Residents raised concerns about training flights that include frequent touch-and-go operations, and council members asked whether the city could take action to reduce noise.
City officials explained that once aircraft are airborne, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) generally has authority and the city’s regulatory options are limited. The mayor and airport staff said the airport manager is reviewing technology and fuel alternatives and described an incentive-based approach the state is considering that could encourage adoption of lower-lead or electric aircraft.
Speakers noted that training patterns vary and do not always use the same flight paths, which complicates complaints tied to any single departure corridor. The council discussed whether the airport could attract electric-aircraft test operations or manufacturers to the airport as a long-term strategy to lower noise, and staff said they are exploring options and can point residents to recorded presentations and past FAA-related case materials on the city website.
No formal policy or regulation changes were proposed in the transcript; staff recommended continuing outreach and said some technical and regulatory constraints will require FAA coordination.