[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 153 (Wednesday, October 30, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H6908]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SUGAR VALLEY AIRPORT'S SPIRIT OF AVIATION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
North Carolina (Ms. Foxx) for 5 minutes.
Ms. FOXX. Mr. Speaker, the poem ``Impressions of a Pilot'' opens with
the line: ``Flight is freedom in its purest form.''
How perfectly that captures the allure of sky and space for so many
who dreamed to conquer that frontier. Freedom and flight are
inextricably linked.
This past Saturday, many young North Carolinians got to experience
that freedom in a brand new way at Davie County Sugar Valley Airport.
What a joy it was to be there.
A dedicated team of volunteers at the airport hosted ``The Spirit of
Aviation: The Next Generation'' to introduce local students to the many
career and recreational opportunities available to them through
aviation.
Children and teens from local counties spent the day exploring
aircraft, trying their hand at flight simulators, listening to aviation
innovators, and even taking flight themselves in ``young eagle'' flight
expeditions.
{time} 1030
Their faces were alight with excitement as they experimented with the
physics of flight and felt the contagious enthusiasm of skilled
aviators who, after years, still find freedom in the blue's high tide.
The Spirit of Aviation Day at Sugar Valley revealed to young people
new career possibilities for their lives, and didn't just stoke the
dream of aviation, but presented a step-by-step path students might
take to see aviation dreams become a reality.
What stands out to me more than anything else is that this day of
discovery and imagination was made possible by a community
independently committed to encouraging the next generation of aerial
pioneers--whether pilots, mechanics, or engineers.
Yes, the spirt of volunteerism and community service is alive and
well in North Carolina. In fact, it is thriving; and every time I am
home visiting nonprofits and meeting the people who make up their
various support networks, I am proud of the Tar Heel State. The
initiative and benevolent entrepreneurialism displayed by Carolinians
contributes new chapters often to the collective record of American
service.
The accomplishment of volunteers at the Sugar Valley Airport is just
one example.
In 2010, a group of North Carolinians came together through Winston-
Salem's nonprofit Human Service Alliance and bought the Sugar Valley
Airport. Their hope was that the airport would facilitate the promotion
of aviation, both as a sport and career field ripe with competitive
jobs.
In 3 short years, with a dedicated team of volunteers supplying 100
percent of the vision, manpower, support, and direction, the airport
has come to serve as a hub for flight enthusiasts and learning center
for those considering the pursuit of pilot or mechanic work. In any
given week, the airport may host Boy Scouts, civil air patrol cadets,
experimental aviation enthusiasts, leading women pilots, and aviation
ground school students.
North Carolinians take great pride in our ``first in flight''
distinction. It was on our Outer Banks that Wilbur and Orville Wright
pushed the limits of gravity and completed history's first recorded
controlled powered airplane flights.
With the commitment of the team at the Sugar Valley Airport, I can
confidently say that our State, the home of Kitty Hawk, is intent on
being the home of great aviators and pioneering aviation contributions
for years to come.
Guidance and encouragement from Sugar Valley's seasoned pilots,
mechanics, and generous volunteers will continue to open a new world of
opportunity to children in North Carolina.
In this world above the clouds, our children are free to dream, free
to soar, and free to conquer the wild blue yonder and much, much more.
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