The Sun (San Bernardino)

John Magness, 58, helped shape IE

Executive and war veteran who died after a mountain summit was a logistics leader

- By Brian Whitehead bwhitehead@scng.com

John Magness, a top executive for the Dallas-based developmen­t giant that transforme­d San Bernardino’s Norton Air Force Base into a Southern California logistics hub, died Saturday after summiting Mount Aconcagua in Argentina, Hillwood Developmen­t Co. officials confirmed Tuesday.

He was 58.

The former Redlands resident and father of two was pictured days ago at the 22,837-foot summit.

“John succumbed to medical complicati­ons in the hours after reaching the summit of one of the highest mountains in the world,” according to a Tuesday post on the Johnny Mac Soldiers Fund LinkedIn page.

Magness, a Desert Storm veteran, and two other Army vets participat­ed in the Aconcagua Challenge expedition to raise money and awareness for the Johnny Mac Soldiers Fund, which provides scholarshi­ps to military children of fallen service members.

Magness was a “dedicated leader” on the organizati­on’s board of directors, the post states.

“In short,” it continues, “he was our classmate, teammate and friend. He was our hero, serving others until the end.”

Magness’ body is in the process of being brought home, the LinkedIn post states.

Daughter Chelsea Shelburne is quoted in the post as saying her father “loved and believed so deeply in the Johnny Mac cause and mission and we will strive to continue his legacy.”

In an email Wednesday, Shelburne added: “His faith and family were the center of his life. He lived with so much purpose.”

Magness leaves an indelible mark on the Inland Empire.

He graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1986, and after his nine years in the Army and time as a consultant to the United Arab Emirates government, Magness joined Hillwood — owned by Ross Perot Jr. — in 1997 with an eye toward developing land at vacant Air Force bases here.

In 2002, Hillwood inked a deal with the Inland Valley Developmen­t Agency, the body of

local and regional leaders overseeing Norton’s redevelopm­ent. Branded as AllianceCa­lifornia, the publicpriv­ate partnershi­p set out to change the landscape of the San Bernardino base, attract new businesses and bring jobs back to the area and community at large.

Hillwood since has developed millions of square feet of new commercial and industrial space in and around the base.

Stater Bros., Kohl’s and Mattel were among the major retailers to occupy new warehouses early on, and by 2017, AllianceCa­lifornia had yielded north of $2.3 billion for San Bernardino, said a news release from that year.

“John was an outstandin­g father, patriot and man of faith,” Perot, Hillwood

president and CEO, said in a statement. “He was a highly decorated combat pilot in the U.S. Army for nine years before joining Hillwood to lead our California Expansion efforts.

“John was instrument­al in forming the public-private partnershi­p that redevelope­d the former Norton Air Force Base,” Perot added, “and he took great pride in that project and the economic opportunit­ies it generated for a community he loved.”

Two years ago, nearly a decade after opening its first California fulfillmen­t center just outside Norton, Amazon moved into a massive air cargo logistics center that Hillwood developed at San Bernardino Internatio­nal Airport.

The Amazon Air Regional Air Hub presently serves as the Southern California headquarte­rs for the e-commerce giant’s expansive air

freight network.

Mike Burrows, executive director of the Inland Valley Developmen­t Agency and San Bernardino Internatio­nal Airport Authority, called working with Magness the past 20years an honor and privilege.

“An ardent profession­al and a visionary leader,” Burrows wrote in an email Tuesday. “Norton Air Force Base became AllianceCa­lifornia because of (Magness’) talent, drive, and dedication to what is now one of the most successful public-private partnershi­ps in the world.

“Words cannot express the magnitude of an individual with such indelible integrity — the caliber of which I find myself fortunate to have seen,” Burrows added.

“The stars of AllianceCa­lifornia will always shine brighter because of John, and we will always be thankful for him.”

Magness is survived by his wife, Angie, and their children, Shelburne and John Michael.

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