

To start, around 35 students from the Golightly Career and Tech Center, a school located a few miles away that supported the Davis curriculum after it left Detroit City Airport, are being bussed to the airport every weekday for training from 2 p.m. “We’re also looking to bring in additional educational offerings and are reaching out to Wayne County Community College (which has a nearby school along Connor Avenue).” “We will introduce the students to aviation careers that include becoming a military, a commercial, or a private pilot as well as studies in aircraft mechanics, ground crew operations, air traffic control, technicians, and avionics,” says Beverly Kindle-Walker, executive director of Friends of Detroit City Airport.


To help bring attention to the reopening of the school at the airfield, Friends of Detroit City Airport, the Civil Air Patrol, the Detroit Chapter of the Tuskegee Airmen, Detroit City Airport officials, and others have hosted a series of programs for more than 300 Detroit youth including field trips, robotics classes, assistance with the annual FIRST Robotics Competition, and an open house. In the next year or so, the Friends of City Airport plans to add a hanger that would attach to the south end of the school.
