The 12th annual Women In Aviation International (WAI) Conference was held March 22-24 in Reno, Nev., attracting more than 3,300 attendees from all around the world. The networking, job fair and trade show event also featured FAA chief Jane Garvey, saw almost $1 million in scholarships awarded, was the venue for the induction of four new members into the WAI's Pioneer Hall of Fame and broke many previous records for the group's annual convention. AVweb's Ann Devers was there and brought back this report from the exhibit floor and the seminar rooms, plus a collection of exclusive images.
Ann Devers serves
as AVweb's Marketing Manager and works closely in this position with AVweb's
sponsors. In addition, she is responsible for developing and managing AVweb's
presence at various trade shows throughout the U.S. Ann has been closely
involved with the aviation industry for more than 35 years, including work as
an editor for the World Aviation Directory and in advertising and production
for Commuter Air magazine. Ann is also a veteran of the Washington, D.C.,
trade association industry, having held managerial positions with the National
Business Aviation Association, the AOPA Air Safety Foundation and the National
Air Transportation Association (NATA). In addition to this experience, she
also played a major role in the NATA's "Learn To Fly" program during
the mid-1990s before it grew into today's Be A Pilot organization. Among other
current activities, Ann serves as a board member of the Clark County (Nev.)
Aviation Association. Ann earned her Private Pilot certificate in the early
1980s and is the very proud owner of a highly-modified, 180-HP, 1975 Cessna
172M: "Honey."
Current predictions indicate that within the next few years there will
be a pilot and maintenance technician shortage that will impact the aviation
industry in gigantic proportions. With fewer candidates for these jobs
coming from the armed forces, the aviation industry including the
military has come to view the female population as a pool to fill these
shortages.
Fulfilling The Association's Mission
The
12th Annual Women in Aviation International (WAI) Conference, held this year
in Reno, Nev., March 22-24, brought together major airlines, commuter
carriers, trade associations, the federal government, the U.S. armed services,
engine and airframe manufacturers and a host of others with their target
audience: the woman aviation professional. When it was all over,
representatives of those major industry segments and many others totaling some
113 exhibitors courted and wooed over 3,300 WAI attendees, setting a record as
the largest and WAI's most successful conference to date, according to the
association. Indeed, this year's event was in stark contrast to the first WAI
conference, which was held in Prescott, Ariz., in 1990. At that initial
gathering, a comparatively paltry 150 attendees and five table-top exhibits
were present. But, unlike most other aviation-industry events, the commodities
being offered were not sleek, shiny new aircraft, the latest in whiz-bang
avionics or new, more powerful engines. Instead, the commodity was much more
basic: the job of their dreams and a career in aviation.
Female candidates weren't the only ones signing up as WAI members and
attendees at this year's WAI conference. A record number of men signed up,
also, to submit their résumés, to network with their peers and to learn as
much as possible from the educational sessions and professional development
seminars.
Training And Education For Career Development
The
overall feeling of a WAI conference is much different from any other industry
"show." There is very little competition among either exhibitors or
attendees and huge amounts of mentoring. Old and new friends compare notes and
trade insights on how to best focus their careers. Some 36 educational
sessions provided an wide range of information for newcomers to the industry
and to old pros who thought they knew it all until they sat in on a
particular session alike. From air traffic control, to human factors in
aviation maintenance and inspection, to refractive surgery, to work and
family, these educational sessions gave something to everyone who attended.
In addition to the educational sessions, Inspection Authorization Renewal
seminars for maintenance technicians and an Aerospace Educators Workshop were
also held, as well as two extremely informative Professional Development
seminars. "Delivering Dynamic Presentations," led by Gary Kral,
manager of employee development at Cessna Aircraft Company, left his 300-plus
audience members with tips and techniques for their public speaking.
"Career Care," another seminar presented by Cheryl Cage, president
of Cage Consulting, provided a packed room with
positive ways to interact with co-workers, supervisors and the general public.
Afterward, many attendees reported that they closely related to the real-life
examples Ms. Cage presented.
Additional
General Session speakers included: Toni Bailey, vice president of community
and education relations, The Boeing Company; Steve Forte, senior vice
president of flight operations, United Airlines; Elizabeth Haskins, president
and CEO, Signature Flight Support; Moya Lear, aviation pioneer and former
chairman of the board of Lear Avia Inc.; Deborah McElroy, president, Regional
Airline Association; and Karen Tripp, vice president of business
communications, Rockwell Collins, Inc. Brig. Gen. Chuck Yeager, USAF
(retired), test pilot and aviation legend, served as the closing banquet
speaker on Saturday, March 24; FAA Administrator Jane Garvey gave attendees
insight on future changes within the FAA during Friday's General Session; and
Sean D. Tucker, aerobatic pilot, entertained the audience as the luncheon
speaker on Friday.
In stark contrast to most other aviation trade shows, the flavor of this
year's WAI conference was enhanced by children: Some mothers with careers
chose to not leave their children at home. Dads and grandparents were brought
along to assist in the caring while moms took care of business. These
outgoing, happy children were welcome additions to the conference since they
were seen and very seldom heard, proving that mom can have a rewarding career
and raise extraordinary children at the same time.
WAI,
as an association, has made great strides in supplying scholarship assistance
to those who have chosen an aviation career. At this conference, some $901,925
from such name-brand industry participants as Airbus, Boeing, American
Airlines, Cessna, Bombardier, Delta Air Lines, FedEx, Jeppesen, Pratt &
Whitney among others was distributed to 99 women (572 applied) in areas
like dispatch, engineering, training and maintenance, to name a few.
On the last evening of this year's conference, WAI gathered at the closing
banquet to induct four into the International Women in Aviation Pioneer Hall
of Fame, which was established in 1992 to honor women who have made
significant contributions as record setters, pioneers, or innovators in
aviation. Thirty-seven individuals and four aviation groups have been inducted
since the program's inception. This year's inductees were:
Mary Barr, of Janesville, Calif., who learned to fly in a Piper Cub in
1944. After WWII, Barr had a varied career including serving as a FAA
Pilot Examiner and Accident Prevention Counselor, and in a variety of
positions within the United States Forest Service, including the first
woman pilot and smokejumper. In 1964, Barr became one of the first four
women to compete in the Reno Air Races. At the age of 75, Barr continues
to fly for pleasure.
Ann Baumgartner Carl, of Kilmarnock, Va., and Abaco, Bahamas, learned
to fly in 1940 and entered Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) training
during World War II. Later, she was transferred to Wright Field in
Dayton, Ohio, where she became the first and only female test pilot. On
October 14, 1944, Carl became the first woman to fly a jet aircraft, the
Bell YP-59A. After the WASP disbanded in December 1944, Carl returned to
flight instruction, and writing for the New York Times and other
publications.
Elizabeth (Betty) Pfister, of Aspen, Colo., learned to fly in 1941 and
ferried United States Army aircraft for nearly two years during World
War II as a WASP. Pfister served on President Nixon's Women's Advisory
Committee on Aviation from 1969 to 1972. She was also a member of the
United States Helicopter Team, competing in the World Championships in
1973 and 1978.
Elinor Smith, Santa Cruz, Calif., soloed at age 15 and three months
later set an altitude record of 11,889 feet in a Waco 9. In 1927, she
became the youngest licensed pilot on record at the age of 16. At the
age of 18, she became the youngest pilot, male or female, granted a
Transport License by the United States Department of Commerce. In 1929,
Smith and Bobbi Trout set a new women's refueling record of 42.5 hours.
Smith was selected by licensed American pilots as the "Best Woman
Pilot in America," in 1930.
WAI's founder and president, Dr. Peggy Baty-Chabrian,
has assembled a board of directors including men and women from all areas of
the aviation and aerospace industry. Conference volunteers served in every
capacity to insure a successful meeting. The 6,000 WAI members include
astronauts, corporate pilots, maintenance technicians, air traffic
controllers, business owners, educators, journalists, flight attendants, high
school and university students, air show performers, airport managers,
writers, administrators, and others deeply involved in aviation.
Women in Aviation,
International is headquartered in Daytona Beach, Fla., as a non-profit
organization dedicated to the encouragement and advancement of women in all
aviation career fields and interests. This 2001 WAI Conference fulfilled the
association's mission. The 2002 Women In Aviation International Conference
will be held in Nashville, Tennessee.