Senate Concurrent ResolutionNo. 100


Introduced by Senator Knight

(Principal coauthors: Assembly Members Gorell, Holden, and Muratsuchi)

(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Berryhill, and Fuller)

(Coauthors: Assembly Members Gatto and Grove)

March 17, 2014


Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 100—Relative to California Aerospace Week.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SCR 100, as introduced, Knight. California Aerospace Week.

This measure would recognize the contributions of the aerospace industry to the history, economy, security, and educational system of California, its communities, and its citizens by proclaiming the week of March 24, 2014, through March 28, 2014, as California Aerospace Week.

Fiscal committee: no.

P1    1WHEREAS, The California aerospace industry is a powerful,
2reliable source of employment, innovation, and export income,
3directly employing more than 162,000 people in California and
4supporting more than 640,000 jobs in related fields for a total
5payroll estimated at $15.3 billion annually and resulting in $500
6million in annual state income taxes; and

7WHEREAS, The California aerospace industry leads the United
8States in aerospace and defense services, including the design and
9manufacture of aircraft, spacecraft, and commercial satellites, as
10well as a myriad of systems and instruments for search, detection,
P2    1navigation, guidance, and radio and television broadcast and
2wireless communication systems; and

3WHEREAS, California is home to many superb sites of air and
4space activity, including Vandenberg Air Force Base, two Federal
5Aviation Administration-licensed launch sites, the Mojave Air and
6Spaceport, more than 20 astronomical observatories, multiple
7international airports, many important defense aerospace bases,
8and hundreds of business and general aviation airfields; and

9WHEREAS, California is also home to three National
10Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) research and
11engineering centers. These centers are recognized as the Ames
12Research Center, the NASA Neil A. Armstrong Flight Research
13Center, formerly known as the Dryden Flight Research Center,
14and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL); and

15WHEREAS, California has led the nation in aeronautical firsts
16and California’s aerospace industry produced many of the
17significant and record-breaking aircraft that are now represented
18in The Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum.
19The Spirit of St. Louis, which in 1927 performed the first solo
20nonstop transatlantic flight from New York to Paris, was designed
21and built in California by Ryan Airlines and made Charles
22Lindbergh an international hero. The Douglas DC-3, recognized
23as the most successful airliner in history, dominating both
24commercial and military air transportation from its introduction
25in 1935 until after World War II, was designed and built in
26California by the Douglas Aircraft Company. The Space Shuttle
27was designed, built, assembled, and tested in California. California
28is home to Edwards Air Force Base, the site of five test flights of
29the Shuttle Enterprise, the landing site of 54 Space Shuttle
30missions, and the site of the 199 X-15 missions; and

31WHEREAS, Edwards Air Force Base, known for its notable
32aeronautical achievements, was the location of many first flights
33of American aircraft, shuttles, and jets flown from Rogers Dry
34Lake in the Mojave Desert of Kern County. America’s first jet,
35XP-59A, was first flown in California. General Charles “Chuck”
36Yeager made world history in California on October 14, 1947,
37when he became the first man to fly Mach 1, faster than the speed
38of sound, while piloting the Bell X-1 rocket plane. The rocket
39powered X-15, flown by former State Senator William J. “Pete”
40Knight, attained a speed of Mach 6.7 (4,520 miles per hour), a
P3    1speed that remains, to this day, the highest ever attained in an
2airplane. The Rutan Model 76 Voyager was the first aircraft to fly
3around the world without stopping or refueling; and

4WHEREAS, California has led the nation in firsts in human
5space exploration, including the manufacture of the Apollo 11
6command module that carried the first humans to the surface of
7our moon; the manufacture and landing of the Space Shuttle
8orbiters, the first reusable space vehicles, which include the
9Endeavour, on display at the California Science Center; and the
10manufacture and recovery of the SpaceX Dragon capsule and
11Falcon launch vehicle, the first privately funded space exploration
12system; and

13WHEREAS, California has led the nation in firsts in robotic
14space exploration, including the Explorer 1 Earth observation
15satellite as America’s first successful spacecraft, the Mariner 2 as
16the first spacecraft to explore another planet, the Viking landers
17as the first spacecrafts to perform experiments on another planet,
18and the development of the Pioneer 10 spacecraft as the first to
19exit our solar system; and

20WHEREAS, Californians, through NASA and JPL, build,
21manage, and operate the majority of the spacecraft exploring our
22solar system, including the most recent Mars Science Laboratory
23“Curiosity,” and those spacecraft exploring other solar systems,
24like the Kepler exoplanet discovery mission, as well as the SOFIA,
25the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, that
26administers the Airborne Astronomy Ambassadors program for
27educators who have inspired the dreams of California youth; and

28WHEREAS, California aerospace industries assemble the
29legendary Boeing C-17 Globemaster III, build the impressive
30Northrop Grumman Global Hawk Unmanned Aircraft Systems,
31engineer radical new aircraft at the famous Lockheed Martin
32“Skunk Works” Advanced Development Programs facility, and
33create systems that assist and protect members of the United States
34Armed Forces through military communications, situational
35awareness, satellite-guided ordnance, and technologies yet to be
36dreamed of; and

37WHEREAS, California will continue to lead in aerospace
38education, through its superb Science, Technology, Engineering
39and Mathematics (STEM) education programs and at its
40world-class research universities, and thus will continue to lead
P4    1the world with the innovation that enabled advanced meteorological
2forecasting, the Global Positioning System, NextGen tools for air
3traffic management, green aviation, sophisticated wind tunnels
4and test facilities, and advanced supercomputing and robotics; and

5WHEREAS, The American Institute of Aeronautics and
6Astronautics (AIAA), in conjunction with NASA, is sponsoring a
7month of events to highlight the contributions of the aerospace
8community to California, including panel discussions, educational
9displays, tours, and the “AIAA Policy Symposium: Civilian
10Applications of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) - A California
11Perspective,” during March 2014; now, therefore, be it

12Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly
13thereof concurring,
That the California Legislature recognizes the
14contributions of the aerospace industry to the history, economy,
15security, and educational system of California, its communities,
16and its citizens by proclaiming the week of March 24, 2014,
17through March 28, 2014, as California Aerospace Week; and be
18it further

19Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of
20this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.



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