log in 

JOB SEEKERS, Try it Now 

EMPLOYERS, POST LEGAL JOBS | SEARCH LEGAL RESUMES

ATTORNEYS LAW STUDENTS LEGAL STAFF

See Legal Jobs We Have Recently Researched and Located for You

What Where
Show Recruiter Jobs  What's this?

Show Refreshed Jobs  What's this?

Job Type:
Employer Type:
+ Browse Legal Jobs     + Advanced Search     + Search Tips
Legal Jobs >> Legal Articles >> Career Corner >> By Ending Labor Talks, FAA Makes Bad Situation Worse
  • Career Corner
By ending labor talks, FAA makes bad situation worse

by Michael Kinsman     
By ending labor talks, FAA makes bad situation worse
By ending labor talks, FAA makes bad situation worse
Federal Aviation Administration: Flying into rough weather
The latest evidence comes with the federal agency's decision to terminate labor talks with its air traffic controllers and to institute its own work and pay guidelines. The House did not muster enough votes to send the FAA back to the bargaining table, so the new work rules were imposed this past week.

In doing this, the FAA has mistakenly targeted air traffic controllers as the source of the agency's problems, making a bad situation worse.

"The FAA is a mismanaged mess," said Mike Boyd, a Colorado-based airline consultant with The Boyd Group. "There's no other way of putting it. It is trying to paint air traffic controllers as greedy bureaucrats, but that's not true. The skies are not as safe as they should be, but that's not the fault of the controllers."

Boyd characterizes the FAA as ineffective and unable to remedy internal management woes. He says exacerbating poor labor relations is not the way to fix the agency.

"It's unfortunate," said Tony Vella, president of the Southern California chapter of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association. "Everything they are doing is based on politics, not facts."

The last major FAA dispute with air traffic controllers was 25 years ago when President Ronald Reagan fired all 11,000 controllers, forcing a massive restaffing and rebuilding project that took years.

This time, the FAA and the controllers union tried for nine months to forge a new contract. In April, the FAA declared an impasse and threw the issue into Congress, where lawmakers had 60 days to either resolve the dispute or to let the FAA draw up the terms of a new contract.

This month, that 60-day period elapsed. A last-ditch effort in the House to force the FAA back to the bargaining table failed on a 271-148 vote.

Under the new pay schedule, newly hired air traffic controllers will make $93,000 after five years of experience, compared with the $127,000 now earned by controllers with five years' experience.

FAA spokesman Geoff Basye said that those salaries are lower, but points out that the agency has no difficulty recruiting new controllers and that all 14,575 air traffic controller positions nationwide are now fully staffed.

Vella vigorously denies that. The Southern California TRACON operation in San Diego, which supervises air traffic throughout the region and is the busiest such facility in the nation, has 261 authorized positions. Only 203 of those positions are filled, with 10 more air traffic controllers in training, Vella said.

From January through May 31, Southern California TRACON reported 12 close calls between aircraft, up from five reports in the comparable period a year ago, Vella says.

"There is no doubt in my mind that there is a correlation between the shrinking number of air traffic controllers and the number of incidents reported," he said. "Our current staffing is not enough to do our job well."

On a typical day, 6,200 to 6,400 planes require TRACON assistance before they are turned over to individual airports for final approaches and takeoffs.

"We haven't been fully staffed in three years, and that is starting to wear on the controllers," Vella said. "We want to assure air safety, and if these numbers keep slipping, we might not be able to do that."

For example, Thursday's staffing at the San Diego airport terminal called for 11 air controllers on both day and night shifts, yet eight were available for each shift, Vella said.

Vella said morale among controllers has been skidding for some time. As work pressures mount, more are talking about retirement. Fifty controllers at the Southern California facility are eligible to retire by September 2007.

"Morale is so bad that every controller I have talked to says they plan to retire the day they are eligible," he said. "That is going to create a major problem."

FAA spokesman Basye said it is a good market for hiring and that the FAA is confident it can replace controllers on a timely basis.

Vella says it can take 12 to 15 months for an air controller with military training to be fully certified for TRACON responsibilities and that fresh college graduates need up to three years of training.

"I just don't see how they are going to fill the positions and that concerns me," he said.

It also concerns Boyd.

"Every upgrade of their systems and operations that the FAA has tackled in recent years has failed," he said. "The air traffic control system is in chaos, but it's not because of the controllers. But FAA has buffaloed the public into believing that."

Boyd said Administrator Marion Blakey is leading the FAA down the wrong path and that maintaining a strong contingent of air traffic controllers is imperative.

"You don't want to wait for a plane crash to do something about your operational problems," he said. "You need to address those now. Blakey is simply making things worse."


© Copley News Service
Rate This Article
   View top rated articles

Printable Version    Printable Version PDF Version    PDF Version Email to a Friend    Email to a Friend
Comment    Post A Comment View Comment    View Comment Discuss    Discuss
Popular Tags
 contracts  salaries  offices  evidence  management  President Ronald Reagan  consultants  FAA  Colorado  September 2007

Featured Testimonials

The number of jobs available on LawCrossing was pretty substantial. It was amazing to find so many open positions.
Steven

Facts

LawCrossing Fact #110: We update our site every day, all day; it’s 90% of what we do!

"We want to hear your thoughts. Please comment on this article (below)!"

Comments


Article ID: 1677    

Article Title: By ending labor talks, FAA makes bad situation worse

Comment not found for this article.

Comment Comment

Facebook comments:

try it now

Enjoyed reading this article?
Click here to sign up for News Wire, our weekly newsletter, and you'll receive articles just like this right in your inbox.

Jd Journal - Send Tips
JDJournal

Enter your email address and start getting breaking law firm and legal news right now!



Every Alert

Alert once a day

 


total jobs
136,936
Upload Your Resume
New Legal Jobs in Last 7 Days
10,997
SIGN UP NOW
*Email:
VeriSign Secure Site  
Only LawCrossing consolidates every job it can find in the legal industry and puts all of the job listings it locates in one place.

  • We have more than 25 times as many legal jobs as any other job board.
  • We list jobs you will not find elsewhere that are hidden in small regional publications and employer websites.
  • We collect jobs from more than 250,000 websites and post them on our site.
  • We do not charge employers when we post their listings.
  • We are private, and therefore far fewer people are applying for the jobs on our site than are applying for those on public job boards.
Facebook Twitter
BCG Attorney Search
Real-Time Job Updates
Sign up free and receive new jobs by email as soon as they become available.

First Name


Email


Areas of Practice


Regions of Interest


post your resume
  • Make your resume viewable to thousands of employers.
  • Employers can look you up in our database.
  • Get job alerts based on your resume.
upload your resume


Your privacy is guaranteed. We will never give out, lease, or sell your personal information.


Employment Research Institute