On campus: Farmindgale aviators earn their wings with both feet on the ground

Farmingdale Chapter President Yolanda Pauze was a study in concentration as she sat in the cockpit of the new flight simulator, her eyes fixed on the computer screen straight ahead.

“Wow, this is amazing,” Pauze said. “It’s like being in an actual airplane.”

That’s why students and instructors at Farmingdale’s aviation program are so excited about the acquisition of the $90,000 simulator—a device the college wouldn’t have without the initiative and persistence of Farmingdale UUPer Barbara Maertz. Maertz was instrumental in helping the college secure a state grant that paid for the training device.

From its controls to its instruments and Global Positioning System (GPS), the Frasca flight training device is a replica of cockpits found in single- and double-engine aircraft. Students can practice taxiing up the runway, taking off, cruising, descending and landing, while their instructor—sitting at a computer just to the side of the simulator—feeds in real-time scenarios and weather hurdles, such as snow, clouds and rain.

The simulator was unveiled during a Dec. 10 press conference at Farmingdale’s Aviation Center at Republic Airport.

“It’s a true representation of what can happen in the air,” said Mike Hughes, a UUPer and the aviation program’s director of operations. “It’s the best possible way to teach and save dollars.”

“Students can practice emergency situations, like fire, smoke in the cockpit, engine-out procedures and navigation problems, that are too dangerous to do in the air,” said Farmingdale UUPer Steve Campbell, the aviation program’s chief pilot. “No one will ever crash and burn using a simulator.”

The quest for a new simulator began seven years ago, when Campbell met with Maertz and asked if there was anything UUP could do to help secure funding for a new flight simulator. The aviation program, one of the oldest in the country, has been using older flight training devices that are still in use but are not compatible with GPS systems.

Maertz took the request to Assemblyman Robert Sweeney (D-Lindenhurst), who eventually secured a grant through the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York. Sen. Charles Fuschillo Jr. (R-Merrick) also aided in delivering the dollars.

But bureaucratic red tape from the state, tie-ups due to the grant being linked to another Farmingdale project that never took off, and delays by the school’s administration to place an order for the simulator kept the apparatus out of reach for a long time, she said.

“It took a while, but we were finally able to make this project a reality and the union membership is thrilled,” said Maertz. “I am very proud to have had a part in this.”

During the press conference, Sweeney acknowledged Maertz’s efforts, saying that she “doggedly persisted” until the grant was awarded.

“I have to say that this wouldn’t have happened without the union,” Campbell said. “Barbara had the contacts, she set up the appointments. It was the union that kept asking administrators where things were, that kept following up.”

The state-of-the-art device is approved for use by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). It will allow students to gain crucial flight experience time without stepping in a plane—and with less stress on their wallets.

Students, who pay as much as $200 per hour to fly with an instructor (students usually fly two-hour sessions), will pay between $40 and $45 an hour to use the flight training device, said Sarah Kilkenny, an aviation program senior.

“The feel of the flight simulator is so realistic,” said Kilkenny, who has more than 400 hours of FAA-certified flight time. “All the controls and instruments are the same. And the best thing is you can freeze the (simulator), turn around and ask your instructor what you did wrong.”

To earn a four-year bachelor of science degree and become an entry-level pilot, students must complete 64 credits of liberal arts and science courses and 65 credits of aviation and flight courses. Students can also earn a number of pilot certificates, including certified flight Instructor (CFI), CFI multiengine instructor, and private pilot certificate.

Kilkenny and Farmingdale senior aviation student Ray Castaldini said they plan to make good use of the simulator, as will the rest of the 60-plus aviation students, Hughes said.

“It will certainly help us attract students when they see it at our open houses,” Campbell said. “They get excited when they see things like this.”

— Michael Lisi

2009 NYSUT RA; Two UUP newsletters awarded for outstanding writing, design

Two newsletters produced by UUP members earned a total of five awards for outstanding writing and design.

The Active Retiree and the Farmingdale Unifier were feted at the annual NYSUT journalism awards luncheon at the 2009 RA in Buffalo. The competition is sponsored by New York Teacher.

The Active Retiree won Awards of Merit for general excellence and best editorial, and an honorable mention for best news story.

“This well-designed, well-written and well-edited newsletter sends a clear message: Retirees as activists and difference-makers,” is how the judges described the newsletter, which is published for the more than 3,300 retiree members of UUP.

The editorial “Health care should be a priority in this election,” by Judith Wishnia of SUNY Stony Brook, also earned high marks from the judges. “This editorial is not just well-written and well-organized, it does an excellent job of backing up its point with a number of factual references.”

Cortland UUPer Jo Schaffer’s winning article on the state’s Rural Aging Summit was praised for its “solid reporting.”

The Farmingdale Unifier, edited in 2008 by UUPer Yolanda Pauze, received a First Award for general excellence and an Award of Merit for best front page among locals with memberships between 651 and 1,000.

“The clean, attractive layout and excellent content make this publication interesting and easy to read,” the judges wrote.

The winning cover, which extolled the contract provisions for family leave, used “graphics and shaded boxes to add interest without being distracting. Nicely done.”

— Karen L. Mattison

Farmingdale Chapter hosts candidate forum

Long Island lawmakers participating in a UUP-sponsored Legislative Forum said they were not in favor of further mid-year cuts to the state university.

Assemblymen James Conte (R-Huntington Station), Charles Lavine (D-Glen Cove), Andrew Raia (R-E. Northport), Joseph Saladino (R-Massapequa), Robert Sweeney (D-Lindenhurst) and Rob Walker (R-Hicksville)—all endorsed by NYSUT in their respective state Assembly races—spoke those words during an Oct. 16 question-and-answer session at SUNY Farmingdale. Barbara Maertz, the chapter’s legislative chair, arranged the event.

Before the candidates’ forum got under way, UUP President Phillip Smith warned that further cuts to SUNY would only add to the decline of the state’s troubled economy, noting that every dollar invested in the state university generates an average of between $6 and $8 for local economies. Maertz added that continued budget cuts would prevent SUNY from fulfilling its core mission of a quality, affordable, accessible education for all New Yorkers.

“In this time of economic crisis, SUNY is the solution,” Smith said.

The lawmakers pointed out that they would be asked to make additional cuts when they return to the Capitol Nov. 18, but agreed that SUNY is worth the investment.

On hand during the event were, above, from left: UUP statewide Vice President for Professionals John Marino; Assembly-man Conte; Assemblyman Saladino; UUP statewide Secretary Eileen Landy; Assemblyman Raia; Maertz; Assembly-man Sweeney; Assemblyman Lavine; Farmingdale Chapter President Michael Smiles; UUP?President Smith; and Old Westbury Chapter President Candelario “Kiko” Franco.

Also attending was Farmingdale State College President Hubert Keen.

— Karen L. Mattison

Changing lives with a smile: Farmingdale has UUP to thank for new dental hygiene care center

Student Allison Terranera works on classmate Patrick Jones. Students, faculty and staff get free dental care at the center.

Sophomore Allison Castro smiled as she looked through the tiny dental loupes attached to her protective glasses, allowing a magnified look at Jim Foby’s teeth as he lay on an examination chair in SUNY Farmingdale’s new Dental Hygiene Care Center.

Inserting a wand-like device called an intraoral camera into his mouth, she pushed a button, snapping several digital photos. Instantaneously, the images appeared on a large computer screen a few feet away. She pointed out small signs of plaque on Foby’s teeth, which were fine.

"That’s amazing," Foby said, staring up at the screen.

Castro was one of more than 20 dental hygiene sophomores working on patients in the sparkling new clinic on a recent March afternoon, cleaning teeth and dispensing dental advice to their patients. The $2.5 million center has been open to the public since January.

The center, located on campus, would still be just a good idea if it weren’t for the dedication of UUP members such as professors Judy Friedman, Sharon Struminger and department of dental hygiene Chair Laura Mueller-Joseph.

UUP Farmingdale Chapter President Barbara Maertz was instrumental in obtaining a $1.7 million state grant to refurbish the clinic.

Friedman, a retired professor and past department chair, hatched the idea for a new center almost a dozen years ago. There certainly was a need; much of the equipment was aging and outmoded, breaking down frequently. Some of the equipment had been in use since the mid-20th century, purchased after the college’s dental hygiene program began in 1946.

The facility itself was cramped and difficult for students and instructors to work in, said Mueller-Joseph. The exam chairs in the old center were so close together that patients, when reclined, were literally head-to-head as students worked on them.

Unable to get college funding for the renovation, Friedman undertook a grass-roots effort in 2002 to raise money for the center, organizing student phone banks, targeting college alumni and corporate sponsors for donations. The two-year initiative, achieved with Mueller-Joseph’s help and the college president’s support, raised $45,000.

Unfortunately, that support didn’t include funding for the project, which left Friedman, Struminger and Mueller-Joseph at loose ends. Enter Maertz, a SUNY Farmingdale chemical technology instructional support tech and active UUP Farmingdale chapter leader, who was aware of the renovation plan.

She invited Mueller-Joseph to meet with Assemblyman Robert Sweeney

(D-Lindenhurst) to ask for $75,000 to replace the clinic’s compressor unit used to operate the dental tools. Sweeney supported the entire renovation plan and suggested they present it to state Sen. Charles Fuschillo Jr. (R-Merrick). The department presented the plan at the chapter’s annual Legislative Brunch in 2004 and 2005.

Working with Maertz, Mueller-Joseph and other UUP members, Fuschillo and Sweeney secured a $1.7 million member item grant to help pay for the new facility. Friedman’s phone bank money and additional college funding made up the difference.

"UUP played an integral part in this," said Friedman. "Barbara just really kept it up. We couldn’t have done it without the union."

"When it comes to dealing with the state, it’s about patience and perseverance," said Maertz. "We had a committed group of people and the politicians saw that."

The new center is in the old center’s space, but with many noticeable changes. There’s a new professional waiting room and reception area built across the hall. The center is clean and bright, with its own dental tool sterilization room and partitioned state-of-the-art examination areas, which meet federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) regulations. More than a dozen licensed hygienists and dentists on staff – all UUP members – supervise and teach students at the center.

"I think it’s better here than at the (dental office) where I work," said student Sarah Wironsteki, who works as a dental assistant in a local dental practice. "We don’t have an interoral camera there."

The center, which is open to the public, serves about 3,000 patients each year. It provides services to Head Start programs in Nassau County at no cost. SUNY Farmingdale students, faculty and staff also receive free care.

Senior citizens and patients referred through nearby community centers come to the clinic for dental care, offered at reduced prices to the community – a huge benefit for many without dental insurance. A comprehensive dental exam costs $20 for seniors, $25 for adults and $15 for children under 16.

And that always gives Friedman cause to flash a shiny smile.

"This program, this facility, has and will continue to change lives," she said.

– Michael Lisi

At Farmingdale: Exhibit to showcase members’ artwork

 

The artwork of faculty members past and present from SUNY Farmingdale’s department of visual communications is currently on display at Hale Hall on campus.

The exhibition is open to the public and runs through October.

The department — first known as the department of art and design when it was established in 1946 — has produced thousands of graduates who have gone on to successful careers as artists or teachers of art.

A special showing of the exhibition will be held Oct. 10 for the Long Island Retirees of UUP, who are gathering that day for a luncheon meeting at SUNY Farmingdale.

— Donald Feldstein