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San Diego TRACON Stays On The Job Despite Fires

ATC Operations Largely Unaffected By Blazes

There were some tense moments at the San Diego TRACON Monday, as flames from two separate wildfires raging to the east of the city came within 10 miles of the facility.

Despite the threat, operations carried on more-or-less normally, reports the Southern California Press-Enterprise... and the FAA took notice. The only weather-related complications involved six planes forced to divert from landing at Ontario International Airport, due to strong winds at that facility.

"Considering what's going on with the winds and fire, the impact to air traffic has really been minimal," said FAA Western Region spokesman Ian Gregor.

Stephen Merlin, facility representative for the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, said officials talked of evacuating the facility.
He also noted the TRACON was short-staffed... with three-to-seven controllers staffing each of the five regions, where Merlin says there should have been between 11-14.

As a result, Merlin said, controllers had to space planes farther apart than usual to give controllers enough room to work multiple areas. That was still preferable to transferring operations to the Palmdale TRACON, however, as radar visibility for the region from that facility is spotty below 8,000 feet.

"If it's slow now, it's less than slow when they take it," Merlin said about a switch to Palmdale.

As of Wednesday, air traffic control operations over Southern California remained largely unaffected by the fires, which spread north of Los Angeles down south to the US/Mexico border.

Fueled by strong Santa Ana winds -- which only started to ease Wednesday -- the fires have forced the evacuation of half-a-million residents of southern California, and caused several billion dollars in damages.

FMI: www.faa.gov, www.natca.org

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