest had the only service at Topeka from 1989 through 2003.

The 1980s were the boom years for traffic at Forbes Field as the airport handled up to 180,000 passengers per year.[6][7][8] By the 1990s however, the airport saw a dramatic drop in traffic and scheduled passenger service became subsidized by the Essential Air Service program.[9][10] This subsidized service ended in May, 2003, due to federal law prohibiting a subsidy over $200 per passenger for airports within 210 miles of the nearest large or medium hub airport (Kansas City International Airport, a medium hub, is 71 miles away). This caused the final carrier, Air Midwest dba US Airways Express, to end service.[11]

After three years with no service, Allegiant Air came to Topeka in 2006 with nonstop jet flights to Las Vegas on two days per week. The carrier used McDonnell Douglas MD80s but ended service on July 30, 2007.[12][13] An additional effort to revive scheduled airline service was made when United Express, operated by ExpressJet, began flights on January 7, 2014, with two daily Embraer-145 regional jets nonstop to Chicago's O'Hare International Airport. The service only lasted eight months however and ceased on September 2, 2014.[14][15]

 
United Express was the most recent airline at Topeka, with non-stop flights to Chicago-O'Hare that ended in September 2014.

Facilities

Topeka Regional Airport covers 2,854 acres (1,155 ha) at an elevation of 1,078 feet (329 m) above mean sea level. It has two concrete runways: 13/31 is 12,803 by 200 feet (3,902 x 61 m) and 3/21 is 7,001 by 150 feet (2,134 x 46 m).[1]

In the year ending October 31, 2017 the airport had 22,418 aircraft operations, average 61 per day: 65% military, 32% general aviation, 3% air taxi, and <1% airline. 36 aircraft were then based at this airport: 25% single-engine, 14% multi-engine, 11% jet, and 50% military.[1]

Airlines and destinations

The airport has had no airline service since September 2, 2014.[16]

References

  1. ^ a b c d FAA Airport Form 5010 for FOE PDF. Federal Aviation Administration. Effective April 5, 2012.
  2. ^ "2011–2015 NPIAS Report, Appendix A" (PDF, 2.03 MB). National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems. Federal Aviation Administration. October 4, 2010.
  3. ^ "Enplanements for CY 2019" (PDF, 1.0 MB). Calendar Year 2019 Final Revenue Enplanements at All Airports. Federal Aviation Administration. September 25, 2020.
  4. ^ Information from MTAA website http://www.mtaa-topeka.org/about/airport-history/topeka-regional-airport Accessed on September 23, 2013.
  5. ^ multiple airline timetables from timetableimages.com
  6. ^ Anderson, Phil Vegas Bound. The Topeka Capital Journal. Retrieved May 5, 2006.
  7. ^ Schofield, Adrian Topeka Targets More Growth As Commercial Flights Return. Aviation Now. Retrieved May 5, 2006.
  8. ^ Forbes Field (ANG). GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved May 14, 2006.
  9. ^ . Office of Aviation Analysis, U.S. Department of Transportation. July 2010. Archived from the original on May 21, 2012. Topeka, KS, by Order 2003-4-16, effective May 1, 2003
  10. ^ "Order 2003-4-16". U.S. Department of Transportation. April 18, 2003.
  11. ^ "Order 2003-2-28". U.S. Department of Transportation. February 28, 2003.
  12. ^ Allegiant Air: Las Vegas Schedule. Retrieved May 5, 2006. May 4, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "Allegiant Air to end Topeka service". The Capital-Journal (Topeka). June 1, 2007.
  14. ^ "Topeka nets daily flights to Chicago".
  15. ^ . www.wibw.com. Archived from the original on 2015-07-12.
  16. ^ Official Airline Guide September 2014

Other sources

  • Essential Air Service documents (Docket OST-1996-1352) from the U.S. Department of Transportation:
    • Order 2000-7-35 (July 28, 2000): tentatively re-selecting Air Midwest, Inc., d/b/a US Airways Express, to provide essential air service at Topeka, Kansas, for the two-year period ending December 31, 2001, at an annual subsidy rate totaling $722,199.
    • Order 2001-8-13 (August 10, 2001): tentatively re-selecting Air Midwest, Inc., d/b/a US Airways Express, to provide essential air service at Topeka, Kansas, for the two-year period beginning January 1, 2002, at an annual rate of $621,872.
    • Order 2003-2-28 (February 28, 2003): requests interested persons to show cause why we should not terminate subsidy for essential air service at Topeka, Kansas, and allow Air Midwest, Inc., d/b/a US Airways Express, to suspend service there as of May 1, 2003.
    • Order 2003-4-16 (April 18, 2003): terminates subsidy for essential air service at Topeka, Kansas, and allows Air Midwest, Inc., d/b/a US Airways Express, to suspend service as of May 1, 2003.

Further reading

  • Maurer, Maurer. Air Force Combat Units of World War II. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office 1961 (republished 1983, Office of Air Force History, ISBN 0-912799-02-1).
  • Ravenstein, Charles A. Air Force Combat Wings Lineage and Honors Histories 1947–1977. Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Office of Air Force History 1984. ISBN 0-912799-12-9.
  • Mueller, Robert, Air Force Bases Volume I, Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982, Office of Air Force History, 1989

External links

  • Aerial image as of February 2002 from USGS The National Map
  • FAA Airport Diagram (PDF), effective February 23, 2023
  • FAA Terminal Procedures for FOE, effective February 23, 2023
  • Resources for this airport:
    • AirNav airport information for KFOE
    • ASN accident history for FOE
    • FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker
    • NOAA/NWS weather observations: current, past three days
    • SkyVector aeronautical chart for KFOE
    • FAA current FOE delay information

topeka, regional, airport, iata, icao, kfoe, formerly, known, forbes, field, joint, civil, military, public, airport, owned, metropolitan, topeka, airport, authority, shawnee, county, kansas, seven, miles, south, downtown, topeka, capital, city, kansas, nation. Topeka Regional Airport IATA FOE ICAO KFOE FAA LID FOE formerly known as Forbes Field is a joint civil military public airport owned by the Metropolitan Topeka Airport Authority in Shawnee County Kansas seven miles south of downtown Topeka 1 the capital city of Kansas The National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011 2015 called it a general aviation airport 2 Topeka Regional AirportUSGS 2002 orthophotoIATA FOEICAO KFOEFAA LID FOESummaryAirport typeMilitary PublicOwnerMetropolitan Topeka Airport AuthorityServesTopeka KansasElevation AMSL1 078 ft 329 mCoordinates38 57 03 N 095 39 49 W 38 95083 N 95 66361 W 38 95083 95 66361 Coordinates 38 57 03 N 095 39 49 W 38 95083 N 95 66361 W 38 95083 95 66361Websitehttp www mtaa topeka orgMapFOERunwaysDirection Length Surfaceft m13 31 12 803 3 902 Concrete3 21 7 001 2 134 ConcreteStatistics 2017 Aircraft operations22 418Based aircraft36Source Federal Aviation Administration 1 Topeka Regional Airport is used by the University of Kansas KU for charter flights for its athletic teams and by schools visiting the KU campus in Lawrence which is 34 miles 55 km east of the airport via the Kansas Turnpike Kansas City International Airport is 51 miles 82 km from KU The airport had scheduled airline service by multiple carriers until 2014 Federal Aviation Administration records say the airport had 11 573 passenger boardings enplanements in calendar year 2019 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Historical airline service 2 Facilities 3 Airlines and destinations 4 References 5 Other sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory EditTopeka Regional Airport formerly Forbes Field is on the site of the Topeka Army Airfield later Forbes Air Force Base a former Strategic Air Command SAC facility that was transferred to Tactical Air Command in 1964 while retaining SAC gained tenants Forbes AFB closed in 1973 but retained a USAF presence in the form of a SAC gained Air National Guard installation that was previously a tenant command at Forbes AFB With the departure of active duty Regular Air Force personnel and units the remaining military activity was named Forbes Air National Guard Base Most of the former base administrative area is now used for offices and an industrial park The 190th Air Refueling Wing 190 ARW of the Kansas Air National Guard continues to part of the airport as a military cantonment area and Air National Guard installation known as Forbes Field Air National Guard Base the wing currently flies and maintains the Boeing KC 135R Stratotanker From 1942 to 1973 the following Air Force components supervised the airfield Second Air Force 1942 1945 Continental Air Forces 1945 1947 Air Materiel Command 1947 1948 1949 1951 In inactive status Strategic Air Command 1948 1949 1951 1964 Tactical Air Command 1964 1973 Air National Guard 1973 presentIn April 1976 except for areas retained by the Air National Guard most of the former Forbes Air Force Base was turned over to the city of Topeka and Shawnee County During this transition all airline flights moved from the Philip Billard Municipal Airport to the newly established Forbes Field On June 1 1976 the original Frontier Airlines 1950 1986 scheduled the first jet out of Forbes Field a Boeing 737 200 Shortly afterward the Combat Air Museum was established on the airport In 1981 a bond to build a new air terminal was rejected but approved in 1982 The 5 million terminal was completed in 1985 The terminal has five airline ticket counters and two rental car counters Currently Hertz is the only rental car company at FOE There is one baggage claim carousel Several charter and military flights use the terminal today In 2012 the MTAA Board of Directors renamed the facility to Topeka Regional Airport and Business Center maintaining the name of the airfield as Forbes Field Topeka Regional Airport is currently the home of the Kansas Air National Guard s 190th Air Refueling Wing and the 1st Battalion 108th Aviation Regiment Kansas Army National Guard 4 Historical airline service Edit Airline service began in the early 1930s by a small mail carrier United States Airways which flew a route between Denver and Kansas City Flights made stops in Goodland Salina and Topeka Kansas using a five passenger Metal Aircraft Flamingo In the early 1940s three new airlines began service flying Douglas DC 3 aircraft through the Philip Billard Municipal Airport near downtown Topeka Trans World Airlines TWA added Topeka as one of many stops on the carriers transcontinental route between Los Angeles and New York Topeka was a stop between Wichita and Kansas City The carrier later upgraded to Martin 4 0 4 aircraft Braniff International Airways added Topeka as one of many stops on their mainline route between Chicago and Houston Topeka was also a stop between Kansas City and Wichita Continental Airlines added Topeka as a stop on a route between Denver and Kansas City which also included a stop at Salina Kansas Ozark Airlines also briefly served Topeka in the early 1950s with a route between Kansas City and Tulsa that stopped in Topeka and two other cities Ozark and Braniff ended service in 1954 TWA ended in 1958 and Continental ended by 1960 Central Airlines began service in 1958 with DC 3s by picking up the routes to Kansas City and Wichita formerly operated by TWA and Braniff The carrier then picked up Continental s route to Denver by 1960 using a Convair 240 and became the only airline at Topeka Central s service continued until the company merged with the original Frontier Airlines in 1967 Frontier then served Topeka using 50 seat Convair 580 aircraft with nonstop flights to Kansas City as well as multi stop flights to Denver St Louis and Wichita Several air taxi and commuter airlines provided shuttle flights to Kansas City in the late 1960s and early 1970s including Trans Mo Airlines Allen Aviation Air Associates Inc and Shawnee Air Commuter 5 After moving to the current Forbes Field in 1976 Topeka then saw multiple new carriers some providing jet service Frontier Airlines upgraded their service with Boeing 737 200 jets direct to Kansas City Denver and Wichita and added flights to Chicago O hare International Airport with a stop in Lincoln Nebraska In the early 1980s Frontier also operated nonstop jets to Manhattan KS and Joplin MO The carrier introduced the McDonnell Douglas MD80 jet to Topeka shortly before ending all service in 1984 Capitol Air Service began shuttle flights to Kansas City Manhattan and Salina Kansas around 1970 From 1987 through 1989 the carrier had a codeshare agreement with the new Braniff Airways and operated as Braniff Express Capitol Air flew Cessna 402 and de Havilland Canada DHC 6 Twin Otter aircraft and shut down about the time of the Braniff collapse in 1989 Trans Central Airlines provided commuter flights to Oklahoma City and onto Dallas Fort Worth in 1981 and 1982 using Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner aircraft The original Midway Airlines provided Douglas DC 9 10 jet service to Chicago Midway International Airport with a stop in Kansas City from 1982 through 1985 Up to three flights per day were operated United Airlines provided mainline jet service in 1986 and 1987 with three daily flights to the carrier s hub at Denver making one stop at Kansas City or Wichita and one daily flight to Chicago O Hare making one stop in Lincoln Boeing 727 and Boeing 737 jets were used Air Midwest began commuter flights to Kansas City in 1981 using Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner II aircraft Air Midwest went on to operate several codeshare services with major airlines the first being with Eastern Airlines in 1985 Air Midwest operated as Eastern Express feeding Eastern s hub at Kansas City until 1988 when Eastern dismantled the Kansas City hub operation By then Braniff had established a hub at Kansas City and Air Midwest became a Braniff Express feeder carrier along with Capitol Air Within a year Braniff had shut down and Air Midwest reverted to operating under their own branding at Kansas City Air Midwest also had codeshare agreements with other major airlines including one with TWA at that carrier s hub in St Louis In late 1989 Air Midwest began nonstop flights from Topeka to St Louis operating as Trans World Express while discontinuing its flights to Kansas City British Aerospace Jetstream 31 aircraft were used This service ended in early 1991 as Air Midwest established yet another codeshare agreement at Kansas City with US Airways Flights to Kansas City were restored now as US Airways Express using Beechcraft 1900 aircraft This service was long term and continued until Air Midwest ended Topeka service in November 2003 Air Midwest had the only service at Topeka from 1989 through 2003 The 1980s were the boom years for traffic at Forbes Field as the airport handled up to 180 000 passengers per year 6 7 8 By the 1990s however the airport saw a dramatic drop in traffic and scheduled passenger service became subsidized by the Essential Air Service program 9 10 This subsidized service ended in May 2003 due to federal law prohibiting a subsidy over 200 per passenger for airports within 210 miles of the nearest large or medium hub airport Kansas City International Airport a medium hub is 71 miles away This caused the final carrier Air Midwest dba US Airways Express to end service 11 After three years with no service Allegiant Air came to Topeka in 2006 with nonstop jet flights to Las Vegas on two days per week The carrier used McDonnell Douglas MD80s but ended service on July 30 2007 12 13 An additional effort to revive scheduled airline service was made when United Express operated by ExpressJet began flights on January 7 2014 with two daily Embraer 145 regional jets nonstop to Chicago s O Hare International Airport The service only lasted eight months however and ceased on September 2 2014 14 15 United Express was the most recent airline at Topeka with non stop flights to Chicago O Hare that ended in September 2014 Facilities EditTopeka Regional Airport covers 2 854 acres 1 155 ha at an elevation of 1 078 feet 329 m above mean sea level It has two concrete runways 13 31 is 12 803 by 200 feet 3 902 x 61 m and 3 21 is 7 001 by 150 feet 2 134 x 46 m 1 In the year ending October 31 2017 the airport had 22 418 aircraft operations average 61 per day 65 military 32 general aviation 3 air taxi and lt 1 airline 36 aircraft were then based at this airport 25 single engine 14 multi engine 11 jet and 50 military 1 Airlines and destinations EditThe airport has had no airline service since September 2 2014 16 References Edit Kansas portal a b c d FAA Airport Form 5010 for FOE PDF Federal Aviation Administration Effective April 5 2012 2011 2015 NPIAS Report Appendix A PDF 2 03 MB National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems Federal Aviation Administration October 4 2010 Enplanements for CY 2019 PDF 1 0 MB Calendar Year 2019 Final Revenue Enplanements at All Airports Federal Aviation Administration September 25 2020 Information from MTAA website http www mtaa topeka org about airport history topeka regional airport Accessed on September 23 2013 multiple airline timetables from timetableimages com Anderson Phil Vegas Bound The Topeka Capital Journal Retrieved May 5 2006 Schofield Adrian Topeka Targets More Growth As Commercial Flights Return Aviation Now Retrieved May 5 2006 Forbes Field ANG GlobalSecurity org Retrieved May 14 2006 Essential Air Service Communities Eliminated from Subsidy Eligibility Office of Aviation Analysis U S Department of Transportation July 2010 Archived from the original on May 21 2012 Topeka KS by Order 2003 4 16 effective May 1 2003 Order 2003 4 16 U S Department of Transportation April 18 2003 Order 2003 2 28 U S Department of Transportation February 28 2003 Allegiant Air Las Vegas Schedule Retrieved May 5 2006 Archived May 4 2006 at the Wayback Machine Allegiant Air to end Topeka service The Capital Journal Topeka June 1 2007 Topeka nets daily flights to Chicago United Airlines Nears Final Departure From Topeka Airport www wibw com Archived from the original on 2015 07 12 Official Airline Guide September 2014Other sources EditEssential Air Service documents Docket OST 1996 1352 from the U S Department of Transportation Order 2000 7 35 July 28 2000 tentatively re selecting Air Midwest Inc d b a US Airways Express to provide essential air service at Topeka Kansas for the two year period ending December 31 2001 at an annual subsidy rate totaling 722 199 Order 2001 8 13 August 10 2001 tentatively re selecting Air Midwest Inc d b a US Airways Express to provide essential air service at Topeka Kansas for the two year period beginning January 1 2002 at an annual rate of 621 872 Order 2003 2 28 February 28 2003 requests interested persons to show cause why we should not terminate subsidy for essential air service at Topeka Kansas and allow Air Midwest Inc d b a US Airways Express to suspend service there as of May 1 2003 Order 2003 4 16 April 18 2003 terminates subsidy for essential air service at Topeka Kansas and allows Air Midwest Inc d b a US Airways Express to suspend service as of May 1 2003 Further reading EditMaurer Maurer Air Force Combat Units of World War II Washington DC U S Government Printing Office 1961 republished 1983 Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 02 1 Ravenstein Charles A Air Force Combat Wings Lineage and Honors Histories 1947 1977 Maxwell Air Force Base Alabama Office of Air Force History 1984 ISBN 0 912799 12 9 Mueller Robert Air Force Bases Volume I Active Air Force Bases Within the United States of America on 17 September 1982 Office of Air Force History 1989External links EditAerial image as of February 2002 from USGS The National Map FAA Airport Diagram PDF effective February 23 2023 FAA Terminal Procedures for FOE effective February 23 2023 Resources for this airport AirNav airport information for KFOE ASN accident history for FOE FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker NOAA NWS weather observations current past three days SkyVector aeronautical chart for KFOE FAA current FOE delay information Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Topeka Regional Airport amp oldid 1140789397, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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