WASHINGTON, Feb 27 (Reuters) -
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said on Thursday
the Trump administration will take steps to boost air traffic
controller hiring after a series of recent safety incidents
again raised questions about a persistent staffing shortage.
The Federal Aviation Administration will open its hiring
window to become an air traffic controller through March 17,
will increase starting salaries by 30% for candidates who go to
the FAA training academy and will speed the time-to-hire by
cutting more than four months off the old process.
A persistent shortage of controllers has delayed flights. At
many facilities, controllers are working mandatory overtime and
six-day weeks to cover shifts.
Duffy said he was reconsidering rules that had allowed
air traffic control supervisors to reduce staffing at
Washington's Reagan National Airport before a fatal Army
helicopter-plane collision that killed 67 people in January.
The FAA is about 3,500 fully certified air traffic
controllers short of targeted staffing levels and has about 10%
fewer controllers than it did in 2012.
The FAA fired 350 probationary workers this month including
some with safety-related positions. Duffy insisted that the
agency eliminated no jobs critical for safety. USDOT withdrew a
retirement offer made to controllers.
This week, a bipartisan group of three U.S. senators called
for new funding to boost air traffic control staffing, speed
training of new controllers and provide new incentives to retain
aviation workers.
Last week, the U.S.
aviation sector called for "robust emergency funding"
from Congress for air traffic control technology and
staffing after a series of crashes.
Airlines for America, which represents American Airlines ( AAL )
, Delta Air Lines ( DAL ), Southwest Airlines ( LUV )
and other major carriers, praised Duffy's action to address the
longstanding shortage of air traffic controllers.
United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby said "addressing
the critical shortage of air traffic controllers is the most
impactful action the government can take to improve safety,
reliability and efficiency for air travelers." American CEO
Robert Isom called the plan "a critical initial step to making
our aviation system even safer."
In 2024, the FAA cut minimum flight requirements at
congested New York City-area airports through October, citing a
staffing shortage of air traffic controllers.
In March, former President Joe Biden proposed $8 billion
over the next five years to replace or modernize more than 20
aging air traffic control facilities and 377 critical radar
systems and to hire 2,000 new controllers. A quarter of all FAA
facilities are 50 years old or older.