When Jesus Saenz stepped into his role as director of airports for the City of San Antonio, he naturally had a 30-, 60- and 90-day plan to improve and grow the San Antonio International Airport (SAT). 

Within a month, those plans were sidelined by a travel-busting pandemic, forcing the new airport boss to pivot to short-term basic health and safety while keeping his eye on the future. 

Five years later, Saenz and his team have a new 17-gate terminal and ground load facility under construction. They have turned SAT into the largest medium-sized airport with connectivity to Mexico, integrated new vehicle parking systems and also celebrated history-making wins and losses in air service.

In this week’s episode of the “bigcitysmalltown” podcast, host Robert Rivard spoke with Saenz about construction at the airport and the anticipated non-stop flight to Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA). 

“It’s going to be transformative, and it’s not going to be transformative to one singular terminal — our efforts are to transform the entire asset,” Saenz said of the project he’s overseeing as part of “Elevate/SAT,” the $2.5 billion capital improvement plan.

He talks about why the upcoming inaugural DCA flight, set for March 3, is such a momentous occasion.

Local and state officials have tried unsuccessfully for years to win a DCA slot for San Antonio in the Federal Aviation Administration’s Reauthorization Bill. “And it really put a dent to this community,” he said. “But now we are going to change that … So go buy your tickets.”

Saenz and Rivard also discuss what happened to the city’s first non-stop transatlantic flight — a Condor flight to Frankfurt that lasted only months — and what he thinks about the ongoing legal challenges brought by Southwest Airlines. 

“Nothing good comes easy,” he said. 

Listen to episode 90 of the “bigcitysmalltown” podcast below.

YouTube video

Disclosure: Robert Rivard is the co-founder of the San Antonio Report.

Shari covered business and development for the San Antonio Report from 2017 to 2025. A graduate of St. Mary’s University, she has worked in the corporate and nonprofit worlds in San Antonio and as a...