The City of Oshawa has finalized a major operational shift in its management of local municipal airspace, executing a formal legal framework to depress chronic acoustic pollution over surrounding residential subdivisions. According to a joint committee brief delivered on Tuesday, May 26, 2026, the municipality has entered into a binding Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Enterprise Air and its subsidiary flight school, the Durham Flight Academy. The Oshawa Airport Noise Agreement 2026 introduces immediate, structural operational adjustments designed to provide long-awaited relief to neighboring property owners.
The breakthrough directly addresses a decades-long friction point between the city’s economic infrastructure and local residential livability. Because aviation regulation sits strictly under federal transport jurisdiction, the negotiated local compromise bypasses standard municipal enforcement limits to deliver a cooperative framework between airfield operators and neighborhood advocates.
Mandated Flight Training Structural Restrictions
The newly signed accord targets the high-frequency flight loops that generate the highest volume of localized noise complaints. Effective immediately, the flight academy must alter its pilot curriculum to comply with four strict scheduling caps:
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Total Sunday Blackouts: A complete elimination of all circuit training operations for the entire calendar day on Sundays. This hard ban directly covers high-noise “touch-and-go” practices alongside repetitive full-stop circuit training lines.
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Saturday Evening Curfews: An absolute cessation of all low-altitude circuit training operations on Saturdays starting at 4:00 p.m.
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Booking Threshold Extensions: The implementation of a mandatory two-hour minimum aircraft booking block on Saturdays after 4:00 p.m. and throughout the entire day on Sundays, a technical shift engineered to mathematically slash the overall frequency of consecutive departures and arrivals.
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Statutory Holiday Groundings: A complete grounding of all instructional flight training sessions and private aircraft rental flights across ten recognized statutory holidays annually (including Canada Day, Civic Holiday, Labour Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day).
The administrative breakthrough was heavily guided by Safety and Facilities Services Committee Chair Brian Nicholson and Commissioner Adam Grant, alongside city CAO Tracy Adams and Ward 5 Councillor Tito-Dante Marimpietri. The structural adjustments build upon secondary airport modernization files, including a previous fleet-size cap agreement with the Durham Flight Centre, heavy capital investment into aerodrome reconfiguration paths, and the successful relocation of a separate flight school away from the tarmac earlier this year.
The Historical Operating Timeline: Countdown to 2047
The Oshawa Executive Airport holds a deep history in the region, originally opening its runways in 1941 to train Allied fighter pilots during the Second World War before the City assumed asset ownership in 1947—long before modern residential housing rows expanded into the northern concession lines.
While community noise complaints surged from a baseline of 50 per year in the early 2000s to over 300 annual filings during the height of the pandemic, the long-term future of the prime real estate remains strictly capped. Under a historic 50-year Operating and Options Agreement signed with the federal government back in 1997, the city is legally obligated to maintain airport operations until 2047.
Oshawa City Council has already passed emphatic, binding motions declaring that this mid-century operational window will not be extended under any circumstances. While the town recently renewed its central facility management contract with Total Aviation & Airport Solutions through 2031, the long-term municipal master plan anticipates a complete conversion of the airfield acreage into high-yield, master-planned residential and commercial real estate subdivisions the moment the federal clock runs out.





















