
 
        
         
		BY JEFF YAPALATER 
 Leaders  of  Girl  Scout  
 troops from the Bronx held  
 Girl Scout Aviation Day with  
 the support of the Greater  
 NY  Chapter  of  Ninety-Nines  
 (99ers) at Vaughn College of  
 Aviation and Technology. 
 According to Troop leader  
 Tarin Rivera, “We wanted to  
 give our ninth grade girls the  
 opportunity to experience  
 things there are not normally  
 exposed to at home or school.” 
 This was clearly the goal  
 as sixteen young women had  
 the  chance  to  be  introduced  
 to many  facets  of  aviation  by  
 interactions  with  aviation  
 professionals in leaning about  
 weather, navigation and prefl  
 ight protocols in hands-on  
 learning modules. 
 They also climbed up to the  
 unique  Vaughn  Air  Traffi c  
 Control Training Tower where  
 United pilot Karen Leckey  
 pointed out the LaGuardia  
 runway  with  a  detailed  
 descrtiption of airport airline  
 procedures. 
 Girls lined up to test their  
 skills in one of the Vaughn  
 fl ight  simulators.  From  the  
 looks on their faces, the  
 scouts thoroughly enjoyed the  
 virtual reality of being behind  
 the controls, taking off, fl ying  
 and landing. 
 Vaughn graduate and  
 Republic Air pilot Margarita  
 Cholakova guided many  
 through the process and  
 shared  their  enthusiasm  
 during the simulator learning  
 module time. 
 According to Rivera who  
 organized  the  event,“This  is  
 Inspiration stems from Cradle of Aviation 
 42     AIRPORT VOICE, APRIL 2019 
 United  Pilot  Karen  Leckey  shows  Civil  Air  Cadet  and  Girl  Scouts  an  
 overview of the LaGuardia runway from the Vaughn Tower.  Photo by Jeff  
 Yapalater 
 one of many trips we take to  
 help  expose  girls  to  different  
 potential  career  paths.  We  
 want to break stereotypes  
 for all our scouts from across  
 cultural and economic  
 backgrounds. 
 After the troops had  
 fi nished  the  tour  of  Vaughn  
 and completed their training  
 modules  they  gathered  
 together for a pizza lunch,  
 but not before the special  
 award presentation by Lt.  
 Col. Civil Air Patrol Jacqui  
 Sturgess. She awarded each  
 of the scouts with a certifi cate  
 of completion, a 99ers patch,  
 along with a backpack and  
 keychain from Vaughn.  
 Excited  troopers  fi lled  the  
 room  with  their  uniforms  
 adorned with dozens of badges  
 signifying their completion  
 of  learning  in  Aviation  and  
 others in each special category  
 of knowledge and interest.  
 The Girl Scouts have many  
 formal badges of achievement  
 but not one for Aviation. These  
 sixteen girls have completed  
 the fi ve steps for qualifi cation  
 for such a badge. Rivera  
 said  that  the  Girl  Scouts  
 are working on an Aviation  
 badge and she hopes to be  
 able  to  present  these  badges  
 to  eligible  scouts  later  in  the  
 year at an event at the Cradle  
 of Aviation. 
 On International Women’s  
 Day,  Governor  Andrew  
 M. Cuomo called for the  
 passage of the Equal Rights  
 Amendment this legislative  
 session.  When  the  U.S.  
 Congress  passed  the  federal  
 Equal Rights Amendment  
 in 1972, New York was one  
 of the fi rst states to vote for  
 its ratifi cation.  However,  
 almost  fi ve decades later,  
 the federal ERA still has  
 not been ratifi ed, and while  
 Governor Cuomo has pushed  
 for a State-level ERA, New  
 York’s constitution still does  
 not guarantee equal rights  
 on the basis of sex. 
 “As the Trump  
 Administration wages a  
 war  on  women,  it  is  more  
 important  than  ever  before  
 that  New  York  fi ght  back  
 to protect our progress and  
 enshrine gender equality  
 in our state constitution,”  
 Governor Cuomo said. “It is  
 unacceptable  that more  than  
 100 years after women won  
 the right to vote in New York  
 State, our Constitution still  
 does not ban discrimination  
 based on sex or afford women  
 equal protections under the  
 law. That needs to end this  
 year. We must pass the ERA  
 this legislative session to  
 ensure New York continues  
 Governor  Cuomo  against  Equal  
 Rights foot-dragging. 
 to serve as the beacon of  
 progress for the nation.” 
 “On International Women’s  
 Day and every day, we honor  
 the women who came before  
 us  by  continuing  to  fi ght  for  
 justice and equality,” said  
 Lieutenant Governor Kathy  
 Hochul. “We have made  
 signifi cant progress, but we  
 still have more work to do to  
 ensure rights and protections  
 for women. As part of our 2019  
 Women’s Justice Agenda,  
 we’re pushing for a new, next  
 generation Equal Rights  
 Amendment that refl ects  
 today’s priorities for attaining  
 true  gender  parity  once  and  
 for all. 
 A special panel presentation  
 featuring women in the Science.  
 Technology Engineering and  
 Mathematics (STEM) was held at  
 the  Cradle  of  Aviation  in  honor  of  
 Women’s History Month. This event  
 was designed especially for middle  
 and high school girls with the aim of  
 opening their minds to a career in one  
 of these disciplines.  
 Honored panelists included Space  
 Shuttle and Space Lab Astronaut  
 Nicole Stott, Vaughn College President  
 Sharon  DeVivo  and  News  12  Carol  
 Silva.These top women in their fi elds  
 shared personal experiences,  feelings  
 and thoughts about their challenges  
 and to empower these young women to  
 enter these career fi elds. 
 It was noted that the percentage  
 of  women  in  STEM  jobs  is  low,  with  
 Black, Latinx and other women of  
 color  underrepresented  in  thee  fi eld;  
 STEM careers are more lucrative;  
 STEM careers represent the future of  
 the economy. 
 Silva moderated the panel and  
 enthusiastically  called  upon  the  
 News Reporter Carol Silva (left), Space Shuttle Astronaut Nicole Stott  
 (middle),    and President Vaughn College Sharon DeVivo  (right)  were  
 panelists at a young woman’s STEM event at the Cradle of Aviation.  
 young attendees to ask questions of  
 the panelists and take advantage of  
 this opportunity to interact with these  
 successful women.  
 Stott, DeVivo and Silva all spoke  
 about the possibilities of woman in  
 professional fi elds. Each one had  
 their own story about the hardships  
 and means to overcome the blocks  
 encountered along the path to success.  
 Devivo asked the young women to  
 “ fi nd their voice”; Stott reminded  
 them to just “do it”, and Silva literally  
 asked these young women to “speak  
 up” in order to fi nd the confi dence,  
 inspiration and passion when it comes  
 to  pursuing  a  career  in  spite  of  the  
 obstacles they may fi nd. 
 Cradle  of  Aviation  Executive  
 Director  Jennifer  Baxmeyer  and  
 Education  Director  Catherine  
 Gonzalez  have  been  behind  the  
 museums’s STEM events working with  
 local schools, parents and speaking at  
 educational conferences on the need  
 to  involve  more  students  into  these  
 programs and especially young women  
 as they plan for their futures. 
 Vaughn & 99s  
 welcome girlscouts 
 Celebrating International  
 Women’s Day 
 Young women given tour of college