Cited For Fair, Insightful Coverage Of General Aviation
A freelance reporter
from Oak Brook, Ill., television producers from Seattle, Wash., and
Bethesda, Md., and a radio reporter from Nashville, Tenn., have all
been awarded the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association's
prestigious 2003 Max Karant Journalism Award.
Winners Larry Randa of The Business Ledger of suburban Chicago,
Mark Erskine of NBC Seattle affiliate KING-TV, Belle Adler and Brad
White of White Paper Productions in Bethesda, Md., and Kim Green of
WPLN Radio in Nashville, Tenn., were presented with their awards
during the Opening Luncheon today at AOPA Expo 2003, the
association's annual convention and trade show, held this year in
Philadelphia.
"Today we honor those members of the media who have made a real
contribution to helping the general public understand what general
aviation is and what it does," said AOPA President Phil Boyer.
"These are reporters and producers who speak to the non-flying
public and show them what we already know — that general
aviation flying is useful, beneficial to the community, and, above
all, fun."
Growing GA Airports
Larry Randa, a former editor and publisher for a suburban
Chicago weekly newspaper and currently a freelance writer, won
first place in the print category for his two-part series on
general aviation airports in the Chicago suburbs.
At a time when neighbors of Chicago's O'Hare International
Airport are at war with the city of Chicago over airport expansion
plans, Randa's articles look at five general aviation airports that
are thriving because of enthusiastic support from their local
communities. The articles point out the economic impact the
airports provide to the communities, and the communities' awareness
of the airports' value.
Randa's articles provided his readers with a clear picture of
the benefits a GA airport brings to a community and what
communities that understand and value those benefits can do to
support the airport.
In addition to the two main articles, Randa wrote sidebar
stories on each of the five profiled airports.
Alan R. Earls of Franklin, Mass., received an honorable mention
in the print category for "Flying with the propeller set," an
article in the Boston Sunday Globe on the pleasures and
practicality of general aviation flying.
Lost in the clouds
Producer Mark Erskine of KING-TV in Seattle is this year's
Karant Award winner in the TV — News or Short Feature
category. Erskine put together a dramatic retelling of the story of
a GA pilot who kept his head and the air traffic controller who
helped him reach safety.
Using interviews with the pilot and controller, footage shot
with the pilot while airborne and with the controller at his work
station, Erskine created a gripping dramatization of an accidental
entry into instrument meteorological conditions while flying
through the Cascade Mountains.
Through Erskine's storytelling ability, audience members were
led to understand that VFR pilots, who normally fly without talking
to air traffic controllers, are highly skilled. They also got an
inside look at how pilots and air traffic controllers can work
together using a variety of tools available to avert a tragedy.
Eric Hurst of WFSB-TV in Hartford, Conn., received an honorable
mention for his smile-inducing story about a pilot who never drives
if he can fly somewhere, including his 11-minute aerial commute
from his airpark home to his job at Bradley International
Airport.
Operation Animal Shield
Producers Belle Adler and Brad White of Bethesda, Md.'s White
Paper Productions are joint recipients of this year's Karant Award
for TV — Program Length category for their work on Operation
Animal Shield, which aired on the cable channel Animal Planet.
Adler and White followed American GA pilots Patty Wagstaff and
Dale Snodgrass to Kenya to train wildlife rangers with the Kenya
Wildlife Service. The rangers fly low-level patrols and often come
under fire from poachers. With spectacular aerial and ground
photography, Operation Animal Shield shows Wagstaff, a world
champion aerobatic pilot, and Snodgrass, a decorated former combat
pilot, training the rangers in potentially lifesaving aerobatic and
evasive maneuvers.
Those who watched Operation Animal Shield saw one of the many
facets of general aviation that often never crosses the non-flying
public's mind. Like police officers patrolling from above or pilots
and flight nurses in medevac helicopters, the rangers of the Kenya
Wildlife Service use general aviation as a law enforcement and
protection tool. The program also showcased the willingness of GA
pilots such as Wagstaff and Snodgrass to use their flying skills
for the benefit of others.
Women in Aviation
WPLN Radio's Kim Green won this year's Karant Award for Radio.
Using the annual Women In Aviation convention in Nashville, Tenn.,
as a starting place, Green, a flight instructor herself, looked at
efforts to rectify one of the greatest imbalances in aviation
— the number of female pilots.
Women currently make up only about six percent of U.S. pilots
and 12 percent of flight students. Green followed one young woman
interested in an aviation career as she attended the annual
convention and mingled with seasoned female pilots eager to
encourage young women to fly.
Today, GA is the entry point into aviation careers. Decades ago,
airline pilots came predominantly from the military. But now, if
not for general aviation, most airline cockpits would be empty.
Green's report showcased the skill and confidence instilled by GA
flight training and that there is a place and a need for female
pilots.
Jason Paur of KUOW-FM in Seattle earned an honorable mention for
his report on the inroads being made by upstart GA manufacturers
like Lancair into a market long dominated by aviation's Big Three
— Beechcraft, Cessna, and Piper.
The Karant awards honor the best of "fair, accurate and
insightful" reporting on general aviation in the general
(non-aviation) media. They include categories for print, TV or
video, and radio, and carry an honorarium of $1,000 in each
category. The awards are named for the late Max Karant, founder of
AOPA Pilot magazine and the association's first senior vice
president.