NATCA, FAA Far Apart In Contract Talks
8/1/2005
FAA Administrator Marion
Blakey says flight delays would increase dramatically and modernization efforts
would slow to a crawl if the agency accepted the contract proposal presented by
the National Air Traffic Controllers Union last week. In an exclusive interview
with AVweb at EAA AirVenture on Thursday, Blakey said the union negotiating team
is asking for a 5.6 percent annual wage increase that would result in the average
pay package for a controller topping $200,000 within four years. She said the
controllers are also seeking a seven-hour work day, minus an hour for lunch and
time for other breaks. FAA officials say that would result in a 12 percent productivity
reduction. NATCA officials were unavailable for comment in time for our deadline.
The agency entered the talks with a series of news conferences claiming that its
chief funding source, the Airline Trust Fund, is declining (something NATCA disputes)
and that the current controller contract is not sustainable. Blakey says the average
compensation package is now at $164,500, including overtime and benefits (but
excluding pension contributions) and the increases proposed by the union would
eat up money that would go towards modernization and facility improvements. NATCA
has maintained that overtime costs are a direct result of understaffing.
Source: www.avweb.com
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