NATCA President Updates Union At ATCA Conference
NATCA President Paul Rinaldi said collaboration equals
better solutions “because it utilizes the expertise of the
entire workforce” during a detailed update on the
status of NATCA-FAA collaborative efforts as part of an Air Traffic
Control Association (ATCA) Conference panel discussion on workforce
issues related to the NextGen air traffic control system this
week.
Rinaldi credited the leadership of FAA Administrator Randy
Babbitt with this new way of working together and demonstrating the
shared NATCA-FAA commitment to solve mutual issues. The current FAA
leadership, Rinaldi said, is moving in the right direction and
listening to the voice that NATCA asked for in NextGen development,
testing and implementation.
“Administrator Babbitt knew when he took office that he
had a front-line controller workforce that not only welcomed
modernization but demanded it,” Rinaldi said. “He has
now seen our commitment first hand. We want to be part of the
solution. We want to be involved early in the pre-decisional stages
of modernization. We want to lend our experience and expertise to
NextGen. We want to be part of something we can be proud of and
serve our country in a critical safety function that is so
inherently governmental.”
Rinaldi (pictured) credited the NATCA-FAA collective
bargaining agreement, which went into effect just over one year
ago, with being the impetus to the critical change in the
labor-management relationship. “We needed a contract in order
to stabilize the workforce, stem the high attrition of experienced
controllers and begin to rebuild the trust and morale that is
essential to believing and sharing in the FAA’s safety
mission,” he said. “Our contract is the framework and
foundation upon which a formal collaborative relationship can be
built. We now have that. And one year into it, the results are
quite positive.”
Among the early achievements in the collaborative relationship
between NATCA and the FAA:
The launch of a formal collaborative process. There are currently
10 test sites underway around the country that are addressing
facility-level technological, procedural, and airspace-related
issues through a collaborative forum. The goal is to offer
solutions aimed at improving safety and performance.
Improvements in En Route Automation Modernization, or ERAM for
short, which was plagued with glitches and serious safety risks
before NATCA’s involvement. But now it is inching closer to
safe and effective implementation at the large, regional en route
centers.
Progress in the efforts to redesign the complex airspace above the
New York/New Jersey/Philadelphia area that is critical to NextGen.
NATCA and the FAA have a formal working agreement in place and are
meeting regularly.
On safety reporting systems, the results “have been
nothing short of remarkable,” Rinaldi said. “The shift
from a blame and punishment culture to a true safety culture has
encouraged controllers to speak up and report more safety issues.
Through ATSAP and Partnership for Safety, we are working closely
with the Agency.”
Added Rinaldi, “Those on the front lines of the NAS are
rising to the challenge and offering solutions to help implement
NextGen safely and effectively. Our workforce gets younger every
day through attrition of veteran employees, but they are energized
and engaged. They are flexible, responsive to change and strive to
make a difference with their participation through
collaboration.”