Bill was Editor-in-Chief of Business & Commercial Aviation from 2000 to 2020. During his stewardship, the monthly magazine received scores of awards for editorial excellence.
He is the recipient of the Lifetime Achievement in Journalism Award from the National Business Aviation Association; the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Aerospace Media Awards; the Aviation Journalism Award from the National Air Transportation Association; and an Aerospace Journalist of the Year Award for Business Aviation.
Previously, Bill served as Managing Editor of Aviation Week Television. He was the top editor for both Flying and Professional Pilot magazines, as well as a member of the senior editorial staff at Reader's Digest. He also managed communications for FlightSafety International.
Bill has authored or co-authored three aviation books, was an essayist for National Public Radio, wrote aviation documentaries for The Discovery Channel and has written for numerous publications including The New York Times, Smithsonian Air & Space, Popular Mechanics and The Associated Press, among others.
An active aviator, Bill holds a Commercial Pilot license, along with multiengine, instrument, seaplane and glider ratings.
San Antonio-based Gore Design Completions has won an international competition to complete two Boeing 787 head-of-state aircraft. “Winning this contract against tough international competition shows that GDC is truly a world leader in head-of-state and VIP aircraft completions,” said GDC general partner Mohammed Alzeer. “We are on track to deliver an industry record of four aircraft this year,” Alzeer added — three widebody Airbus A340s and one BBJ3. GDC is adding ERP (enterprise resource planning) and Catia software, he said.
Doris Kearns Goodwin, Pulitzer Prize winning biographer of Lyndon Johnson, the Kennedys, Roosevelts Teddy and Franklin, and Abraham Lincoln, said in a recent interview that her years-long research involves poring over her subjects' letters, speeches, notes and diaries. And, she adds, that kind of close analysis of original documents will be a problem for those historians of the future since the emails, blogs and social media postings favored today by tomorrow's lions will simply disappear in the electronic evanescence.
The FAA has certified the Learjet 75, clearing the way for deliveries to formally begin. The approval, which came Nov. 14, had been slowed by delays in certification of the Garmin 5000 avionics panel and more recently by the government shutdown. The first customers of the new Learjets are banker and real estate mogul Louis Beck and London Air Services, a charter operator. Fractional operator FlexJet is also expected to begin taking delivery soon.