Local ATC Personnel Learning To Deal With Higher Traffic
Volume
Air Force air traffic controllers
worked side-by-side with Haitian air traffic controllers to provide
some sense of normalcy a month after an earthquake devastated vast
portions of Port-au-Prince.
Since Feb. 1, Haitian controllers worked with American military
controllers to ensure the safety of the airfield and the planes in
the sky. "Our goal is to make (the Haitian controllers) comfortable
and actually have them take over the control tower," said Chief
Master Sgt. Tim Sowder, an air traffic controller assigned to the
260th Air Traffic Control Squadron.
This is the second transition Air Force air traffic controllers
have made since taking over ATC responsibilities from combat
controllers from the Air Force Special Operations Command. With the
local tower in disrepair, there was a need to get a more permanent
structure at the airport for the controllers to work in. FAA
officials set up a mobile air traffic control tower on the airfield
to provide the operators with a safer and more comfortable platform
to work from. Before the arrival of the FAA tower, combat
controllers were landing aircraft from a dirt berm on the airfield
with equipment stacked on a table.
The Haitians working with the U.S. forces is the beginning of a
process to eventually have ATC operations completely turned over to
the Haitians and airport authorities. "The biggest benefit is to be
able to familiarize the Haitians in the tower that they will be
using until their new tower is built," Chief Sowder said.
So far, it has been a smooth transition and the integration of
the two styles of air traffic control has gone rather seamlessly.
The Haitian controllers are very good, but it will take some time
for them to get accustomed to dealing with a much higher volume of
air traffic than they were used to, Chief Sowder said.
USAF Photo
"It's a good experience for me to work in this kind of situation
because I experience much more traffic than before," said Nadia
Adma, a Haitian air traffic controller. "It's good to work with
different people from different countries because you learn the
differences in controlling traffic."
Prior to the earthquake, the Haitians ran the airport as a
nonradar facility, where aircraft were controlled one at a time by
one controller. The new way of operating may require an additional
body in the tower to perform ground operation responsibilities. "If
they bring in someone to perform ground control, then they will
ensure that they are properly trained," Ms. Adma said.
The transition should be rather smooth because the equipment is
much the same as what they were using before, Ms. Adma said.
ANN Salutes Tech. Sgt. Larry W. Carpenter Jr. Joint Task
Force-Port Operations Public Affairs