Newsletter: An Honor Flight to remember

Honor Flight was born in the Dayton-Springfield region, thanks to the work of a VA physician’s assistant, Earl Morse, and some like-minded friends.

Morse saw how many of his aging patients simply would never get to see the panoply of Washington, D.C. war memorials that help tell the story of how ordinary Americans changed the world.

Morse asked a patient if he (Morse is a private pilot) could fly him to D.C. to see the sights.

From such humble beginnings did Honor Flight become a reality.

In this newsletter:

  • How much are local city managers being paid?
  • A call to support local tenants.
  • A spotlight on a winner of Saturday’s Air Force Marathon.

Operation Honor takes flight from Wright-Patt

Veterans and their guardians line up on Wright-Patterson Air Force Base tarmac Sunday Sept. 21, 2025 to board a 445th Airlift Wing C-17 for a one-day "Honor Flight" trip to Washington, D.C. THOMAS GNAU/STAFF

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Honoring the honorable: As dawn warmed the Eastern horizon Sunday, more than 160 veterans were winging their way to Washington, D.C. for a trip they would never forget.

Carl Johnson, 79, and about 166 other veterans left Wright-Patterson Air Force Base on two Air Force Reserve C-17 Globemasters for a one-day trip to Washington, D.C., where they toured war memorials, getting the kind of reception Honor Flight Network organizers always strive to give veterans.

Public concert: The veterans returned to Wright-Patterson in time for the final performer of a concert on the 445th campus, Lee Greenwood.

“Nobody can seem to remember when Wright-Patt has been open to the general public,” Col. Matthew Muha, deputy commander of the 445th, told me last month.

Read the story.

Payroll Project: Dayton city manager pay climbs despite lack of performance reviews

Dayton City Manager Shelley Dickstein at a city commission worksession in May 2024. CORNELIUS FROLIK / STAFF

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The findings: Dayton’s city manager has gone without an annual performance evaluation for three years as her pay has steadily risen, a Dayton Daily News investigation found.

City Manager Shelley Dickstein’s 2024 compensation was $284,232, according to the Dayton Daily News Payroll Project. This is an increase from $264,888 in 2022.

Regular reviews elsewhere: The absence of an annual performance review puts Dayton at odds with its largest suburbs, Kettering and Beavercreek. Both cities perform annual reviews of their city managers, according to records obtained by the Dayton Daily News.

Read the story.

Making Dayton home: Immigrant businesses help fuel economy

Musicians play traditional Greek music during the Greek Festival at the Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Dayton on Saturday, Sept. 6, 2025. STAFF/SYDNEY DAWES

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Cultural statement: Immigrants are far more likely than native-born citizens to start businesses, and leaders in Dayton-area entrepreneurism say these owners both power the local economy and make the region more appealing, Reporter Sydney Dawes was told.

Staying power: “You have to have culture,” Dayton Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Christina Mendez said. “If you don’t have the things that stand up a culture, then people don’t want to live, work or stay here long-term. And we’ll just be a city that people pass by on the highway on their way to Cincinnati or Columbus.”

Read the story.

Kettering’s free- and low-cost home rehab programs turn heads

Courtland Avenue homeowner Bill Trent thought it was too good to be true, but his house now has new windows, garage doors, siding, gutters and downspouts, HVAC system and roof thanks to Kettering’s available programs. JEN BALDUF/STAFF

Credit: Jen Balduf

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Credit: Jen Balduf

What’s up: The city of Kettering is helping homeowners with upgrades and repairs as well as free home rehabilitation to address lead-based paint.

What they’re saying: Courtland Avenue homeowner Bill Trent thought the program was too good to be true, but his house now has new windows, garage doors, siding, gutters and downspouts, HVAC system and roof thanks to the programs.

Before my to-do list was a mile long and now it’s much shorter and I have a home that’s safe, that I can grow old in,” said Trent, 58, who has lived in his home for three years. “The chance to be a part of the program really, really, really is a miracle to me.”

Read the story.

Community group calls for tenant rights

A row of homes in the city of Dayton. CORNELIUS FROLIK / STAFF

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The idea: A community group that advocates for tenant rights is pushing hard for Dayton to create a housing trust fund to help pay for free legal representation for low-income renters in eviction cases and other types of support.

Members of the Dayton Tenant Union say a local pilot program that provides tenants with legal counsel produced promising early results and they want the city to fund a more permanent program.

Read the story.

Newsletter numbers

$58 million: What a Montgomery County levy, if renewed in November, would fund in social services.

7,600-plus: The number of Air Force Marathon runners this year.

2 hours, 21 minutes: Zach Kreft’s winning time in the Air Force Marathon Saturday.

Contact me: Thanks for being here. Tell me about your business at tom.gnau@coxinc.com or at X. I’m also on LinkedIn and on our Dayton Business page, with my colleagues. Find me as well on my Facebook page.

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