Cantwell Introduces Legislation to Rename National Air Grant Fellowship Program After ET-302 Crash Victim Samya Rose Stumo, Honors 737 MAX-8 Crash Victims

Source: United States Senator for Washington Maria Cantwell

03.10.22

Cantwell Introduces Legislation to Rename National Air Grant Fellowship Program After ET-302 Crash Victim Samya Rose Stumo, Honors 737 MAX-8 Crash Victims

Cantwell-led National Air Grant Fellowship Program recognizes international health advocate Samya Rose Stumo, who died at age 24.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, on the 3rd anniversary of the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA) introduced a bill to rename the National Air Grant Fellowship Program and commemorate and recognize the 347 lives lost due to the Ethiopian Airlines and Lion Air Boeing 737 MAX-8 crashes.

If passed, the program would be known as the Samya Rose Stumo National Air Grant Fellowship Program in honor of international public health advocate Samya Rose Stumo, who lost her life at age 24 in the March 10, 2019 Ethiopian Airlines crash. The legislation was introduced along with Senator Roger Wicker (R-MS).

Born in Connecticut and raised in Massachusetts, Samya Stumo was an avid international traveler. As a teenager she spent a year in Peru as part of a Rotary Youth Exchange. As an undergraduate at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Stumo returned to Peru to study the health needs of rural indigenous people. She then earned a graduate degree at the University of Copenhagen, and completed an internship at the Barcelona Institute for Global Health. Stumo booked a seat on Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 while on assignment for ThinkWell, a nonprofit healthcare organization based in Washington D.C. She planned to travel to Kenya and Uganda to establish local offices for ThinkWell’s healthcare initiatives.

“I am grateful for the ongoing advocacy of the Lion Air 610 and Ethiopian Airlines 302 families and share their dedication and commitment to advancing aviation safety for the flying public,” said Senator Cantwell. “Samya Rose Stumo traveled the world with a purpose — to make it a better place. Her life, along with the other victims of these tragedies, was cut short. But we continue to honor and commemorate their lives and Samya’s sense of purpose through the ‘Samya Rose Stumo National Air Grant Fellowship’ program, which will help to improve and shape aviation safety policy, now and into the future.”  

In addition to honoring Samya Rose Stumo, the bill recognizes and commemorates the lives of the 189 passengers and crew who died in the Lion Air Flight 610 crash on October 29, 2018, the lives of the 156 passengers and crew who died in the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crash on March 10, 2019, and the life of Indonesian diver Syachrul Anto, who died during search and rescue recovery operations in the aftermath of the Lion Air Flight 610 crash.

“Samya’s selfless dedication to improving the lives of others was inspiring to everyone around her and guides our family’s advocacy for meaningful change each day,” said Michael Stumo, father of Samya Rose Stumo. “I thank Chair Cantwell and Ranking Member Wicker for honoring all the victims of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 on this day, the third anniversary of the crash, and for ensuring that Samya’s legacy of service continues through the Samya Rose Stumo National Air Grant Fellowship Program’s mission to invest in young aerospace leaders and improve aviation safety for future generations.”  

In January 2020, Senator Cantwell, along with Senator Roy Blunt (R-MO), introduced the National Air Grant Fellowship Program Act of 2020, bipartisan legislation to create one-year paid aerospace policy fellowship roles for graduate and post-graduate students in Congress, at the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), and in other federal agencies.

The program was enacted into law with the signing of the Aircraft Certification, Safety, and Accountability Act in December 2020, authorizing $15 million a year for fiscal years 2021 to 2025 to award aerospace policy fellowships.

Under the program, each Fellow spends a year within either a Congressional office that has jurisdiction over the FAA, or within an office at the FAA or other federal agencies, to assist the federal government in keeping pace with changing aviation-related technology and developing aviation safety policy.

The program provides Fellows with valuable educational and professional experiences in the field and will help build a new generation of talent for the FAA and Congress to draw from as they make policy in this space.

The full bill text is available HERE.

###