- Messages
- 2,513

Air Traffic Controller Warns Major Airport Unsafe for Travel
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy pleaded this week for more people to become air traffic controllers.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
They’re not just private citizens. They’re neuroscientists and urogynocologists. Piloting an old twin engine plane in bad weather should be no problemo. Except the plane is kind of a dog, but only a broker or an aviation pro would know that.Why do private citizens think they can fly well-enough to warrant flying without a competent and experienced pilot and co-pilot?
You’re gettin’ it.Doesn’t matter because it’s probably Trump’s fault that doctors have been killing themselves in light twin engine planes for as long as the healthcare system has been affording them the opportunity to do so.
I’m supposed to fly into Newark in July with my son. Haven’t booked the tickets yet. Wondering if I should now.Just finished an episode of The Daily about this situation. They said the previous staffing recommendation was 63 air traffic controllers. They have since revised that number down to 42 somehow. But as of now only have 22 controllers. Each day shift needs 10. Each night shift needs 14. When the last blackout happened a couple weeks ago they only had 4 controllers working.
Some friends are flying into Newark in 2 weeks for a wedding. [Tracy Morgan gif no, no, no, nope, no, hell no]
They said on the pod that the staffing problem is not something that can be solved quickly. To become a controller, you have to have experience with an airspace over another large US city (Indy for example). And then when you get to Newark you have to shadow for 1 year to learn the unique circumstances of the Newark airspace before becoming a fulltime controller.I’m supposed to fly into Newark in July with my son. Haven’t booked the tickets yet. Wondering if I should now.
I listened to that one as well, and I couldn't help but think about all of the money it will take to fix it, as well as a lot of other issues we have. Then I thought about our debt. Then I thought about how toxic the idea of paying taxes is to most people. Damn.They said on the pod that the staffing problem is not something that can be solved quickly. To become a controller, you have to have experience with an airspace over another large US city (Indy for example). And then when you get to Newark you have to shadow for 1 year to learn the unique circumstances of the Newark airspace before becoming a fulltime controller.
On top of that you have these blackouts because they are routing their flight data from Newark to Long Island to Philly and the system keeps getting overloaded. In these blackouts they're losing all radars AND radio communication with flights. On final approach the planes can be 1-2 miles away from each other. If you have a 90 sec blackout with planes moving 7 miles a min (~425mph) you can easily have collisions. Huge mess.
I would avoid unless absolutely necessary.
I have to ask. Link?Per Sean Duffy, if air traffic control is down, pilots should treat it as an all-way stop sign.
Ha. Hopefully he hasn’t suggested that yet.I have to ask. Link?
Per Sean Duffy, if air traffic control is down, pilots should treat it as an all-way stop sign.
A Confederacy of Dunces.He also said today to expect these issues to manifest themselves all across the country.