Henry Kuitu, who served as executive director of the Metropolitan Airports Commission from 1960 to 1976, died at his Inver Grove Heights home on Jan. 2.
Kuitu, who grew up in Cloquet and lived in St. Paul for many years, was 96.
He was at the controls of the MAC when many believed that the Twin Cities should be planning a second main airport farther from the urban center and when air traffic was growing by leaps and bounds.
Then as now, airport noise was in the news.
"After investigation of all potential airport sites in the area, the MAC staff has recommended acquisitions of 15,000 to 20,000 acres of land identified as the Ham Lake Site," Kuitu wrote in 1969 for an industry magazine. He said the site for a second airport was a good one in terms of air safety, closeness to population centers and "especially as regards aircraft noise."
By 1973, noise and air-traffic problems were no longer considered urgent.
Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport "is one of the finest airports in the world" and should continue to serve all kinds of aircraft, Kuitu said in the Feb. 2, 1973, Minneapolis Star.
Next he turned his attention to making improvements at the Twin Cities airport.