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From Field to Flight: Building Northeast Wisconsin’s Next-Generation Aviation Economy

Written by Mark Scheffler | 5/13/26 9:38 PM

What if Northeast Wisconsin became the place where aviation’s future is built, fueled, and flown?

We already have the pieces:

  • A strong agricultural base
  • A deep manufacturing tradition
  • A growing aviation ecosystem
  • World-class technical education

Now it’s time to connect them.

By aligning bio-based fuels, light aircraft manufacturing, and workforce development, we can create a fully integrated “Field to Flight” economy—one that drives jobs, innovation, and long-term prosperity across our region.

 

Here’s what that means for Northeast Wisconsin:

  • New markets for farmers growing energy crops
  • Local processing facilities creating high-quality jobs
  • Energy dollars staying local instead of leaving the region

With local and regional companies already experienced in large-scale fuel logistics and distribution, we have an array of natural partners to help scale delivery across the Midwest.

This is how we turn agriculture into energy—and energy into opportunity.

 

Manufacturing the Next Generation of Aircraft

 

At the same time, aviation itself is changing.

The rise of light sport aircraft (LSA), experimental aircraft, and next-generation composite designs is opening the door to smaller, more efficient, and more affordable airplanes.

And there is no better place to lead that movement than Northeast Wisconsin.

 

The Oshkosh Advantage:

With Experimental Aircraft Association headquartered in Oshkosh and hosting the world’s largest aviation gathering each year, we already sit at the center of experimental and recreational aviation innovation.

This gives us:

  • A global network of builders, designers, and innovators
  • A culture of hands-on aircraft construction
  • Immediate visibility for anything we build here

We can leverage this to:

  • Attract light aircraft manufacturers to set up operations locally
  • Support kit aircraft assembly and customization shops
  • Develop composite manufacturing expertise tied to aviation

 

 

Our technical college system is one of the best in the country. By aligning programs with aviation and energy, we can create a direct pipeline from classroom to career.

Imagine programs that train students in:

  • Aircraft assembly and maintenance
  • Composite materials and advanced manufacturing
  • Biofuel processing and energy systems
  • Avionics and next-gen flight technology

Students wouldn’t just learn—they’d step directly into high-demand, high-skill careers right here at home.

 

Appleton as a Regional Aviation Hub

 

Appleton International Airport is already positioning itself as more than just a regional airport.

With connections to aviation leaders like Gulfstream Aerospace and Allegiant Air, we have the foundation for a full-service aviation ecosystem:

  • Maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) operations
  • Corporate and commercial aviation partnerships
  • Training and workforce development hubs

Now imagine pairing that with:

  • Locally produced sustainable aviation fuel
  • Regionally manufactured light sport aircraft

That’s not just an airport—that’s an aviation cluster.

 

 

We can build a coordinated strategy that links:

Agriculture → Energy → Manufacturing → Aviation → Workforce

Here’s what that looks like in action:

  1. Farmers grow energy crops used for biofuel production
  2. Processing facilities convert feedstocks into SAF
  3. Distributors deliver fuel through existing infrastructure
  4. Aircraft manufacturers build next-gen planes locally
  5. Airports deploy and service those aircraft
  6. Technical colleges train the workforce at every step

Each piece reinforces the others.

This is how you build a self-sustaining regional economy.

 

Why This Matters

This isn’t just about aviation—it’s about the future of Northeast Wisconsin.

It means:

  • Good-paying jobs that can’t be outsourced
  • Long-term high-skilled careers for younger workers
  • New income streams for farmers
  • Energy independence rooted in local production
  • Leadership in a fast-growing global industry

And importantly, it brings together people across political and economic lines:

  • Farmers
  • Engineers
  • Manufacturers
  • Small business owners
  • Students and educators

This is a big-tent economic strategy.

Leadership to Bring It Home

 

This kind of transformation doesn’t happen by accident—it requires leadership that understands how to connect local strengths with federal opportunity.

As a licensed private pilot and aircraft owner, Mark's focus is simple: bring resources home to Northeast Wisconsin and make sure our region is first in line for emerging industries like sustainable aviation fuel and next-generation aircraft manufacturing.

That means securing federal investment for SAF production, expanding workforce training grants for our technical colleges, supporting airport innovation at Appleton International Airport, and cutting through red tape so local businesses can grow.

We have the foundation—what we need now is a voice in Washington who will fight to turn this vision into reality.