Corporate Angel Network Archives - FLYING Magazine https://cms.flyingmag.com/tag/corporate-angel-network/ The world's most widely read aviation magazine Thu, 04 Jul 2024 14:00:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 Nonprofit Turns to Jets to Fight Cancer https://www.flyingmag.com/non-profit-turns-to-jets-to-fight-cancer/ Thu, 04 Jul 2024 14:00:00 +0000 /?p=210700 For over 42 years, the Corporate Angel Network has been working to ferry cancer patients to treatments they otherwise wouldn’t be able to access.

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Corporate aviation tends to take a beating for what some see as unnecessary extravagance, but you can bet many finger-pointers would have a different perspective if they or a loved one were riding on a bizjet that was taking them for cancer treatments they otherwise wouldn’t be able to access. 

For over 42 years, the Corporate Angel Network (CAN) has been quietly working in the background to make this happen for as many cancer patients as possible, regardless of their financial status.

The CAN nonprofit story is an important one to tell, and AVweb contributor Larry Anglisano does just that with a sit-down discussion with CAN president and CEO Bob Stangarone and other volunteers who help make it happen.


Editor’s Note: This article first appeared on AVweb.

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Business Aviation Provides Charity Lift https://www.flyingmag.com/business-aviation-charity-lift/ Tue, 29 Dec 2020 16:27:09 +0000 http://137.184.62.55/~flyingma/business-aviation-provides-charity-lift/ The post Business Aviation Provides Charity Lift appeared first on FLYING Magazine.

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When we look at the sleek outlines of the latest Cessna Citation Latitude, Pilatus PC-24 or Gulfstream G600, we see the potential for performance, agility, and the speed that gets us to a destination safely and in style. What a cancer patient sees—looking at that same airstair door—is entirely different. Therein lies a protected cocoon, a nurturing shell in which an immunocompromised soul can fly to treatment without worry.

Using these amazing tools we know as pilots day in and day out, we may not fully comprehend how life-transforming their capabilities can be—save for those angels among us who fly urgent medical transport and volunteer their time and abilities to do so.

Hope, Faith, Answered Prayers

Mark Pestal—a Denver-based attorney and commercial pilot—is one of those pilots. Pestal founded AeroAngel, based at Centennial Airport (KAPA) in Colorado, and he donates much of his time and resources toward the organization. Since January 2010, the AeroAngel mission has been able to connect sick children with the wings to access distant medical care. With more than $2 million worth of in-kind or monetary donations in total, AeroAngel has helped more than 200 children receive critical care to date.

In the first four months of 2019, AeroAngel tallied more flights than it had in 2018—but a lot has changed since this year began. The mission remains critical, however, so Pestal and the organization’s volunteer pilots have worked to find a way to carry on flying through the challenging first half of 2020.

Brent Bythewood, one patient’s father, relates the urgency underlying the missions: “I was tasked back in May with trying to figure out how to get my critically ill daughter, Emily, from Nashville [Tennessee] to Boston for an extremely complex open-heart surgery. My options were: putting her in a car for an 18-hour drive or…well, because of COVID-19, there weren’t any other feasible options.”

charity flight for patients
Pilots enjoy providing the critical lift through corporate “angel” flights. Corporate Angel Network

“The idea of the organization is to transport extremely sick kids to the lifesaving procedures or the best doctors for their diagnosis,” Bythewood says. “[Pastel] does this by using [private] jets rather than smaller lightweight planes [because of] mileage and weight constraints.” This focus on jets, crewed by volunteer professional pilots, stands out and allows for a level of care needed by those very sick children facing severe chronic illnesses. It also makes long distances go by more quickly and comfortably than could be possible on the airlines or, conversely, on lighter GA aircraft.

It’s a task getting out in front of donors, whether it’s pilots or owners or those with the means to support the costs of these trips. However, in 2018, AeroAngel took on a donated Learjet 55—crewed by pilots trained at FlightSafety International—which enables nonstop trips from Denver to either coast. Pestal would love to add another aircraft to their hangar.

Wade Tagg flies an Embraer Phenom 300 on AeroAngel missions, a culmination of the 20 years of civilian flying he has logged since he started off as a flight instructor in Longmont, Colorado. For the past six years, he’s flown for one owner, stepping up with that owner from a Cirrus SR22 to a Pilatus PC-12, and in 2018, to the Phenom, which he flies single-pilot. For the past three years, the owner and Tagg have donated the aircraft and piloting time to AeroAngel, and Tagg’s conducted several flights.

No one patient stands out to Tagg—”They all seem important”—though one “triple” flight took him from the aircraft’s base at Longmont’s airport (KLMO) to California, then out to the East Coast before returning to Longmont. In the process, the flight served one teen and two younger children over the course of two days. “It’s so nice to have the right equipment to get the job done,” Tagg says. “And it’s so impressive to see how hard [Pestal] works to figure out how to help.”

Corporate Angel Network

The folks at the Corporate Angel Network know that effort all too well. Their only mission? To give a lift to cancer patients—that’s why CAN was founded in 1981. The goal? To use empty seats on corporate aircraft to provide that critical transportation. While AeroAngel works directly with private-jet owners, CAN has looped into the flight departments of major Fortune 500 companies to secure needed lift.

Founder Priscilla “Pat” Blum, a pilot holding a commercial certificate—and a cancer survivor herself—joined forces with Jay Weinberg, the then-owner of an Avis rental-car franchise in Mount Vernon, New York, and pilot Leonard Greene, president of Safe Flight Instrument Corporation. Weinberg was also a cancer survivor, and Greene had lost his wife to cancer, so the mission was intensely personal for all. On December 22, 1981, CAN flew a patient from his treatment in New York City back home to Detroit just in time for Christmas.

charity flight for patients
The passengers are all smiles on board the direct flight to critical care. Corporate Angel Network

Roughly 500 corporations in the US—including half of the top 100 of the Fortune 500—have donated seats to CAN over the nearly four decades since its inception, with more than 60,000 flights coordinated in total by the group. Eligibility is not based on financial need, and patients can use the service as often as they need to.

Of the current corporate partners—who normally represent at least 1,200 flights each year—only a couple dozen are currently donating flights, mostly because of greatly reduced (or temporarily grounded) flight departments. But those who are still giving to CAN are doing so in a very generous way. Instead of a company offering empty seats on a handful of segments in its network, companies have contacted CAN to see what patients need most urgently. “The companies are being creative and nimble,” says Gina Russo, executive director for CAN. “We’re not flying as many patients, but those in need are getting help.”

For example, a recent flight took a 3-year-old girl up to Boston and back for a critical major surgery on her leg. Because it’s typically hard to match up flight schedules, such out-and-back flights are rare during normal times. But the company offered the round-trip flight knowing that it would be nearly impossible to find another partner to take her home in COVID times. Companies are also using repositioning and post-maintenance flights to fulfill urgent needs. Only those patients who require special medical attention are traveling these days, according to Russo. Many who are stable can use telemedicine or find local therapy for the time being.

How does it work normally? When a patient requests transportation, and the database indicates there’s a scheduled flight within 100 miles of both departure and destination airports, CAN will call to verify whether the flight is going and seats are available. If seats are available and the patient can take that flight, CAN then calls the company back to request the flight and obtain a final clearance. Patients book backup commercial flights in the event a corporate partner needs to change their flights—which clearly happens all the time in the business-aviation world, coronavirus or not.

Fundraising has also taken a new twist during the pandemic, with CAN’s major charity event normally held at the annual National Business Aviation Association convention. Instead, CAN has a virtual auction underway, closing on October 7. Russo explains, “Cancer does not wait.” To solicit donations through the auction, several companies—including Universal Weather and Aviation, Nike, and American Airlines—have contributed experiences to bid on, so CAN will remain aloft through the crisis.

And though she’s now coming up on her 96th birthday, Blum still considers CAN among the most important aspects of her life well-lived. “Next to my family, it’s dearest to my heart.”

charity flight for patients
Ava pauses for a moment on the airstairs, cradling her copilot. Corporate Angel Network

Other Ways To Help

Another mission-specific organization that coordinates vital transportation through use of corporate and private aircraft, Veterans Airlift Command, puts its efforts into the service of those who have served their country—and paid a price. Started after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the VAC primarily supports those who have been wounded in the conflicts that have followed, along with their families. Volunteer pilots and aircraft owners have stepped up to fly more than 10,000 passengers to date, using mostly turboprop twins and jet aircraft to suit particular needs.

On the civilian side, the Angel Flight network of charitable organizations also holds opportunities for medical-related airlift through its web of regional partners. Pilots and aircraft owners typically volunteer service of their light singles and twins to carry ambulatory patients within a state or region, or they collaborate to span farther distances. Using anything from a Cessna 182 on up, Angel Flight pilots work wherever there is need.

And because that need doesn’t stop—not even for a pandemic—those who volunteer their time to fly others to critical care are always looking for pilots, aircraft, and a hand from anyone willing and able to assist. Perhaps your new mission awaits.

Are you a corporate pilot, aircraft owner or interested volunteer? Check out the organizations listed below to determine if there’s a good match for your aircraft, skills and availability to help those in need of critical medical care.

This story appeared in the October 2020 issue of Flying Magazine

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CAN Hosts Online Auction for Cancer Relief Flights https://www.flyingmag.com/can-cancer-relief-flight-auction/ Tue, 01 Sep 2020 15:15:37 +0000 http://137.184.62.55/~flyingma/can-hosts-online-auction-for-cancer-relief-flights/ The post CAN Hosts Online Auction for Cancer Relief Flights appeared first on FLYING Magazine.

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On the second night of the National Business Aviation Association’s annual convention, the Corporate Angel Network traditionally hosts its live auction, Fund An Angel, to muster financial support for the organization, which coordinates relief flights for cancer patients across the United States. While the NBAA’s live event has been cancelled, the auction goes on, in a virtual way.

The Fund An Angel Virtual Auction features a wide range of items and experiences, and CAN’s executive director Gina Russo credits creativity with providing a way for the auction to go on. “While the CAN team wishes we could be in-person for this event as we’ve done for the past ten years, I am pleased that we still have a platform to generate funds for our operation while promoting the positive impact business aviation has on cancer patients throughout the country,” Russo said.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has severely impacted CAN financial resources, as well as the availability of aircraft,” Russo noted. “When flight departments decreased flight activity in mid-March, it presented a unique challenge for the CAN model. Fortunately, through the support of the business aviation community, we have remained a critical part of our patients’ treatment plans and continue to transport them to the country’s top treatment centers.”

The online auction is now live and will close on Wednesday, October 7 at 8 pm EDT. Items will be added as they are received by donors, and supporters may place a bid at any time. Participants may also make a direct pledge to CAN’s mission through the “Fund an Angel” selection on the items list, the association noted.

Prior to the slowdown induced by the pandemic, CAN coordinated roughly 250 flights each month, and the organization has flown more than 63,000 patients since its founding in 1981. Read more about CAN in the October issue of Flying.

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