Cessna airplane, in flight, over Southern Illinois University

May 01, 2023

Media Advisory: SIU Aviation to receive seven new Cessna planes

by Pete Rosenbery

CARBONDALE, Ill. — The continued enrollment growth in Southern Illinois University Carbondale’s nationally recognized aviation program is also an opportunity to bring new flight training planes online.

SIU Aviation will welcome seven new Cessna 172s flight training airplanes into the program later this week. Reporters, photographers and camera crews are encouraged to see the newest state-of-the-industry planes and learn how the additions will help train future pilots at 9 a.m. Thursday, May 4, at Southern Illinois Airport. Members of the news media can meet in the lower lobby of the Glenn Poshard Transportation Center, 545 N. Airport Road, Murphysboro, before proceeding to the planes outside. Several SIU aviation program officials, including director José R. Ruiz and chief flight instructor Steven Goetz, along with several flight instructors, will be available for interviews.

“I am very excited at the prospect of acquiring seven new flight training aircraft because of the impact the new additions will have on our ability to serve our students,” Ruiz said. “Our students deserve the finest flight training available, and these new aircraft will assist us in meeting that expectation.”

Plans are for 11 aviation personnel to fly to Independence, Kansas, to get the planes and return to Southern Illinois Airport about 7 p.m. Wednesday, May 3, weather permitting.

The aircraft are financed entirely by student aviation flight fees, the same funds that are used to pay for maintenance upgrades and fuel. There were more than 350 students in the aviation flight program in fall 2022, and Goetz expects that number or more in fall 2023.

Goetz said the newest planes are vital to SIU’s aviation program. The new planes, which will feature cutting-edge glass panel Garmin avionics, will increase to 47 the number of available planes for flight training students to use. The program still uses some planes that date back to the late 1970s, but Goetz explained that constant upgrades allow those planes to continue air worthiness.

“We use every bit of life out of them in order to make sure that we are being good stewards of our students’ money,” he said. “As the aviation industry grows, we have more and more demand for pilots and for flight training. Being able to bring on new airplanes that will allow our students to train on a modern flight deck and prepare for their careers better positions us to support the needs of the aviation industry in the nation.”

For more information, contact Goetz at 618-453-9247 or Ruiz at 618-453-8898.