Clarksburg Airport Expansion Receives Federal Funds

Clarksburg’s regional airport has received millions of dollars in federal funding to complement an ongoing expansion project.

Clarksburg’s regional airport has received millions of dollars in federal funding to complement an ongoing expansion project.

The North Central West Virginia Airport (CKB) in Harrison County was awarded $15 million from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for the construction of a new terminal building.

The funding comes from the FAA’s Airport Terminal Program and was made possible through the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA).

The federal money will nearly double the funds for an ongoing infrastructure project that began at the airport in June 2021.

The state government has already committed $20 million to create 140 acres of flat property east of the airport’s existing runway.

Along with the passenger terminal, the new land will be used to house auxiliary airport facilities and a 100-acre AeroTech Business Park.

FAA Certifies New Aviation Technician School In Wayne County

Students are preparing for a new aviation maintenance technician, or AMT, school in Wayne County.

Thirty students are preparing for a new aviation maintenance technician (AMT) program through Mountwest Community and Technical College and Marshall University in the Fall 2022 semester.

The program has been certified by the Federal Aviation Administration and is now the first AMT school for the region and the 189th in the country. The school will be located at the Huntington Tri-State Airport.

Students enroll into the program through Mountwest and are counted as transient students with Marshall University.

“Mountwest could deliver the associate degree; in the state of West Virginia there are limitations on what a four year school can do in terms of a two year degree,” program director James Smith said.

Upon graduation from the 18-month program, students will receive an Associate of Applied Science (A.A.S.) degree under the names of both institutions.

Students who complete the program will also be eligible to take FAA Airframe and Powerplant certification exams.

Applications for the program opened in May, but the program was unable to process them until now.

“They’ve just been kind of in limbo until we could get the FAA to give us that final approval,” Smith said. “With the final approval, we were able to flip that switch and work on the formal processing of their applications.”

According to Smith, a quarter of the students who come out of aviation programs go to work in industries such as oil and gas, maritime, or automotive.

“The skills we teach in this program have direct impacts on other manufacturing and trade skills industries,” Smith said. “It’s not aviation centric specifically.”

Applicants on the waiting list will be considered for an additional 30 students for the Spring 2022 semester.

NTSB, FAA Investigating Fatal Helicopter Crash In Logan County

Local authorities say the bell UH-1 helicopter was taking passengers on a tourist ride when it crashed and caught fire on Blair Mountain Highway.

Six people are dead in southern West Virginia after a helicopter crash on Wednesday.

A Vietnam-era Huey helicopter crashed on a rural highway in Logan County West Virginia around 5 p.m. local time on Wednesday, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.

Local authorities say the bell UH-1 helicopter was taking passengers on a tourist ride when it crashed and caught fire on Blair Mountain Highway.

A woman who lives in the area told local TV stations she saw the chopper go down and tried to see if there was anything she could do to help. But she said the fire was so hot that she couldn’t get close enough.

In a statement, U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin said, “our entire state feels this loss.”

The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board are investigating.

Manchin, Capito Ask Buttigieg For Quick Approval Of Yeager Projects

The terminal project qualifies for grants from the recently enacted Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which both senators supported.

U.S. Sens. Joe Manchin and Shelley Moore Capito have asked U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg to move forward with plans to modernize Yeager Airport’s taxiway and terminal.

The airport, which boarded almost 500,000 passengers in 2019, needs to move its gates and concourse areas and relocate its main taxiway to meet current Federal Aviation Administration standards.

The terminal project qualifies for grants from the recently enacted Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which both senators supported.

In a letter to Buttigieg, Manchin and Capito asked for a categorical exclusion – that is, an expedited permitting and review process.

Federal law typically requires a lengthy environmental analysis that can delay such projects.

West Virginia Airport Gets Federal $13 Million Grant to Fix Runway

West Virginia’s most used airport will receive a $13.5 million Federal Aviation Administration grant to rebuild the runway safety overrun area that collapsed after a 2015 landslide.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports the state’s U.S. congressmen announced the allocation Wednesday for Yeager Airport. Replacing the area allows Yeager to restore 500 feet (150 meters) of runway for operational use.

It nearly matches the $14 million April request airport officials made for the repairs and replacement of the EMAS bed, which stops an aircraft if it overshoots a runway. Last month officials were expecting the FAA to notify on whether an $8 million emergency grant would be given to order EMAS materials and begin work on the project.

Airport governing board chairman Ed Hill says a meeting Monday will accept the grant.

Small Plane Veers Off Taxiway at Yeager Airport

A small private plane skidded off the taxiway at Yeager Airport in Charleston.

The plane went off into the grass toward the end of the taxiway Wednesday night.

Yeager Airport spokesman Mike Plante says planes usually turn to the left when they turn onto the runway, but the plane turned to the right and got stuck in the mud.

Plante says the two passengers on board were not injured.

He says the Federal Aviation Administration will investigate to determine what caused the plane to depart from the taxiway.

Plante added that an incident such as this is highly unusual.

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