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Find or Refer a Contractor in Tyler

Tyler Texas Jet Center

August 28th, 2010

Tyler has a surprisingly active aviation community. While Pounds Field is only a regional airport, it is one of the larger of its type outside of the Dallas Metroplex. In fact the Tyler airport is home to a number of Fixed Base Operators (FBO). An FBO is a company that is either privately or publicly owned, which provides any number of services to aircraft owners and pilots.

These may include every thing from aircraft washing and refueling, to mechanical repair, often charter flights and hanger space rental, or any number of other potential services. Of the three or four FBOs in Tyler (or east Texas for that matter), the one with hands down, the most high end, quality customer support, is the Jet Center of Tyler (JCT).

Jet Center offers the full range of services, including a lounge for pilots and passengers, and an on- site car rental agency. The Skyline Café is housed in a neighboring building within the Historic Aviation Memorial Museum, (beneath the control tower). The staff there can provide nearly any kind of assistance the customer requires.

Some very famous names have passed through their doors, but the company is careful to protect the privacy and anonymity of its customers. Discretion is the better part of public relations you might say.

Despite the name, the Jet Center of Tyler is there for all types of aircraft, including medical, military and defense department aircraft. (I’m no expert but it is my understanding that the requirements of government equipment makes servicing them a very selective process that very few FBOs are equipped to handle). Any number of curriers and air delivery services of varying sizes make regular stops here as a part of their normal routes.

Numerous pilots attest to the fact that the staff of JCT is enormously helpful regardless of the size of the aircraft or the names on the passenger manifest. For those of us Tylerites who can afford to operate our own planes, (and I’m not one of them by the way) I would recommend choosing JCT as your regular FBO. The quality of their staff and service is by all accounts impeccable.

For more information on the Jet Center of Tyler visit their webpage at http://websmart66.net/cgi-bin/p/w66p-home.cgi?d=jet-center-of-tyler. Also, to read some revealing customer reviews go to http://www.airnav.com/airport/KTYR/JET_CENTER.

Guadalupe Radio Network is Spreading Across the Lone Star State

August 10th, 2010

A close friend of mine who happens to be Catholic and who lives in the Dallas Metroplex was recently invited to be a guest on a local Catholic talk radio show there. I have yet to listen to the interview as it has not been posted yet but it may well serve as a subject for a future article. In the meantime I took the occasion of his interview to learn a bit about both the station and the network of which it is a part.

The Guadalupe Radio Network (GRN) serves Catholic listeners across Texas with twelve different stations. The closest station to the Tyler area is the North Texas station located in the Dallas area or at 910 on the am radio dial. So why would someone who writes on East Texas culture and events write an article on a religious radio station a couple of hours out of his jurisdiction?

There are a couple of answers to that question. First off with stations everywhere are now streaming their broadcasts, it’s possible to reside a hundred miles away or more and remain in the cultural loop. And the GRN broadcasts to most of our state. It’s not unreasonable to expect an affiliate to spring up closer to our area. The only branch outside the state that I’m aware of is located in Washington DC by the way.

The Guadalupe Network was founded in 1997, and has as its goal to help educate Catholics on the fundamentals of their faith as well as to stand up for conservative pro-family values in a society that increasingly rejects them. The format is all, or nearly all topical. While the network is very Catholic in its theology and its views on modern society and politics even the most ardent protestant is likely to find a natural ally in the station.

Many socially conservative Tylerites are likely to find an agenda with which they can sympathize. Recent broadcasts addressed issues like prolife activism, the abstinence movement, and parochial and private education.

Much like Tyler’s religious broadcasting, GRN is a non- profit that subsists on the donations of listeners, as well as grants from businesses, church groups and community organizations. So how wide will the stations reach be? I think it remains to be seen.

The network’s agenda is likely to appeal to Texans from all over the state regardless of theological stripe, but I’m curious whether or not the more exclusive denominations will be able to overlook the station’s orthodoxy in order to unify around its family values message.

I’ll confess (no pun intended) I remain unsure how often I’ll listen in, not due to religious differences but time constraints. For those in our area who would like to check out the broadcasts or perhaps make a donation visit the website at http://grnonline.info/.