Aviation
Institute created at York College
Jamaica Times, October 31, 2002 by
Courtney Dentch
York
College in Jamaica is taking advantage of the neighbor it has in
Kennedy Airport by establishing the first university-level Aviation
Institute in New York City.
The
institute received tentative approval from the school’s trustee
board to offer seminars on the aviation industry and build to
degrees in aviation business and management, said Anthony Perl, the
institute’s director.
The Aviation Institute is just one of
several components to boost the school’s visibility and enrollment,
York’s new president Russell Hotzler told a meeting of the Greater
Jamaica Development Corp. Oct. 23. The meeting also featured a
discussion on the AirTrain rail link to Kennedy Airport and the
late-September crash that has stalled the project’s
completion.
Hotzler, who took over as interim president for
Dr. Charles Kidd in July, told the 75 GJDC members that York
College, at 94-20 Guy R. Brewer Blvd., has an enrollment of 5,200
students but can accommodate twice that number.
“We have the
ability to serve many more students than we are currently serving,”
he said. “The growth of the institution has not progressed as we had
hoped.”
The Aviation Institute is just one program to boost
the school’s academic strengths, Hotzler said. The program would
work with the Port Authority, as well as individual airlines and
other air travel companies, by both using their expertise to teach
students as well as providng them continuing education oportunities
for their employees, Perl said.
“It’s surprising that the
country’s largest aviation market hasn’t focused on the education
aspects of the industry,” he said of New York City. “This is an
important time to be focused on aviation. The institute can play a
very important role in the college, the airport and the city as a
whole.”
The institute hopes to offer general introduction
classes to students next year, but until the courses are developed,
the school is looking at seminars and an award program to whet the
appetites of the students and industry professionals.
“That
will get the word out that there’s more to come,” Perl said. “We
want to develop a reputation as a hub of expertise.”
Hotzler
also hopes to build on the school’s existing programs and
facilities, such as the occupational therapy program, which is the
only one in the CUNY system, he said. The program may also be
expanded into a master’s degree, which would be York’s first
post-graduate program, Hotzler said.
The school also is
looking to develop media-related programs to take advantage of its
television and radio students and other facilities.
“York has
fairly comprehensive media facilities,” he said. “It’s the only
college that has the facilities but doesn’t offer the programs to
its students.”
York College also needs to be more
“customer-friendly,” Hotzler said, addressing issues such as
building signs, street access and information and advisement
centers. One plan already in place calls for turning 159th Street
into a pedestrian mall.
“That will just open the campus up to
a north-south flow of students I just think is long overdue,” he
said.
Hotzler also promised to continue the partnership
between the school and the community.
“I give my word that
during my term here at the college we’ll move forward in ways that
complement what you’re doing in the community,” he said.
The
GJDC also heard from Cruz Russell, director of the Office of Policy
and Planning for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. The
PA is waiting for the National Transportation Safety Board to
respond on the September crash that killed AirTrain operator Kelvin
DeBourgh, Jr. before moving forward with AirTrain plans, Russell
said.
The agency has not resumed testing the AirTrain, but
construction on the terminals and stations has continued, he
said.
Reach reporter Courtney Dentch by e-mail at
TimesLedger@aol.com, or by phone at 229-0300, Ext. 138.
©Jamaica
Times 2002