Northwest Aerospace News August | September Issue No. 4 | Page 4
AEROSPACE
NORTHWEST
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708 North Argonne Road #18
Spokane Valley,WA 99212
NORTHWEST AEROSPACE NEWS
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PUBLISHER
ISSUE No. 4
DEAN CAMERON
w w w. n o r t hwes t aerospacenews.co m
PUBLISHER
DEAN CAMERON
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CREATIVE DIRECTOR
& EDITORIAL DESIGN
REBECCA LLOYD
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COPY EDITOR
& PROOFREADER
ANN CONTOIS
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CONTRIBUTING WRITERS:
DEAN CAMERON
GOODLOE SUTTON
BRYAN CORLISS
JONATHAN FRANK
PAUL DELANEY
FIONA MCKAY
JENNIFER FERRERO
MARY KAYE BREDESON
LEAD DEVELOPER | I.T. SUPPORT
ADAM TOWNSEND
FINANCE | BOOKKEEPING
PAM CAMERON
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American Heroes
I was recently invited to attend the Spring Meeting of the Association of Washington Businesses here in
Spokane. The keynote speaker was Captain Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger III, who successfully landed
US Airways Flight 1549 on the Hudson River after a flock of Canada geese caused major damage to his
plane. All passengers were successfully rescued.
Recently another very rare commercial airline tragedy took place when a failed engine exploded on
Southwest Airlines Flight 1380, causing severe lack of thrust and drag due to a lost window — one
passenger tragically lost her life. With nerves of steel, Captain Tammie Jo Shults successfully brought
the crippled plane in for a safe landing. She was also reported to have spoken to each passenger after
they landed, to ensure their safety.
What struck me most of all in both cases, was the fact that their background, experience and training
lead them to do an exemplary job when it was needed most. Often someone is hailed a “hero”; in this
case, you hear them say, “I was just doing my job.”
Training, awareness of the situations around us, and the ability to execute your skills when needed
is something business leaders do every day. It may not be as dramatic as a crippled airplane, but it
is no less important. Livelihoods for families, benefits to the health of our communities, success and
growth in your business — all these play a part in the execution of the skills and talents of the “unsung
heroes.”
Here are some aerospace facts.
· There are over 26,500 commercial aircraft flights per day in the U.S.
· That is over 9,672,500 flights per year in the U.S.
· The last commercial plane crash with fatalities was Colgan Air Flight 3407 (a connector flight
with Continental Airlines), which crashed into a house outside Buffalo, New York, on February
12, 2009, killing all 49 aboard and one on the ground.
· Until the tragic accident with loss of life on Southwest Flight 1380, there have been approx-
imately 87,052,500 successful takeoffs and landings of commercial aircraft — without loss of
life in the USA.
To all of you who build parts for this industry, who struggle through the paperwork, the overtime, the
urgent needs, the strict attention to detail and quality — I take my hat off to you and call you a hero.
Keep up the good work!
Dean Cameron
Publisher
NORTHWEST AEROSPACE NEWS