Help the Texas Repair Station Community
On Aug. 29, ARSA Executive Director Sarah MacLeod sent the following message to all of the association’s member contacts:
The storm isn’t even over as I’m writing this, but the devastation of Hurricane Harvey seems beyond imagination. Emergency service agencies are overwhelmed by distress calls and private citizens have begun taking action to help their fellow Texans.
For the repair station community, the situation along the Gulf Coast is serious. Aviation businesses will face technical and economic obstacles as they try to recover and get back to work.
Most of us can’t float down the floodwaters to rescue stranded neighbors, but we can help. ARSA is calling on its members – no matter where they are located – to reach out to repair stations affected by the storm. Below is a list taken from the FAA Repair Station Directory of companies in Texas with coastal area codes. Review the names, in addition to any other Texas-based organizations you may know personally, and look for suppliers, competitors or partners. Find those performing similar work or supporting the same portion of the industry as you. Determine which might benefit from a simple check-in call and then pick up the phone. Remember that we’re all in this together and must support each other in a trying time.
As you do this, keep ARSA in the loop and ask us first if you find regulatory issues or need help dealing with the government. Also, let us know if the association should support any specific policy from Washington as lawmakers consider relief options.
Every day, ARSA reminds the world that it can’t fly without your work…today we remember that we can’t fly without each other.
Your Servant,
SarahSarah MacLeod
Executive Director
Aeronautical Repair Station Association
[email protected]Coastal Texas Repair Stations
*The links below will take you to the company’s page on the FAA Repair Station Directory, which contains location and contact information.