3 child clusters
Sub-clusters inside General Aviation Infrastructure & Access. Each card links to its own detail page; counts are rolled up through the whole subtree of that child.
5 orgs in this cluster's subtree
Every organization with primary activities in General Aviation Infrastructure & Access or any of its descendants. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SEDONA-OAK CREEK AIRPORT AUTHORITY The Sedona-Oak Creek Airport Authority (SOCAA) operates and manages the Sedona Airport, providing aviation services, facilities, and an airport scenic overlook… | AZ | $3.7M | 20 |
| 2 | PHOENIX FLYERS INC Phoenix Flyers Inc. is a nonprofit flying club based in Arizona that provides shared aircraft access to its member-owners for recreational, educational, and so… | AZ | $141K | 13 |
| 3 | SKYRANCH AIRCRAFT STORAGE SkyRanch at Carefree is a private airport in Carefree, Arizona, offering aircraft storage, home sites, and condominium units directly on the airfield. It serve… | AZ | $417K | 13 |
| 4 | Arizona Cloudbusters Inc Recreational flying club based at Chandler Municipal Airport in Arizona, operating since 1959. The club provides affordable access to well-maintained aircraft … | AZ | $165K | 4 |
| 5 | ARIZONA PILOTS ASSOCIATION INC Arizona Pilots Association Inc is a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting aviation safety, education, and community among pilots in Arizona. The organi… | AZ | $147K | 2 |
strategies used in this cluster
Theories of action extracted from orgs in this subtree. Click any to see the full set of orgs running the same approach.
- Community-Driven Engagement 3 orgsBy fostering shared ownership, knowledge exchange, and experiential involvement within an aviation community, organizations increase participation, skill retention, and safety, because individuals are more motivated and effective when they are actively connected, informed, and invested in a supportive peer network. This strategy centers on building and sustaining engagement through collective participation, whether via shared resources, member-led education, or hands-on experiences. It distinguishes itself from top-down or service-delivery models by emphasizing peer-to-peer learning, mutual support, and intrinsic motivation fostered through community identity and belonging. While some organizations focus on cost reduction or youth outreach, the unifying mechanism is the use of community as both a means and an outcome of organizational impact.Arizona Cloudbusters IncPHOENIX FLYERS INCSEDONA-OAK CREEK AIRPORT AUTHORITY
- Behavior Change Through Education and Engagement 1 orgBy combining education, experiential learning, and multi-stakeholder engagement, organizations produce safer behaviors and reduced injury rates, because meaningful participation and tailored messaging increase personal relevance, retention, and social accountability. This strategy centers on shifting individual and organizational behavior through intentional educational interventions that go beyond information delivery to include emotional engagement, hands-on practice, peer influence, and cultural relevance. It distinguishes itself from purely enforcement- or infrastructure-based approaches by prioritizing human factors—motivation, awareness, and social norms—as primary levers for safety improvement. While delivery methods vary (e.g., classroom training, peer ambassadors, community events), the shared theory is that sustained behavior change emerges when people are not just informed, but actively involved and personally invested in safety practices.ARIZONA PILOTS ASSOCIATION INC
- Low-Overhead Impact Maximization 1 orgBy minimizing administrative and operational costs, organizations maximize the proportion of resources directed to programs and beneficiaries, because reducing overhead increases efficiency, transparency, and donor trust, thereby amplifying social impact. This strategy unifies organizations that prioritize financial stewardship and operational leanness—through volunteer-driven staffing, zero-overhead models, endowment earnings use, or shared resource infrastructure—to ensure nearly all funding directly serves mission goals. Unlike broader capacity-building or service delivery strategies, this approach centers cost efficiency as a core theory of change, treating overhead reduction not just as a practice but as a lever for greater accountability, donor confidence, and programmatic scale.Arizona Cloudbusters Inc