In 1928 the citizens of Klamath Falls approved the sale of $50,000 worth of bonds to build Klamath Falls Municipal Airport. It had gravel runways and one Fixed-Base Operator; in 1942 it was selected for a Naval Air Station later named NAS Klamath Falls. In 1945 the airport transferred back to civil use; the January 1952 C&GS diagram shows runway 7, 14 and 18. In 1954 the airport was selected as a site for U.S. Air Force installation under a joint civil-military arrangement supporting Air Defense Command, later Aerospace Defense Command aircraft and squadrons. In 1957 the airport was dedicated as Kingsley Field in honor of 2nd Lieutenant David R. Kingsley, USAAF, an Oregonian killed in action on June 23, 1944 after a B-17 bombing mission over the oil fields of Ploesti, Rumania. In 1976 ADC was inactivated and control of the military installation passed to Tactical Air Command. In 1978 the Department of Defense closed Kingsley Field as a regular Air Force installation, transferring all military facilities to the Air National Guard.
Facilities
Crater Lake - Klamath Regional Airport covers 1,166 acres at an elevation of 4,095 feet. It has two runways: 14/32 is 10,301 by 150 feet asphalt and concrete; 7/25 is 5,258 by 100 feet asphalt. In 2011 the airport had 39,004 aircraft operations, average 106 per day: 43% general aviation, 41% military, 14% air taxi, and 2% airline. 170 aircraft were then based at the airport: 62% single-engine, 19% jet, 15% military, 3% multi-engine, and 1% helicopter.
Airline history
Until 1959 United Airlines Douglas DC-3s and Convair 340s served Klamath Falls; later West Coast Airlines flew Fairchild F-27s to cities in Oregon and California. West Coast merged with Bonanza Air Lines and Pacific Air Lines to form Air West which changed its name to Hughes Airwest and merged into Republic Airlines. Air West and Hughes Airwest continued to serve the airport with F-27s. Hughes Airwest introduced the first jets, Douglas DC-9-10 and McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30s; successor Republic DC-9s continued to serve the airport until 1983. In the late 1970s - early 1980s Air OregonFairchild Swearingen Metroliners flew direct to Portland, Seattle and other cities. In the mid 1980s Pacific Express BAC One-Elevens flew to San Francisco via Redding, California and to Portland via Redmond. Horizon Air, a subsidiary of Alaska Airlines, flew de Havilland Canada DHC-8 Dash 8s to Portland and Seattle. WestAir flew BAe Jetstream 31s to San Francisco while Reno Air Express flew BAe Jetstream 31s to San Jose, California. United Express pulled out of Klamath Falls in the late 1990s but resumed flights when Horizon Air quit the airport. SkyWest Embraer EMB-120 Brasilias were the last airliners at Klamath Falls. In late 2010 SkyWest dropped one flight to Portland. Passenger count dropped in 2011, but passengers per flight increased. United Express, operated by SkyWest, terminated service to Portland and San Francisco on June 5, 2014. PenAir started Saab 340B flights from Klamath Falls to Portland on October 6, 2016. Initially, the proposed service by PenAir was on hold from 2015 due to federal Transportation Security Administration refusal to station security personnel at the terminal. As of August 2017, this service has ended, following PenAir filing for bankruptcy.
Airlines and destinations
Cargo
Funding
The Airport City Fund operates the airport's civilian and military interest. Revenue mainly is from city property taxes, transient room taxes and the rental activities in the airport itself. Because of the commercial flights at the airport, the Federal Aviation Administration contributes funds to keep the runways and taxiways in good conditions.