A construction tycoon’s use of a helicopter at his $4.5million vacation home has spawned a lawsuit and numerous neighbor complaints, it’s been revealed.
Doug Schieffer, the 50-year-old CEO of Northland Concrete and Masonry, has filed a lawsuit against the City of East Gull Lake in Minnesota – after they said that the use of his helipad at the lush mansion was ‘unauthorized.’
Schieffer submitted building plans to have a private helipad on the waterfront home in 2020 – but the city snapped back, saying they don’t allow landing strips, or the authorization of takeoff and landing, within its boundaries.
Despite the push back, the brazen millionaire called the city’s rules ‘dumb’ and said that their anti-helipad code is not going to stop him – irrespective of the noise complaints from his neighbors.
After filing his suit, Schieffer argued that his neighbors’ lawnmowers and chainsaws make more noise that his six-seat Bell 206L4 aircraft – which was pictured flying off and on his property.
‘At this point the opposition is all about spite,’ he told The Star Tribune, citing pushback from the lakeside town that has a population less than 1,000.
The masonry mogul – who lives in Webster just a two hours’ drive away – explained that his insistence to keep flying is in part because he wants to be a good father to his kids.
‘There are times where it allows me to travel for work and with other entities that I am a part of,’ he explained. ‘And getting home for, say, kids sports, it’s important, and other health stuff within my family.’
‘[I’m] just trying to be the best dad I can be,’ he eventually concluded. ‘[A]nd be there as much as I can for my kids, but yet also be there for work.’
The suit – which has since elicited a response from the town with photos that show the businessman repeatedly landing the leather-interior craft in his home’s garden – is a saga more than four years in the making.
‘They told me to design and to build my place with hangar incorporated into it, and I did,’ Schieffer explained to Tribune, recalling how he first submitted plans to build a helipad.
‘Everyone’s got a right to make noise,’ he insisted. ‘That’s absolutely insanity.’ Responding to town officials’ insistence that he should not even be allowed to even store the aircraft on his property, he said, ‘They don’t have a leg to stand on. The burden of proof is on them.’
The city, meanwhile, maintains the helipad is a zoning violation. ‘They’ve had complaints from neighbors,’ Jason Kuboushek, the attorney representing the city, said.
‘They continue to get complaints from neighbors,’ he asserted. ‘Neighbors have attorneys that are complaining. The city just wants it to end.’
Schieffer, in response, defended his helicopter ‘passion’, telling the Twin Cities paper that ‘there’s [been] just too much opposition.’
He believes it’s a mere matter of semantics – one where city officials are supposedly splitting hairs over legal definitions and terminology surrounding the word ‘airport.’
‘The vast majority of my close neighbors don’t care, and there’s no harm to them,’ he said ahead of a looming courtroom showdown now slated for January.
The hearing will be in Minnesota’s 9th judicial district, after the state’s federal court dismissed the matter in December of last year.
Within months, the Minnesota Department of Transportation issued a cease and desist order to Schieffer – one the city has said was ignored.
Photos included in their response show Schieffer’s helicopter airborne over the summer, more than two years after county commissioners put a stop to another bid from the seasonal, part-time resident, who filed a permit application in the summer of 2021, only to see it tabled as officials looked into the supposed opposition from neighbors.
In April 2022, Crow Wing County commissioners unanimously updated the ordinance to now longer allow private airplanes in the shoreland district, which was designed to account for seaplanes.
Schieffer’s quest to commute by air saw that right pulled, seemingly leaving him without a legal leg to stand on.
Numerous complaints of sound from the aircraft were recorded in 2023 – a total of nine, legal filings between the two parties show.
Filings further show Scheiffer admitting to several of the instances, while casting down on others.
The city, meanwhile, maintains it received a renewed stream of complaints this past summer – when Scheiffer is typically seen in town.
The hearing is scheduled January 8 before District Judge Jana Austad. She will have three months to deliver a judgment.
DailyMail.com has reached out to Scheiffer for comment. He did immediately provide a response.