Will assist women, persons of color as well as veterans; Yavapai Community College does not have similar scholarships for its aviation program
Boeing announced March 7, 2019 that it plans to establish a $3 million permanent endowment for scholarships at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University to assist students interested in pursuing a pilot’s license and certificates in aviation maintenance.
The scholarships are intended to assist underrepresented populations including women and persons of color as well as veterans. The $3 million award builds upon Boeing’s long-standing support of STEM programs, women, military veterans and minorities.
The Boeing scholarships at Embry-Riddle will seek to increase the number of underrepresented populations in the pilot workforce, particularly women and persons of color as well as veterans.
Of the 609,306 pilots certificated by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration’s Aeronautical Center in 2017, only about 7 percent, or 42,694, are women, according to Women in Aviation International. Statistics on other underrepresented groups in aviation are limited, but a 2014 report suggested that 2.7 percent of U.S. airline transport pilots were people of color, 2.5 percent were of Asian heritage, and 5 percent were Hispanic or Latino.

Yavapai Community College was told by VP Clint Ewell that it will ask the Yavapai Community College Foundation to raise $2,657,000 so it can build a multi-use soccer field on the Prescott campus. Last year, the Governing Board majority approved spending up to the a quarter million dollars for design and estimates for this project. Much earlier, over $1 million originally found in the capital improvement fund was transferred to the preventative and unplanned capital budget where it will be used to build (rebuild) a parking lot adjacent the soccer field.

Executive Dean of the Verde Valley Campus James Perey outlined in detail to the Governing Board at Tuesday’s meeting how once Building “L” is completed it will be used for training. As the current architectural plans show, almost all of the space will be used for Allied health and nursing training. A small section has been set aside for manufacturing training of some sort. Dean Perry said that it is hoped that the number of students in the Allied health and nursing training program will expand once the renovations in place.

The Community College announced in a press release that there will be a College Jazz Big Bands concert Friday, March 8 at 7 p.m. at the Old Town Center for the Arts in Cottonwood. The concert will “include the ‘Roughriders’ and the ‘Trailblazers,’ who will present a night of big band sounds that will send you back in time. Swing rhythms, soulful saxophones, and punchy brasses combine to make this an evening of classics that define the genre. Greats from across the ages will be performed.”
Yavapai Community College has announced it will be hosting a pair of open-house style meetings Thursday, March 7, at the Verde Valley Campus. The purpose of the meetings is to review plans for Building “L.” The College has explained that the meetings will allow interested citizens to review the building design with the construction team, Community College faculty and staff.