Midstate Aviation, Inc.

Midstate Aviation, Inc. Midstate Aviation - Flight Training and Maintenance Vern and Opal Mitchell began training pilots in 1961 at Midstate Aviation, Inc. in Ellensburg, Washington.

Wide open spaces and Eastern Washington weather combine to provide an ideal environment for flight training. Over the years, thousands of pilots have earned their wings at Midstate, and a large percentage of these pilots are currently flying in military, commercial or corporate aviation. Midstate has always been dedicated to producing the very best professional pilots possible, and our graduates s

uccess in the wide world of aviation speaks for itself! Today, under the direction of Ron and Sonja Mitchell, and a lot of extremely well qualified and dedicated flight instructors, our experience and training provide the continuity and quality of flight training required to produce the exceptional pilots we have come to expect as graduates of our courses.

CONGRATULATIONS, Ashley, on a perfect day for your perfect solo flight. Way-to-go!
05/03/2016

CONGRATULATIONS, Ashley, on a perfect day for your perfect solo flight. Way-to-go!

02/18/2016

CWU/IASCO FIASCO by Ron Mitchell

It is interesting that the Assistant Attorney General who advised the Department of Corrections that they did not have to fix a software glitch that caused hundreds of inmates to be released prior to the end of their sentences has stepped down. These people may be attorneys, but that doesn't mean they are always right. Alan Smith, the Assistant Attorney General, who advised CWU they did not have to rebid a contract when the contractor defaulted made a similar error, and in my opinion, his negligence may eventually mean an end to the CWU flight program.

The latest in this continuing saga is that CWU is requesting 3.5 million dollars in "emergency" funding from the legislature for classroom expansion. This is the first phase, and they have stated they will come back during the regular budget process in 2017 to ask for funding to build a hangar and other infrastructure. In the 33 years I contracted with CWU, it was my responsibility to provide office, hangar, classroom, schedulers and dispatchers, aircraft and ramp space required to meet the needs of the student load. This was also a requirement of anyone bidding the most recent contract, yet someone decided when the contractor defaulted that CWU (read taxpayers) could provide all of these things except the airplanes. Creating an infrastructure that private business, with assistance from Kittitas County provided previously, represents a major shift in policy, and an unnecessary drain on taxpayers. Evidently the "emergency" exists because the CWU aviation program is growing exponentially.

Fact: Although CWU claimed to have 125 flight students as of fall quarter 2014, only 25 finished the required training by August 31, 2015, and CWU (read taxpayers) had to pick up the lodging expenses for those living in the dorms. 25! How long do you think I would have been allowed to continue with a 20% completion rate? The "emergency" exists because CWU with help from Mr. Thompson in contracting, and Mr. Smith so badly botched the process in obtaining a new flight training provider. The CWU Provost, Dean, Aviation Chair, as well as IFT's CEO, CFO, Chief Flight Instructor, and Director of Training have all been replaced. That leaves only President Gaudino, along with Mr. Smith and Mr. Thompson with their fingerprints on this debacle.

CWU administrators have repeatedly said that the new contractor represents a 25% cost savings to the students. Fact: The 20% who finished paid about 7% less than the previous contractor despite flying older less sophisticated airplanes, and CWU paying for all the infrastructure and personnel detailed earlier. The latest is the contractor, despite failing to complete the required training is asking for price increases of 10% to 40% for the 2016/2017 academic year, despite their cost per hour to operate their aircraft down almost 5% due to lowered fuel costs. The new Aviation Department Chair, despite having zero experience in flight training has said that a 10% increase is "industry standard." Midstate Aviation did not raise rates over the last three years of our contract, but a failed contractor raising rates is "industry standard?" A 10% increase per year would equate to 46% over the four years of a student's training. Ridiculous!

I am tired of the dishonesty. I am fed up with the lack of transparency. I am appalled by CWU and their contractor’s lack of planning and their attempt to throw taxpayer money at the problem. I am OUTRAGED that our tax dollars are being spent subsidizing a California corporation that is owned by a Chinese national. Please contact your legislators and urge them to vote no on CWU's supplemental budget request for 3.5 million dollars. If you wish, cut and paste this post to help educate them on how CWU has failed miserably in its duty to do due diligence in contracting.

01/19/2016

The following Letter to the Editor was printed in the Ellensburg Daily Record on January 16, 2016 by Marlene Pfeifer:

CWU’s Aviation Program Plans Are Not Realistic

To the Editor:

CWU is seeking $3.5 million in state funding to expand administrative, operational and instructional space for the aviation program.

One reason for the request is because CWU is now subsidizing the current contractor, Iasco Flight Training, a California corporation owned by a Chinese national. CWU is now paying for dispatchers, remodeling of offices, computers for flight instructors and snow removal. Housing costs for the summer were provided to many students last year in an attempt to finish due to the contractor’s failure to provide the services they were responsible for in a timely manner. All these things were provided by the previous contractor, Midstate Aviation, as a cost of doing business.

Midstate did not bid the contract due to disagreements with unrealistic requirements set forth by CWU. They believed a contract to perform services meant just that. Iasco was awarded the contract and agreed to the terms. It was obvious very early on to all including CWU, that they wouldn’t be able to perform. Rather than admitting their negligence and incompetence of vetting, they simply threw out the contract and allowed Iasco to participate in writing a new one. True! In the process long-time Kittitas Valley residents lost jobs and some were forced to move away to obtain employment. Airport revenues are down substantially, and the number of airport operations, the justification to receive state and federal funding to operate the airport, are down by almost 50 percent.

While it is true that there is a huge need for increased pilot training, the Kittitas Valley is incapable of handling more than 200 flight students safely, due to lack of practice airspace. This has been pointed out to the previous aviation chair. The rationale of needing the funding to grow the program to 400 students is not realistic. More importantly, the current contractor can’t handle the 125 students that they have repeatedly claimed they have. At the end of the school year, 10 out of 28 private pilot students completed the program, eight completed the instrument, one completed the commercial and five or six completed the certified flight instructor rating.

All this said, why would we allow our legislators to approve funding for infrastructure that has always been and should be provided by the private sector?

Please join me in contacting our representatives to urge them to vote no if this comes before them.

Marlene Pfeifer
Ellensburg

Santa was out exercising his reindeer, and so he stopped for his annual visit with the preschool children at the airport...
12/08/2015

Santa was out exercising his reindeer, and so he stopped for his annual visit with the preschool children at the airport. These two pilots waited patiently to bend Santa's ear, but don't you have to make the naughty OR nice list? (You look like you have lost a bit of weight this year, Santa. Is Mrs. Claus' cooking getting to you, again?)

The county has arrived!
12/02/2015

The county has arrived!

Tis the season....
11/30/2015

Tis the season....

Scott Armstrong stopped by to look at those airplanes he detailed back in 2008 when he was in the flight program.  He wa...
11/05/2015

Scott Armstrong stopped by to look at those airplanes he detailed back in 2008 when he was in the flight program. He walked down memory lane in this hangar; as a student, line guy, and detailer. Congratulations to you, Scott, at SkyWest.

Ryan Sackett, 2009 graduate of the program, stopped by to say hello.  We are glad to hear he is doing well at Ravn Alask...
10/27/2015

Ryan Sackett, 2009 graduate of the program, stopped by to say hello. We are glad to hear he is doing well at Ravn Alaska. It is always great to hear those stories about past instructors, airplanes, office staff, and mechanics. Thanks for taking the time, Ryan!

When Clint solos, he solos BIG! This was his day, CONGRATULATIONS! Those aviator glasses, solo t-shirt, and Elite Magazi...
10/15/2015

When Clint solos, he solos BIG! This was his day, CONGRATULATIONS! Those aviator glasses, solo t-shirt, and Elite Magazines are now his.

10/14/2015

Yesterday morning I was informed by several of our employees who are enrolled in the CWU flight program that they could not work certain hours we had scheduled two months ago because the new flight contractor would not take into account student work schedules. This is the contractor who supposedly brought some magical scheduling software to the program, and has just now released a schedule for only the next two weeks. Midstate had a schedule for the entire quarter ready to go the day school started, which took into account class schedules, sports and extracurricular commitments, and also student work schedules. All students were scheduled a minimum of 6 times every two weeks. Ask the current students, or at least the ones who have been allowed to start training, how many times they are scheduled. Add this to the huge backlog of students who didn't finish the certificates or ratings they were supposed to finish last year. Where was the planning and oversight required prior to the start of the school year to avoid a repeat of the disaster experienced last year? What was the acting Chair of the Aviation department doing this summer other than running around squawking about my lease with Kittitas County? How is it that student lab fees have been collected for multiple flight labs and paid to the contractor in advance for training that has never been completed? The failure of CWU to deliver the training to the students on budget and in a timely manner is epic.
Also promised from the new contractor (besides the new state-of-the-art aircraft that didn’t exist) was a safety management system. It is my understanding that a CWU faculty member developed the safety management system, not the contractor. For a safety management system to do what it is intended to do, namely avoid incidents and accidents and keep everyone safe, a safety matrix is critical as a tool to use in dispatching flights. In a typical scenario, numbers from one to five would be assigned based on potential risk to a variety of variables such as aircraft maintenance status, inoperative equipment, weather, day or night operations, student and instructor physical and mental well-being, and student and instructor experience. Any combination of risk numbers placing the prospective flight in a yellow area of the matrix would require some intervention. If the risk numbers placed the proposed flight in the red, it would not be allowed to be dispatched. What kind of risk assessment do you think would be assigned to night training operations in a 36 year old high-time multiengine aircraft with students having no prior complex airplane training, paired with flight instructors with no prior flight training experience, and expected to work up to sixty hours a week. You don't have to have forty years of experience in this industry to answer that question, just some common sense.

Address

1207 E Bowers Road
Ellensburg, WA
98926

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

Telephone

(509) 962-7850

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