(CBS/AP) The former chairman of the National Transportation Safety
Board said that, despite the "terrible" revelations in recent government
watchdog agency reports on air traffic controllers, he believes work
and safety conditions have improved because of recent changes made by
the government agencies responsible.
In a report released earlier this week by the Office of the Special Counsel, or OSC (which protects whistle-blowers), controllers at one of the world's busiest air traffic control facilities in Long Island, N.Y., slept in the control room at night, left shifts early, used personal electronic devices while on duty, ignored proper procedures, and manipulated work schedules to gain overtime pay.
The report also charged that airline
safety regulators have lagged in responding to urgent safety problems,
including takeoff and landing procedures at one airport that caused some
planes to nearly collide.
Special Counsel Carolyn
Lerner, whose job is to protect government employees who expose mismanagement or wrongdoing from retaliation, has sent the White House
and Congress letters detailing seven FAA whistle-blower cases in which
safety allegations have been substantiated. In five of the seven cases,
the FAA has failed to follow through fully on promised corrections, her
office said.
The office said that the FAA (which oversees air traffic controllers) has one of the
highest rates of whistleblower filings per employee of any executive
branch agency, with 178 whistleblower disclosures since FY 2007, about
half (89) relating to aviation safety. OSC referred 44 of those cases to
the Department of Transportation investigation, which substantiated all
but five in whole or in part.
Among
the problems revealed by whistleblower complaints: Emergency service
helicopters used by first responders nationwide were incorrectly
retrofitted for night vision goggles, posing a potential threat to
pilots' ability to read instruments; and air traffic controllers in the
greater New York area airspace slept in the control room, left their
shifts early, used personal electronic devices while on the job, and
used dangerously imprecise language when directing aircraft, resulting
in a near-crash.
Lerner said it took the "years-long
persistence of one whistle-blower and two referrals from my office for
FAA to acknowledge that its oversight was lacking" with regard to the
night vision googles problem and begin safety corrections.
The
cases show a pattern dating at least to 2007 in which employees have
complained to the special counsel that the FAA refused to heed warnings
about significant safety issues and then promised to correct the
problems only when forced by oversight agencies, Lerner said.
The
cases "paint a picture of an agency with insufficient responsiveness
given its critical public safety mission," Lerner said in her letter.
The
allegations about controllers at the Long Island center were made
public last year by Evan Seeley, a controller who has since been
transferred to another facility at his request. The FAA has since
replaced most of the center's top managers.
On "CBS This
Morning: Saturday," Mark Rosenker, the former head of the NTSB, said
that last year's report dealing with the Ronkonkoma Air Traffic Control
Center was one that "really tipped me over as it related to the behavior
of the controllers in that particular facility.
"They
were using laptops while they were on duty," Rosenker said. "They were
using cell phones, they were, in fact, leaving their shifts early. They
demonstrated insubordination to their management - Clearly, the kind of
behavior we saw there was not adding to our safety in the aviation
community."
Rosenker called "disturbing" the indication
that management seemed to be going along. "They seemed to be afraid of
the controllers there. The particular individual who went to the Office
of Special Counsel, the whistleblower if you will, had been threatened,
his car was vandalized, he got demoted. This was a terrible, terrible
work environment."
However, Rosenker said that despite
the new report, "99.9 percent of the people that are working in these
jobs are very dedicated. They're very skilled. And they do an excellent
job. There are 50,000 operations that occur every day. They occur
without incident. They occur routinely. They occur safely."
He
also said he does not think the situation is getting worse. "Remember,
[the new report's cases] could go back as far as 2010. What we've seen
is a significant improvement. Remember, last year we saw a number of
controllers that were asleep on their job. That was not because they
wanted to come in and fall asleep; it is because of the way the system
had been geared.
"Once, in fact, the Department of
Transportation and FAA really began to look at what was happening out
there, they made substantial changes," including shifting hours to
prevent fatiguing work schedules.
Source: http://www.cbsnews.com
Source: http://www.cbsnews.com
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