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Velocity173
I've heard that the contract tower at San Carlos, CA (SQL) has been having trouble finding controllers who are willing to work for what the contractor is willing to pay. The level of service has been seriously declining there.
Contract towers are a different animal. The pay does not compare with FAA salaries (and benefits), and you must already have a Control Tower Operator (CTO) certificate and 12 months experience to be hired by most contract towers so the pool of people who can work for them is limited. Typically former military waiting to get an FAA spot and FAA controllers who have hit their mandatory retirement age. There are also a few mills ($$$) that turn out students with a CTO and then let them work at a private tower to gain their 12 months.
Pay is also fairly fixed by location and not subject to negotiation by the controllers or by the contract tower company. Expensive areas have this problem with low level FAA towers too. So much so that on top of government locality pay some facilities are getting a COLA and an incentive increase.
I had an interview with LZU tower back in the day. A whopping $42K starting salary! Actually would have been twice my E-5 salary at the time so not all that bad considering.
Expensive areas have this problem
I don't understand why SQL doesn't have an FAA tower, because In recent years, there has been a lot of traffic there. Their numbers are probably dropping now though, because they have been restricting pattern operations due to the staffing issue.Contract towers are a different animal. The pay does not compare with FAA salaries (and benefits), and you must already have a Control Tower Operator (CTO) certificate and 12 months experience to be hired by most contract towers so the pool of people who can work for them is limited. Typically former military waiting to get an FAA spot and FAA controllers who have hit their mandatory retirement age. There are also a few mills ($$$) that turn out students with a CTO and then let them work at a private tower to gain their 12 months.
Pay is also fairly fixed by location and not subject to negotiation by the controllers or by the contract tower company. Expensive areas have this problem with low level FAA towers too. So much so that on top of government locality pay some facilities are getting a COLA and an incentive increase.
I heard that the pay at SQL is not much over half of what it is at FAA towers in the area. What can we denizens do to correct this?No qualifier needed. "sunshine tax" comes in many forms, low pay for the locality COL line is but one such manifestation. The point is a good millions of people clearly think the trade is worth it, so it is so (retirees, 2nd career types, non-primary breadwinners, etc). For those of us that don't, geoarbitrage is the only game left, complete with the opportunity costs (distance and absence from family, travel costs, etc). Nothing new under the sun.
What I don't have a lick of sympathy for, is denizens of high COL desirable areas complaining about lack of staff for services. Exclusionary attitudes have consequences, and the serfs don't owe anyone a 2 hour commute to a $10/hr (inflation adjusted for pre-Covid) service job.
Why the age discrimination?
Off topic, but a lot folks are under the impression that certain FAA Air traffic facilities are designated training facilities (and conversely insinuating that other facilities are for experienced controllers only) for air traffic controllers. That is not true. All facilities are training facilities. New controllers are assigned based on academy performance, personnel preferences and staffing needs. All new controllers to a facility require training, regardless of previous experience, and every facility is set up to provide training.The FAA tower at Palo Alto (PAO), which is only seven miles away from SQL and similar in COL, has no staffing issues, and is said to be a very popular spot for controller training.
Because it’s a job that requires rapid fire decision making. The odds are better that a person at 30 has less cognitive decline than say someone at 50. Not to mention, if they hire a 50 yr old, they’ll only get 6 more years until mandatory retirement. Not much of an investment.
Similar to what I was told in the Army. Max age at the time for flight school was 29. They wanted applicants that they could get 20 yrs out of them before they retired or generally started experiencing grounding medical conditions.
Off topic, but a lot folks are under the impression that certain FAA Air traffic facilities are designated training facilities (and conversely insinuating that other facilities are for experienced controllers only) for air traffic controllers. That is not true. All facilities are training facilities. New controllers are assigned based on academy performance, personnel preferences and staffing needs. All new controllers to a facility require training, regardless of previous experience, and every facility is set up to provide training.
I think some controllers are more obviously green than others, and when a pilot hears obvious trainees on more than one occasion they assume that facility is a "training facility". Nevertheless, it would be quite inefficient and disruptive for a controller to move to an area, train for a couple years, and then get moved to another area (only to be trained in that local area as well).
All that said, this may very well be completely different for military facilities. I'm not familiar at all with Army/Navy/AF air traffic programs, but I suspect there's a ton more training and moving around and cycling through of personnel, so perhaps certain facilities are more training focused than others...but I doubt it. Maybe our military controller experts can weigh in...
I may have read too much into the rumor I heard. As best I can remember, what was said was that PAO was a popular assignment because it could be a stepping stone to better jobs at nearby places like SFO, OAK, and SJC. (It's a VERY busy airport.)Off topic, but a lot folks are under the impression that certain FAA Air traffic facilities are designated training facilities (and conversely insinuating that other facilities are for experienced controllers only) for air traffic controllers. That is not true. All facilities are training facilities. New controllers are assigned based on academy performance, personnel preferences and staffing needs. All new controllers to a facility require training, regardless of previous experience, and every facility is set up to provide training.
I think some controllers are more obviously green than others, and when a pilot hears obvious trainees on more than one occasion they assume that facility is a "training facility". Nevertheless, it would be quite inefficient and disruptive for a controller to move to an area, train for a couple years, and then get moved to another area (only to be trained in that local area as well).
All that said, this may very well be completely different for military facilities. I'm not familiar at all with Army/Navy/AF air traffic programs, but I suspect there's a ton more training and moving around and cycling through of personnel, so perhaps certain facilities are more training focused than others...but I doubt it. Maybe our military controller experts can weigh in...
And there’s the enlistment thing. Some do their four years and don’t re-enlist. They may say this ain’t no fun no more and get out and go fly helicopters or sumpin’. Or what ever it is, maybe it’s more than four nowadays. In the early 80’s the Navy was getting 5 year enlistments if you wanted to be a Controller. In the early 2000’s the Airforce was still doing 4.All military facilities are training facilities as well. Even more so than FAA / contract because of a much higher turnover of controllers. While you get an FAA “pink card” out of school, it doesn’t mean jack until you get position quals on the back. With controllers spending 3-5 years at a facility before they’re off to another base, it’s a constant state of training.
Then, probably half the controllers either get washed out or they don’t even get facility rated before shipping out to their next duty station. They’ll even carry a little excess staffing compared to civ because of deployment demands. So you’ll have guys attached to the tactical stuff, they get pulled for overseas deployment or large scale exercises. Gotta have enough non deployable station controllers to make up for the loss. That’s where the DOD civ guys like @Timbeck2 come into play.
Trivia time. There was a time when San Carlos was the busiest single runway airport in the US. Probably the world.I may have read too much into the rumor I heard. As best I can remember, what was said was that PAO was a popular assignment because it could be a stepping stone to better jobs at nearby places like SFO, OAK, and SJC. (It's a VERY busy airport.)
I heard that about Palo Alto.Trivia time. There was a time when San Carlos was the busiest single runway airport in the US. Probably the world.
Because it’s a job that requires rapid fire decision making. The odds are better that a person at 30 has less cognitive decline than say someone at 50. Not to mention, if they hire a 50 yr old, they’ll only get 6 more years until mandatory retirement. Not much of an investment.
Similar to what I was told in the Army. Max age at the time for flight school was 29. They wanted applicants that they could get 20 yrs out of them before they retired or generally started experiencing grounding medical conditions.
My understanding of the age requirement, after working with an ex ATL ARTCC guy, is that literally 1/3 of your career is in training. The middle third you’re in your own. The last third you are the trainer.There ought to be a law ...
Why the age discrimination?
So FBI, DEA, most other federal law enforcement. Many state and local police departments and firefighters have and age limit to be hired and and forced out to retire.
Palo Alto may have been at one time, maybe is now, I dunno. But around 1980, San Carlos was. It wasn’t the busiest Runway, but it was the busiest single runway airport.I heard that about Palo Alto.
The 31 year old law came in 1972. Following the 1969 Sickout. At the time Controllers were just any ‘ol civil servant. Retirement age was whatever it was, I don’t remember, probably around 65. It was rare for a Controller to reach it. Burnout, loss of mental acuity to do the job, or some combination thereof. The Air Traffic Controllers Act of 1972 was the result. Mandatory retirement at 56. Eligible for Retirement at 50. Maximum entry age 31.I understand what their reasoning is but 31 seems to be quite young as a cutoff for entry. But it is government and they do as they want ... *
* ... and I don't have to like it and they don't care if I don't.
And there’s the enlistment thing. Some do their four years and don’t re-enlist. They may say this ain’t no fun no more and get out and go fly helicopters or sumpin’. Or what ever it is, maybe it’s more than four nowadays. In the early 80’s the Navy was getting 5 year enlistments if you wanted to be a Controller. In the early 2000’s the Airforce was still doing 4.
Highly doubtful and certainly not any time since 1990.Trivia time. There was a time when San Carlos was the busiest single runway airport in the US. Probably the world.
Circa 1980, San Carlos was the busiest single runway airport in the USHighly doubtful and certainly not any time since 1990.
Looking at the traffic court figures, it was likely that PAO was the busiest single-runway airport until 1993, when SAN overtook it.
I didn't start flying until 1991.Palo Alto may have been at one time, maybe is now, I dunno. But around 1980, San Carlos was. It wasn’t the busiest Runway, but it was the busiest single runway airport.
For many years, recruiters were telling ATC trainees that the enlistment was 6 years. Only within the last few years they were caught in their lie and now most are only 4 years.
I have an age waiver which allowed me to be hired after I turned 31 as a civilian. It works on the back side too as I can work as long as I keep passing the class two physical. Most have mandatory retirement at 54.
Trivia time. There was a time when San Carlos was the busiest single runway airport in the US. Probably the world.
Coulda been.I would have thought Kai Tak (Hong Kong) or Narita (in the 1980s) would be the busiest single runway airport.
My understanding of the age requirement, after working with an ex ATL ARTCC guy, is that literally 1/3 of your career is in training. The middle third you’re in your own. The last third you are the trainer.
They need all the years.
I can confirm . The level of service has gone to ****. They been cutting hours as well, not that I blame them when they have one controller for ground and airI've heard that the contract tower at San Carlos, CA (SQL) has been having trouble finding controllers who are willing to work for what the contractor is willing to pay. The level of service has been seriously declining there.
This sounds like a problem suited to an AI solution.