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FAA to ‘supercharge' air traffic controller hiring on Long Island; seeks 9K more nationwide
FAA to ‘supercharge' air traffic controller hiring on Long Island; seeks 9K more nationwide

New York Post

time2 days ago

  • General
  • New York Post

FAA to ‘supercharge' air traffic controller hiring on Long Island; seeks 9K more nationwide

WASHINGTON — The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) launched a new application portal to 'supercharge' hiring at a Long Island air traffic control facility this week, as it seeks to recruit and retain nearly 9,000 more controllers nationwide by the end of 2028. The hiring blitz for New York Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) in East Garden City — which has been understaffed for years — aims to fill 226 positions over the next three years, according to figures released by the FAA. Currently, the facility is short at least 100 Certified Professional Controllers (CPCs), the staff who are fully cleared for the job. Advertisement 4 'In our first 100 days, this administration has made more progress on addressing the air traffic controller shortage than the last one did in four years,' Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy boasted in a statement. Getty Images The FAA air traffic controller academy in Oklahoma City is accepting New York TRACON applications through Aug. 15 — with each being offered a $5,000 bonus for completing the initial qualification training and another $5,000 after getting placed at a facility in 'a high cost-of-living area.' The DOT's Office of Inspector General is currently auditing New York TRACON — which handles incoming and outgoing flights from JFK and LaGuardia airports — after controllers overseeing Newark Liberty Airport's airspace were moved to a radar hub in Philadelphia from the East Garden City facility in July 2024. Advertisement The move shifted a dozen CPCs to the City of Brotherly Love while New York TRACON's skeleton crews kept working 60-hour weeks. That was followed by hair-raising, 90-second radar blackouts in April and May of this year affecting controllers handling Newark flights. Thousands of other outages due to the FAA's outdated systems and near-misses have also plagued the FAA. 4 Up to 35% of academy students flunk out, according to an FAA spokesperson, meaning the agency will have to keep making improvements to hit its target numbers — or come up as many as 3,000 hirees short. Federal Aviation Administration Advertisement Almost 1,000 candidates from across the country have signed up for the FAA Academy so far this year, with 550 applying in July alone after Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced a streamlining of the process meant to cut down on five months' worth of administrative backlog and accelerate hiring of top candidates. The FAA said it will be recruiting mainly from the private sector and the US military with the goal of filling all academy classrooms to capacity — while using simulators at 95 facilities to cut total training time by 27%. Up to 35% of academy students flunk out, according to an FAA spokesperson, meaning the agency will have to keep making improvements to hit its target numbers — or come up short by up to 3,000 hires. 4 More than 2,000 air traffic controllers are expected to join the FAA this year. Federal Aviation Administration Advertisement More than 2,000 air traffic controllers are expected to join the FAA this year as part of the agency's workforce plan, with 8,900 projected to be hired through 2028. Another 4,600 safety inspectors and engineers are supposed to join the FAA by the end of 2034. 'In our first 100 days, this administration has made more progress on addressing the air traffic controller shortage than the last one did in four years,' Duffy boasted in a statement. 4 The Department of Transportation's Office of Inspector General is currently auditing New York TRACON, which handles incoming and outgoing flights from the JFK and LaGuardia airports. Lukas Wunderlich – The transportation chief has offered FAA controllers cash bonuses of up to 20% of their annual salaries and other waivers to incentivize veterans from leaving the workforce at the mandatory retirement age of 56. In May, the Post exclusively reported on efforts by the controllers' union to block the move. The urgency of staffing up the FAA was driven home by the tragic Jan. 29 mid-air collision between an American Airlines passenger flight and an Army Black Hawk helicopter in the sky over Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, killing 63 people.

Newark Airport Meltdown: What's behind the flight delays? When will they end?
Newark Airport Meltdown: What's behind the flight delays? When will they end?

Yahoo

time06-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Newark Airport Meltdown: What's behind the flight delays? When will they end?

For a week and counting, flying in and out of Newark Airport has inflicted misery on travelers. The cancellations and delays have been caused by a cascade of infrastructure failures and staffing issues that have ground air travel to a crawl. What's behind it the meltdown and when might it end? Here's what you need to know befoire you fly: How extensive are the delays out of Newark Airport? They delays and cancellations have been extensive, Monday, more than 150 flights into and out of Newark were canceled as of midday and nearly 300 were delayed, according to flight tracking website FlightAware. Inbound flights contending with low cloud cover and ongoing air traffic control issues were delayed as much as 4 hours. The rainy-day delays capped what's now become a full week of pain for those traveling through the international airport, with days of hundreds of canceled flights and hours-long delays. What triggered the problem? The trouble started April 28, when sources tell the Daily News two unrelated air traffic control systems — the radar coverage of the north Jersey airspace and the telecommunications lines between the controllers and the local airport towers — failed shortly before 2 p.m. For two hours, Newark was effectively shut down, with no planes in or out. The systems were restored and flights resumed within three hours, but the outage exposed two weak links in an aging air traffic control infrastructure. Airplanes approaching or departing from an airport are handled by an air-traffic control system known as 'terminal radar approach control' — or TRACON. TRACON controllers are responsible for guiding a pilot's ascent or descent from an airport, bridging the gap between the local towers controlling planes at the airport, and the controllers tasked with directing planes already at cruising altitude. Until last year, New York TRACON — located in Nassau County — controlled the skies for all three major NYC airports: Newark, LaGuardia, and JFK. That was changed in July, when the FAA gave control of the north Jersey airspace — and the two-dozen air traffic controllers who were certified on it — to Philadelphia TRACON. The move was an effort to more evenly distribute the workload away from the chronically understaffed Long Island control center. But despite the reassignment, the radar feeds for the north Jersey airspace controllers rely on are still sent to New York TRACON, a source told The News. From there they must be sent on to Philadelphia — a situation that introduces latency into the system and can cause outages. A spokesman for the air traffic controller's union, NATCA, confirmed to The News Monday that last week's incident had effectively blinded Philadelphia TRACON. 'On Monday, April 28, air traffic controllers in Area C of the Philadelphia TRACON, who are responsible for separating and sequencing aircraft in and out of Newark Airport, temporarily lost radar and communications with the aircraft under their control, unable to see, hear, or talk to them,' read a statement distributed by NATCA spokesman Galen Munroe. Did air traffic controllers walk off their jobs? Though traffic resumed quickly last Monday, delays soon followed due to another on the cascading series of problems: a shortage of air traffic controllers in Philadelphia. According to the controller's union, 'due to the event, the controllers took absence under the Federal Employees Compensation Act. This program covers all federal employees that are physically injured or experience a traumatic event on the job.' 'The controllers did not 'walk off the job,'' the statement added, refutating a statement from United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby, who used the phrase last week. Newark is a major hub for United. Sources told The News that five of the 25 controllers assigned to the Newark airspace took a leave of absence, a 20% reduction in the workforce. The reduced number of controllers has made it difficult for Newark keep flights on schedule, leading to the week of delays, and leading United to pull 10% of their flights from the airport. Complicating matters even further, scheduled maintenance work has taken one of Newark's three runways — the North-South facing Runway 4L/22R — out of service until mid-June. When will the delays end? It's not clear. Newark won't have three working runways until the summer. The controllers' contract allows them take up to 45 days of leave. And sources say the radar and communication systems are old and could easily fail again. NATCA, the controllers' union, said it 'supports Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy's efforts to upgrade and modernize our nation's air traffic control systems and infrastructure,' but its not yet clear what those upgrades will be or what the timeline is for their installation. Last Thursday — three days after the outage — Duffy announced he would 'supercharge the air traffic controller workforce.' The secretary had announced a 30% increase in the base salary for trainees, as well as a $10,000 one-time bonus for new controllers headed to any of a list of 13 'hard to staff' control facilities. But as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D – N.Y.) said Monday that neither New York TRACON nor Philadelphia TRACON made Duffy's 'hard to staff' list. The Democratic leader made the remarks in a letter to the acting DOT inspector general, Mitch Behm, asking him to dig into the staffing and infrastructural problems surrounding New York metro air traffic control.

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