{"id":40,"date":"2009-03-15T00:05:53","date_gmt":"2009-03-15T00:05:53","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2009-03-15T00:05:53","modified_gmt":"2009-03-15T00:05:53","slug":"2009-natl-general-aviation-award-winners-named","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/stateaviationjournal.com\/index.php\/news\/news-release\/2009-natl-general-aviation-award-winners-named\/%20","title":{"rendered":"2009 NAT&#8217;L GENERAL AVIATION AWARD WINNERS NAMED"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>LONGMONT, Colorado (12 March 2009)<\/strong> &#8211; In each of the past 45 years, the General Aviation Awards program and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) have recognized a small group of aviation professionals in the fields of flight instruction, aviation maintenance, avionics, and safety for their contributions to aviation, education, and flight safety. <\/p>\n<p>This awards program is a cooperative effort between the FAA and more than a dozen industry sponsors.&nbsp; The selection process begins with local FAA Safety Team managers at Flight Standards District Offices (FSDO) and then moves on to the eight regional FAA offices.&nbsp; Panels of aviation professionals from within those four fields then select national winners from the pool of regional winners.<br \/>\n&nbsp; <br \/>\nRecipients of this year&#8217;s national awards are Alfred Joseph &quot;Lucky&quot; Louque of Chatfield, Texas, Aviation Maintenance Technician (AMT) of the Year; Arlynn Marine McMahon, Versailles, Kentucky, Certificated Flight Instructor (CFI) of the Year; Paul Jerome &quot;Jerry&quot; Stooksbury of Fort Collins, Colorado, Avionics Technician of the Year; and Kent Blair Lewis of Keller, Texas, FAA Safety Team Representative of the Year.&nbsp; Previously, this award was the Aviation Safety Counselor (ASC) of the Year.<\/p>\n<p>The FAA administrator will present the national awards in July during a &quot;Theater in the Woods&quot; program at EAA AirVenture 2009 in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.&nbsp; Included in the prize package for all four national winners is an all expense paid trip to Oshkosh for the recipient and a guest to attend the awards presentation and other GA Awards activities.&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>&quot;These awards highlight the important role played by these individuals in promoting aviation education and flight safety,&quot; said JoAnn Hill, General Aviation Awards Committee chairperson.&nbsp; &quot;The awards program sponsors are pleased that these outstanding aviation professionals will receive the recognition they so richly deserve before their peers in Oshkosh.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>2009 FAA SAFETY TEAM REPRESENTATIVE OF THE YEAR:&nbsp; Kent Lewis of Keller, Texas, exemplifies a high&nbsp;standard of professionalism in the field of aviation safety education.&nbsp; He serves as a FAASTeam Lead Representative in the Fort Worth area where he conducts FAA WINGS seminars and maintains&nbsp;safety websites. &nbsp;He has been in love with aviation since 1969 when, at the age of nine, he was a fence line observer of Braniff Airways 747 operations at Love Field, TX.&nbsp; Today he holds an airline transport pilot certificate with an AMEL rating as well as CFI, CFII, MEI, and commercial helicopter. <\/p>\n<p>Kent created the Signal Charlie (http:\/\/www.SignalCharlie.net) wikispace, a web based aviation safety information resource developed to promote safety in high reliability and high-risk organizations.&nbsp; Signal Charlie is dedicated to the continuous improvement of aerospace safety.&nbsp; He also is the owner of Fort Worth Aviation Safety Program Google group (http:\/\/groups.google.com\/group\/ftwasp).&nbsp; The site was developed to teach a continuing improvement process that promotes the reporting of aviation safety issues.&nbsp; He was recruited to be a member of the FAASTeam as a subject matter expert for human factors and safety management s systems (SMS) applications for general aviation.&nbsp; He serves as a liaison for helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS) issues and facilitates the FAA Southwest Region Runway Safety Summit as well as WINGS seminars. &nbsp;Additionally he has developed aviation heritage initiatives and&nbsp;assists with Young Eagles programs in his local area.<\/p>\n<p>Joining&nbsp; the United States Marine Corps in 1979, Kent worked his way up through the enlisted ranks as an avionics technician with one meritorious promotion after another.&nbsp; Upon being commissioned in 1987, he completed an intense fixed and rotary wing flight training program, and was designated an unrestricted Naval Aviator.&nbsp; After a distinguished 20-year Marine Corps career, he began a second flying career with Delta Airlines.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>With Delta, he performs domestic and international operations on B727, B737, MD-88, and B777.&nbsp; He has also been a Bell 206L-3 captain and S-76 SIC with Houston Helicopters.&nbsp; Lewis serves as an Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) Air Safety Representative, is member of the ALPA National Committees on Runway Safety, Human Factors and Safety Management Systems.&nbsp; He is an ALPA representative to the FAA Runway Safety Root Cause Analysis Team, the NTSB, and the NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System program.<\/p>\n<p>Kent is a charter member of the Society of Aviation and Flight Educators (SAFE), a new national organization for aviation educators, as well as the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA), Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA), International Society of Air Safety Investigators (ISASI), and NAFI.<\/p>\n<p>Lewis (Lewis.Kent@gmail.com) represented the Fort Worth FSDO area and the FAA&#8217;s Southwest Region.&nbsp; This year&#8217;s other regional winners include MCFI-E Alan C Davis of Thornton, CO (FAA&#8217;s Northwest Mountain Region); Ellen Marie Nobles-Harris of Wilmington, DE (FAA&#8217;s Eastern Region);&nbsp; Dennis L Bowdoin of Fowlerville, MI (FAA&#8217;s Great Lakes Region); Richard Lawrence Martindell of San Diego, CA (FAA&#8217;s Western Pacific Region); Harry Narvaez-Munet of Vega Alta, Puerto Rico (FAA&#8217;s Southern Region); and William Alexander Hopper of Manchester, MO (FAA&#8217;s Central Region).&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (Attached photo: 2009 Nat&#8217;l FAA Safety Team Representative of the Year Kent Lewis of Keller, TX)<\/p>\n<p>2009 NATIONAL CFI OF THE YEAR:&nbsp; Master CFI Arlynn McMahon, the 2009 National CFI of the Year, grew up at Kentucky&rsquo;s Lexington-Blue Grass Airport (LEX) where she was the kid in pigtails sweeping hangar floors and washing airplanes.&nbsp; On her 16th birthday, she soloed; on her 17th birthday, she earned her private pilot certificate. &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Now, more than three decades later, she is a flight instructor at the very same airport with more than 9000 hours of dual given.&nbsp; She specializes in training CFI candidates.&nbsp; Says McMahon, &quot;Lexington provides a great learning environment because the weather allows for year round flying while the students get to experience several different weather patterns through the seasons.&rdquo;&nbsp; She also earned a BS degree in Professional Aeronautics from Embry Riddle and an MBA in Strategic Leadership from Amberton University. &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>A flight instructor at Aero-Tech (www.AeroTech.net), a part 141 \/ part 61 flight school at LEX, she continually updates her skills after adding a CFII, MEI, AGI and Gold Seal to her original flight instructor certificate by completing transition training in glass cockpits and light sport aircraft.&nbsp; A Cirrus Certified Instructor, a Cessna Factory Authorized FITS Instructor, and an FAA Designated Examiner for Sport Pilots, she now serves as Aero-Tech&#8217;s chief flight instructor.&nbsp; &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>When a new approach to general aviation flight training called FITS and scenario-based training was introduced, Arlynn was eager to jump onboard.&nbsp; Aero-Tech was the first traditional flight school to offer FITS-accepted courses.&nbsp; To date the school has a total of 34 FITS-accepted FAA approved training syllabi.&nbsp; Recently, ASA published her book entitled &ldquo;Train Like You Fly, a Flight Instructor&rsquo;s Guide to Scenario Based Training.&rdquo;&nbsp; She also provided editorial assistance for the newly revised FAA Aviation Instructor&#8217;s Handbook.<\/p>\n<p>Several years ago, Arlynn discovered a love of and a talent for writing when she wrote for AOPA&rsquo;s &ldquo;Flight School Business.&rdquo;&nbsp; Since then, she has been published in numerous aviation journals and magazines and writes a monthly column in Aviation for Women. &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Since 1984, she has been active in the FAA&rsquo;s National Safety Program and currently serves as an FAA Safety Team (FAASTeam) representative with the Louisville FSDO.&nbsp; The holder of Master Level wings in the FAA&rsquo;s WINGS Pilot Proficiency Program, she contributes to the quarterly FAASTeam CFI workshops.&nbsp; A current Master CFI, she first earned that national professional accreditation in 2002.<\/p>\n<p>A resident of Versailles, KY, Arlynn is a charter member of the Society of Aviation and Flight Educators (SAFE), a new organization for aviation educators, and is a candidate for SAFE&rsquo;s board of directors.&nbsp; She is also a member of AOPA, NAFI, and WAI. <\/p>\n<p>McMahon (Arlynn@AeroTech.net)&nbsp;represented the Louisville FSDO area and the FAA&#8217;s Central Region.&nbsp; This year&#8217;s other regional CFI of the Year winners include Charles H Ebbecke of Mullica Hill, NJ (FAA&#8217;s Eastern Region); Master CFI Charles Ray McGill of San Diego, CA (FAA&#8217;s Western Pacific Region); Master CFI Ken Wittekiend of Burnet, TX (FAA&#8217;s Southwest Region); Master CFI John Lewis of Houghton, MI (FAA&#8217;s Great Lakes Region); and James Lawrence Camden of Centennial, CO (FAA&#8217;s Northwest Mountain Region).&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Attached photo: 2009 Nat&#8217;l Certificated Flight Instructor of the Year MCFI Arlynn McMahon of Versailles, KY) <br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\n2009 AVIATION MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN OF THE YEAR:&nbsp;&nbsp; Alfred J &ldquo;Lucky&rdquo; Louque of Chatfield, Texas, is this year&rsquo;s National Aviation Maintenance Technician of the Year.&nbsp; He is the general manager for Air Salvage of Dallas (www.ASOD.com) and works with the FAA, NTSB, and aviation industry on aircraft accident investigations and reconstructions.&nbsp; Spending his days answering technical questions on both the telephone and the Internet, he also performs quality assurance inspections, researches parts, and handles customer sales.&nbsp; Lucky provides assistance with coordinating and scheduling accident investigations as well as aircraft component studies, engine teardowns, and test runs.&nbsp; Air Salvage of Dallas is located at the Lancaster Airport (LNC) in Lancaster, Texas.<\/p>\n<p>Growing up in Louisiana, Lucky loved airplanes since childhood.&nbsp; Whenever he heard an airplane, he stopped whatever he was doing to gaze skyward.&nbsp; His mother always said that she knew she would lose him to airplanes.&nbsp; When still a very young man, he had the opportunity to move to Texas and work for an aunt and uncle at Air Salvage of Dallas.&nbsp; He jumped at the chance and has now been turning wrenches there for almost four decades.&nbsp; He has held a mechanic&rsquo;s airframe and powerplant (A&amp;P) certificate for 39 years and an inspection authorization (IA) for 35 years.&nbsp; For the past fifteen years, he has served as an FAA Designated Maintenance Examiner (DME) as well as a Designated Airworthiness Representative (DAR).&nbsp; Lucky has been a certificated private certificate for 39 years and holds ASEL and AMEL ratings.<\/p>\n<p>Aircraft accident investigation has been a large part of his work for the past three decades.&nbsp; In that capacity, he teaches formal classes on the art and science of accident investigation.&nbsp; Because aviation safety is extremely important to him, he has done remedial training for the FAA and presented aviation safety seminars for pilots and mechanics for 20 years.&nbsp; He joined the FAA&rsquo;s national safety program as an Aviation Safety Counselor in 1994 and recently transitioned into the new safety program as a FAASTeam lead representative.&nbsp; He has taught numerous aviation industry courses on &quot;unapproved suspect aircraft parts&quot; and has conducted a popular annual IA renewal seminar in Dallas for the past 14 years.&nbsp; Not only does he enjoy lecturing, but he also authors articles for the FAA newsletter &quot;Nuts &amp; Bolts&quot; as well as local EAA chapter newsletters.&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>Lucky belongs to Aircraft Owners &amp; Pilots Association (AOPA) and is an advisor and speaker for the American Bonanza Society (ABS).&nbsp; He participates as a Technical Counselor and conducts educational activities with Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA) chapters 168 in Dallas, 59 in Grapevine, 983 in Granbury, and 34 in Dalworth.<\/p>\n<p>Louque ( Lucky@ASOD.com) represented the Dallas FSDO area as well as the FAA&#8217;s Southwest Region.&nbsp; This year&#8217;s other regional AMT winners include Jack Duane Bell of Watkins, CO (FAA&#8217;s Northwest Mountain Region); Keith Evan Hetrick of Topeka, KS (FAA&#8217;s Central Region); Stephen Stodolski of Colchester, CT (FAA&#8217;s Eastern Region); and Michael P Dougherty of Kailua, HI (FAA&#8217;s Western Pacific Region).&nbsp;&nbsp; (Attached photo: 2009 Nat&#8217;l Aviation Maintenance Technician of the Year Lucky Louque of Chatfield, TX)<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\n2009 AVIONICS TECHNICIAN OF THE YEAR:&nbsp; Jerry Stooksbury, the 2009 National Avionics Technician of the Year, resides in Fort Collins, Colorado.&nbsp; A native of Tennessee, he has been involved in aviation since he was a teenager.&nbsp; First soloing in 1978, he has since earned commercial pilot certification along with instrument, ASEL, and AMEL ratings.&nbsp; He has also been an active flight instructor for over 20 years with airplane single engine and instrument airplane ratings.&nbsp; As a cadet in the Tennessee Wing of the Civil Air Patrol, he participated in several encampments as well as other CAP activities.&nbsp; The CAP organization and its people played a key role in shaping the professional development of this teenager.<\/p>\n<p>His interests in electronics started at about the same time as his aviation interests.&nbsp; Jerry obtained a FCC 2nd Class Radiotelephone Operators permit and an Amateur Radio Operators license in the mid 1970s.&nbsp; After graduating with high honors from the University of Tennessee in 1983 with a degree in electrical engineering, he relocated to Colorado to work for Hewlett-Packard (HP) as a systems engineer.&nbsp; This employment opportunity played a key role in his career.&nbsp; The employees of HP and its corporate culture provided a wide range of experience in new technologies, sales, marketing, business management, and customer relations.&nbsp; Jerry spent 3 years in Europe as an HP employee and took advantage of numerous general aviation flights while there.<\/p>\n<p>In the mid 1990s, he left HP to work with Garmin as their technical marketing manager.&nbsp; Then in 2004, he founded Avionics Specialists, LLC (www.AvionicsSpecialists.net) at Colorado&rsquo;s Fort Collins &#8211; Downtown Airport but relocated the business to the Fort Collins-Loveland Airport (FNL) the following year.&nbsp; The avionics industry was a natural fit for this engineer \/ flight instructor who loves to fly and teach others to fly.&nbsp; He enjoys consulting with pilots to help them determine the right set of products and technologies for their type of flying and their budget.&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>AvSpec currently employs five people who specialize in avionics upgrades for piston singles and light\/medium piston twins.&nbsp; Jerry is also the cofounder of AirportView.net, a web site providing real-time weather camera and AWOS information for airports located in Colorado and the Rocky Mountain region (www.AirportView.net).&nbsp; Jerry and his team are working to expand this network and the depth of information it provides to pilots.&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>A member of AOPA and AOPA&rsquo;s Airport Support Network, he also is a member of the Colorado Pilots Association (CPA), and the Aircraft Electronics Association (AEA) where he serves as an AEA \/ FAA Ambassador for the Denver FSDO.&nbsp; He is also a mission pilot with the Colorado Wing of CAP.&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>Stooksbury (JStooks@AvSpec.aero) represented the Denver FSDO area and the FAA&#8217;s Northwest Mountain Region.&nbsp; This year&#8217;s other regional avionics technician winners were Klarann Voegle of Highland, IL (FAA&#8217;s Central Region); Ronald Mark Wright of Battle Ground, IN (FAA&#8217;s Great Lakes Region); and Michael George Phillips of Glendale, AZ (FAA&#8217;s Western Pacific Region).&nbsp; (Attached photo: 2009 Nat&#8217;l Avionics Technician of the Year Jerry Stooksbury of Fort Collins, CO)<\/p>\n<p>Support and sponsorship for the General Aviation Awards program is provided by Women in Aviation International (WAI), The Society of Aviation and Flight Educators (SAFE), the Professional Aviation Maintenance Ass&#8217;n (PAMA), the National Business Aviation Ass&#8217;n (NBAA), the National Ass&#8217;n of State Aviation Officials (NASAO), the National Air Transportation Ass&#8217;n (NATA), the National Ass&#8217;n of Flight Instructors (NAFI), the Helicopter Ass&#8217;n International (HAI), the General Aviation Manufacturers Ass&#8217;n (GAMA), the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the Experimental Aircraft Ass&#8217;n (EAA), the Aircraft Maintenance Technology Society (AMT Society), the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Ass&#8217;n (AOPA), the Aeronautical Repair Station Ass&#8217;n (ARSA), and Aircraft Electronics Ass&#8217;n (AEA).&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>Information about the General Aviation Awards Program as well as applications for next year&#8217;s awards is available on the websites of sponsoring organizations.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>Alexander &quot;Sandy&quot; Hill<br \/>\nCommunications Director<br \/>\nGA Awards Committee<br \/>\nPhone:&nbsp; 303-485-8136<br \/>\nGenAviationAwds@aol.com<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>LONGMONT, Colorado (12 March 2009) &#8211; In each of the past 45 years, the General Aviation Awards program and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) have recognized a small group of aviation professionals in the fields of flight instruction, aviation maintenance, avionics, and safety for their contributions to aviation, education, and flight safety. This awards program [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[90],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-40","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-news-release"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/stateaviationjournal.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/stateaviationjournal.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/stateaviationjournal.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stateaviationjournal.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stateaviationjournal.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=40"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/stateaviationjournal.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/40\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/stateaviationjournal.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=40"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stateaviationjournal.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=40"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stateaviationjournal.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=40"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}