Inspector General Staffing Report Validates NATCA's Concerns
Posted on: Monday, 27 April 2009, 18:34 CDT
The IG found a whopping 32-percent decline in the number of fully trained and certified controllers at the Southern California Terminal Radar Approach Control Facility (TRACON) - the nation's busiest such facility. The IG, which also looked at the Northern California TRACON and
The report, which was requested by Sen.
"I want to thank Senator Feinstein for requesting this report and holding the FAA accountable for its dangerously misguided and reckless policies that have led to this crisis at these critical facilities," NATCA President
The IG found in a report last June that the FAA's imposed work rules and pay cuts have resulted in a drastic decline in the number of controllers who want to transfer to hard-to-staff and busy facilities like the ones in
"The FAA's failed 'run it like a business' approach the past few years is rearing its ugly head," Forrey said. "Simply forcing out experienced controllers through imposed work rules and pay cuts and unfair, demoralizing working conditions, only to replace them with lower paid trainees, has resulted in high training failure rates, low experience levels and short staffing.
"Desperation has bred reckless policies. Instead of fixing the labor mess it created, the FAA continued to dig itself a hole, all the while denying there was a staffing problem. Today's report is clear: there IS a staffing problem. If the FAA cannot properly staff the country's busiest TRACON, what does that say about the credibility of this agency on important issues of protecting the public's safety?"
The IG report is supported by NATCA's own research asserting the critical staffing problems at
When LAX Tower was once lauded for going error-free for 27 months it was operating with 44 to 46 fully trained controllers; now that total is down to 34. With the risk of losing five more to retirement, the potential for errors increases.
With 25 eligible to retire at Northern California TRACON the facility continues to lose experienced controllers; now operating with 133 fully certified controllers when the last negotiated staff number between NATCA and the FAA was for 196.
SOURCE National Air Traffic Controllers Association
Source: PR Newswire
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