For more than 35 years, Robert Epting has been flying in and out of Horace Williams Airport. And for much of the time he’s been using it, he said, Chapel Hill residents and University officials have been underestimating their local airport’s worth.
“The value of that airport for our community is often overlooked and misstated,” said Epting, a lawyer and former UNC professor.
Since 2002, UNC officials have been attempting to close the airport in order to make way for the University’s Carolina North satellite campus. One of the most recent attempts to close the airport came in an early version of the 2013 N.C. General Assembly budget, which would have closed Horace Williams on Aug. 1.
The newest version of the budget, released Sunday, did not include a provision to mandate the closing. But that doesn’t guarantee the airport will remain open indefinitely.
University spokeswoman Susan Hudson said no date has been set for the construction of Carolina North, as funding for the project has not been finalized. She said ultimately, the University will need the land the airport currently occupies.
“We have been able to do some infrastructure work at Carolina North,” she said in an email.
“But we will need to close the airport to start construction on the first building there because most of the development area for Carolina North is located on or near the runway.”
Nearly 90 years of flight
First opened in 1928, the airport was bought by UNC and named for former philosophy professor Henry Horace Williams after he died in 1940. During World War II, it served as a Navy pre-flight training school and saw former presidents Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush pass through, along with baseball player Ted Williams.