Wednesday, 10 June 2015

Environmental Assessment For Southern California Airspace Improvements

GET INVOLVED:
The U.S. Department of Transportation/Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is seeking public comment on the Draft Environmental Assessment (Draft EA) for the Southern California Metroplex project, a comprehensive proposal to improve the flow of air traffic into and out of Southern California by making the airspace safer and more efficient.

The project proposes to replace dozens of existing conventional air traffic procedures with new satellite-based procedures, which are a key component of the FAA’s Next Generation Air Transportation System (NextGen). The Metroplex proposal encompasses most of Southern California and includes six major airports.

The FAA issued the project’s Draft EA today for public review and comment for 30 days. The FAA will hold 11 public workshops between June 16 and July 1, 2015, where people can learn about the proposal and how to submit comments on it. After evaluating and responding to all substantive public comments, the FAA could adopt the entire proposal, adopt portions of it, or modify it.

“Public engagement and participation in the Southern California Metroplex process is critical,” said FAA Administrator Michael Huerta. “We take public input very seriously, and we strongly encourage people, agencies and officials to learn about, and weigh in on, this proposal.”

Michael Huerta on the Draft Environmental Assessment (Draft EA) for the Southern California Metroplex project

About the FAA’s Southern California Metroplex Initiative:

A Metroplex is a region with multiple airports serving major metropolitan areas where heavy airport activity and environmental constraints combine to hinder the efficient movement of air traffic. Metroplex initiatives are completed, under way or planned in more than a dozen metropolitan areas across the country, including Northern California, Houston, Washington, D.C., Atlanta and Charlotte.

Many of the current air traffic procedures in Southern California are decades old. While they are all safe, some are inefficient because they rely on ground-based navigation aids, which limit available flight paths.

Some procedures are longer than necessary, while others converge and occupy the same airspace. As a result, air traffic controllers issue a series of instructions to pilots to vector aircraft onto more direct routes and to keep aircraft safely separated from each other. Vectoring, in turn, results in irregular and less predictable flight paths and increases pilot-controller communications and workload.

Satellite-based procedures, by contrast, allow for more direct routing with fixed routes, altitudes and speeds. Their precise flight tracks help keep routes automatically separated. This in turn reduces the need for vectoring and reduces controller-pilot communications.

In all, the proposed Southern California Metroplex project includes 109 new satellite-based procedures – 50 departures, 37 arrivals and 22 approach procedures that guide aircraft down until they’re very close to their destination airports. The project also expands the number of entry and exit points into and out of the Southern California airspace, which is like creating more on- and off-ramps in the sky.

The noise modeling that the FAA conducted for the project’s Draft EA calculated noise at more than 175,000 points throughout the study area. It indicates the proposed action would not result in any significant or reportable noise impacts.

The public comment period ends on July 10. The public workshops for the project will take place throughout Southern California between June 16 and July 1. People can submit comments on the project by email (9-ANM-SoCalOAPM@faa.gov), in person at the public workshops, and by writing to:

SoCal Metroplex EA
Federal Aviation Administration
Western Service Center – Operations Support Group
1601 Lind Avenue SW
Renton, WA 98057


The Draft EA is available online at:http://www.metroplexenvironmental.com/socal_metroplex/socal_introduction.html.

Electronic versions of the Draft EA have been sent to 40 libraries and hard copies are available at five libraries. A complete list of libraries with electronic and hard copies is available online.

Additional information on the Metroplex Program can also be found athttp://www.metroplexenvironmental.com/.

The public workshop dates and locations are as follows. The public can attend workshops anytime between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m.

June 16: Santa Ana. McFadden Intermediate School, 2701 S. Raitt St., Santa Ana, CA 92704

June 17: Santa Monica. Santa Monica Public Library – Main Branch, 601 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90401

June 18: Los Angeles. Proud Bird Restaurant, 11022 Aviation Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90045

June 22: San Diego. Logan Heights Library, 567 S. 28th St., San Diego, CA 92113

June 23: Palm Desert. Palm Desert Library, 73-300 Fred Waring Drive, Palm Desert, CA 92260

June 24: Torrance. Ken Miller Auditorium, 3341 Torrance Blvd., Torrance, CA 90503

June 25: Long Beach. Beach High School, 3701 E. Willow St., Long Beach, CA 90815

June 26: Ontario. Ontario International Airport Administration Building, 1923 East Avion Street, Ontario, CA 91761

June 29: Ventura. E.P. Foster Library, 651 E. Main St., Ventura, CA 93001

June 30: Santa Barbara. The Westside Neighborhood Center, 423 W. Victoria St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101

July 1: Burbank. Burbank Community Services Building, 150 N 3rd St., Burbank, CA 91502

Tuesday, 9 June 2015

Fly. Homework. Fly.

This Quarter is Flying By...



And I'm flying back to Paris Today... 


I will catch up on blogging 
when I return. 
But until then...
 Thank You for reading... 




 Comments on Amazon 
are Appreciated!!!


Enjoy the Journey!
XO Karlene 

Monday, 8 June 2015

Summer Activities for School or Home

FREE Summer Activities - Here are some fun summer activities for school or home!  Students will make a collage craft, do a science sink or float experiment, read a swimming finger play, complete a dot to dot worksheet, play an online summer game, and more!


1. Summer Collage


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Cut pictures from magazines.  Students may glue or Modge Podge the pictures to poster board or to a trinket found at a rummage sale or Good Will store.

2. Sink or Float Science Activity


Students will make a jello recipe and determine which fruits sink or float. Click HERE to download this free printable activity.

3. Summer Finger Play


Students will read and act out this swimming finger play.  Click HERE for the free download.

4. Going on Vacation



Arrange a variety of clothing on a table or center area.  Students must choose an article of clothing appropriate for various descriptions.  Here are some examples:
1. I'm going on vacations to a friend's house who has a pool.  What do I need for the pool? (swimsuit)
2. I'm going on vacation to hike in the woods.  What do I need for my hike? (tennis shoes, hiking boots)
3. I'm going on vacation to a zoo.  What do I need for my visit? (hat, sunscreen)

5. Summer Math Worksheet

Right click to save and print. (smaller size is a clearer image)



6. Summer Word Find

Right click to save and print. (smaller size is a clearer image)



7. Five in a Line Online Game

Click here to play on this fun website.


8. Summertime Craft - Jellyfish

Watch the video to make this adorable jellyfish!



9.  Summertime Craft Ideas

Here is a compilation of several summer craft ideas (no directions).



10.  Saving the best for last... Frozen "In Summer" song!



You may also like these paid resources from our shop:

1.  Summer Packet  
There are so many fun summer activities in this packet. Students will create a summer collage, make a fan, read and make a lemonade recipe, act out a finger play, and list summer safety rules. They will also plan a vacation using different modes of transportation and determine what to pack in their suitcases. They will even plan a trip to space! Students will tell a fish story with visuals and design a backyard obstacle course. Next, students will create a bucket list, write to a fictional or real pen pal, and create lyrics to a summer gardening song. Finally, the students will make pinwheels, get active with a jumping checklist and learn to play hopscotch.


Students will create an interactive notebook with numbers 1-12. Students color the objects on each flap and attach the flaps to their interactive notebooks. Students may paste both the numbers and number words under each matching flap. For differentiation, students may paste the numbers only. Omit the number word cards for non-readers. Higher students may independently write the numbers and words under each flap. You will also receive two matching worksheets and two anchor charts for #1-6 and #7-12.


In this packet, your students will be drawing or writing about their summer bucket list. The are seven variations of the ONE template, including open-ended options to meet the individual needs of all your students. This summer bucket list craft activity works well year after year for multiple grade levels due to the different templates and writing or drawing options! 


Your students are sure to enjoy finding summer time words in this summer word search. You may also use the summer word bank words for sentence writing. Images are in black and white for easy printing and for a coloring opportunity for your students. Also included are 3 pages of summer time themed writing paper. 


Here is a 60 page printable math and literacy beach thematic unit with printable activities and worksheets. Skills include beach reading comprehension, vocabulary, beach BINGO game, is or are, contractions, parts of speech, singular and plural nouns, capitalization, beach paragraph writing, comparing numbers, place value, telling time, calendar, temperature, 2-digit addition, patterns and story starters. Answer keys and rubrics are also included.


You may also like these affiliate resources from Amazon:








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Sunday, 7 June 2015

Failure as our Teacher

"Failure should be our teacher, not our undertaker. Failure is delay, not defeat. It is a temporary detour, not a dead end. Failure is something we can avoid only by saying nothing, and being nothing."

Denis Waitley



The failure of the internet at this hotel is not my undertaker, just my delay. It's early morning and I'm sitting in Paris trying to do homework, unable to access the site, unable to upload photos on this post. I am able to watch CNN, however, and listen to the atrocities that ISIS is doing to those young women. The rape. The humiliation. Burning alive. Slaves on the boats being murdered. What century do we live in?

I have no right to begrudge the technical challenges I am having right now. I am free and will be flying a heavy jet across the ocean today. I am so grateful for my life. But what can we do for the rest of the world? How can we help those girls?

Despite failure and being pushed back, we must keep pressing forward. Failure is just a detour. We shall succeed in all we do! 

Enjoy the Journey! USA... Here I come! 
XOX Karlene

Friday, 5 June 2015

Marjorie Bicknell Johnson

Friday's Fabulous Flyer!

Marjorie Bicknell Johnson

PILOT HITS TREES! 
And Nobody wants to fly with her....

She's a pilot and a writer, and and all around inspiration! Wait until you read her story. I met Marjorie at the 99 banquet in Palo Alto last month. I asked her to send me her story, and what a story it is. And wait until you find out where her inspiration to write came from. Yes... she is an author!

Welcome Marjorie!

"When my husband retired, the first thing he did was to buy an airplane. He took me out to dinner and presented me with a blank card that pictured red roses. Inside was a set of aircraft keys and the message, “Come, fly away with me.”


I learned to fly in 1991 at Palo Alto Airport. When I had only one more hour left to complete my private pilot training, I decided to practice soft field take-offs, something I had never done solo. Everything went wrong that day in the Cessna 172: I uprooted a tree at the Palo Alto Golf Course.

I remember nothing about it, so it couldn’t have happened, right? The FAA assigned me 10 hours of stall recovery practice—10 hours IN stalls, not counting flights to and from the practice areas. My flight instructor quit, and no one else wanted me.

 

I finally found an instructor who liked acrobatics. I learned to recover from a stall in any configuration, including inverted flight. When I got my private pilot’s license, I had 260 hours in my logbook. I joined Santa Clara Valley 99s the next day and attended every function for several years. I have served as chapter chairman, vice chairman, and secretary, and several stints as a committee chairperson. Most recently, I was chapter co-vice chairman for two years.



The picture of me next to a Cessna 172 was taken on the day I got my instrument rating—I felt like I had conquered the world. I don’t have a picture of me with the 172 that crashed—it went to the aircraft bone yard. I joined Santa Clara Valley 99s the day after I got my license. One of my daughters is a pilot, and so is her son (my grandson).


My husband and I owned three Mooneys. I appear with each of them. We flew out of Palo Alto Airport for twenty years. We crossed the US several times, flew to the tip of Baja, and to Alberta, Canada. We also flew for 50 hours above Australia—in a rented Cessna 172.


I spent my working years teaching high school mathematics, but I have always written stories. I have more than ninety published articles in academic mathematics journals, but they don’t make light conversation with friends, and I had always wanted to write a novel. So, in 2002, I signed up for creative writing.

Bird Watcher was published in 2007; Jaguar Princess: The Last Maya Shaman in 2011. I expect The Lost Jade of the Maya to come out in 2015. Of course, flying plays a part in every one of these. Bird Watcher is about a stolen airplane—stolen from Palo Alto Airport. The two Mayan books are archaeological mysteries, and small aircraft and helicopters are used extensively in the field in archaeology.


 
I wrote Bird Watcher after I spent a whole day watching birds. (They called it “birding;” I called it “boring.”) When I had a turn with the binoculars, I could read tail numbers of small aircraft landing at the adjacent unfenced airport. My imagination took over: a thief could pick out his favorite airplane and fly away with it at night. Why would he steal it? How would its owner find it? How could the thief take it, with no key? Read Bird Watcher to find out"

Marjorie’s books are available at
and her webpage is:

Enjoy the Journey!
XO Karlene  

Tuesday, 2 June 2015

Mr. Aviation Safety

I'm in Brussels as the 2015 Automation Safety Forum is half way done! This has been an amazing event and the people incredible. I am honored to be among them. Due to a tight schedule (and homework) posting will come later. Thus today I'm going to share a picture of a gentlemen that I'm sitting beside during the event. Do you know he is?


Today he received an honorable mention for what he did for Aviation Safety, followed by a standing ovation. A brilliant inventor. He is also my neighbor, living in Bellevue WA. So, can you guess who this is, and what impact he has made on aviation safety, and how many lives he has saved? Clue: his invention also pops up in Flight For Safety!

Enjoy the journey! 
XO Karlene

Monday, 1 June 2015

Customer Service: Make it Happen!

"Don't wish Mommy, 
work hard and make it happen!"

A couple weeks ago I attended the  Palo Alto 99 banquet as the guest speaker, and met incredible people like Sue Ballew and this week's Friday Flyer Marjorie Johnson. But there was another woman that I met along the way who touched my life. She made me a life long customer of Holiday Inn and the IHG Intercontinental Hotel Group.


Cannon is the Director of Sales & Marketing Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites San Mateo-San Francisco SFO & San Mateo SFO Airport Hotel. While many organizations advertise customer service, sometimes effort falls short because the attitude, "it's not my job." However, this was not the case and allow me tell you what happened. 
 
InterContinental Hotels Group

With work, school, grandkids, and life in general, my schedule is tight. However, on this particular day I arrived in the morning earlier enough to avoid potential snags for the event, and found a hotel. I selected the Holiday Inn in San Mateo, south of SFO airport to be close to Palo Alto, yet still have van service back to the airport the following morning. I booked a taxi to pick me up 1 hour prior to the show time.  5 pm rolled around and no taxi. The front desk called him every 7-10 minutes for the next 35 minutes, and each time the driver said he was three to five minutes away. The driver no-showed.


Cannon said, "I'll take you!" This transportation service was not part of her job, and she used her personal vehicle for the drive. The trip to Palo Alto Airport was 45 minutes in traffic, one way. After a long day of work, she took her time and gave it to a me. I made my event, and met a new friend. 

This woman is not only a corporate super star, but is raising two incredible children. The quote above is something she shared with me that her 11-year-old daughter said.

Thus... for anyone looking for a hotel, and value customer service, I would recommend IHG hotels, because of this most valuable employee. When customers receive bad service, we blame the company. But people are the success behind organizations, and people like Cannon make the difference in the lives of everyone.  Thus we need to celebrate the employee for a job well done.

Thank you so much 
for going beyond the call of duty Cannon!

And Holiday Inn, 
you have a superstar on your payroll!!

Enjoy the Journey!
XOX Karlene