Discovered Watching a Film Instead of Planes, Controller Suspended

In the latest in a series of embarrassments involving air traffic controllers, a controller in Ohio was suspended  after being caught watching a movie on a DVD player while on the job.

As reported by the Associated Press, the controller, who was working at an Oberlin, Ohio, site that handles high-altitude air traffic, unknowingly piped three minutes of the 2007 crime thriller “Cleaner” into the cockpits of the planes he was supposed to be monitoring, revealing what he actually was doing in the tower while he was supposed to be focusing on his work.

For those three minutes, planes were prevented from communicating with the controller, who eventually was alerted by a military pilot about the situation.

This follows a series of embarrassing incidents that has air travelers and aviation experts alike questioning the professionalism of the nation’s air traffic controllers.

Five controllers have been caught sleeping on the job since the beginning of the year, and nine controllers and supervisors have been suspended for various incidents since late March. That total includes a supervisor in Oberlin, near Cleveland, who also was suspended in connection with the latest incident.

Federal authorities have expressed dismay, saying that travelers should not have to worry about air traffic controllers doing their jobs. “That should never be a thought for anybody getting in an airplane in this country,” said the Federal Aviation Administration’s chief, Randy Babbitt. “And it hasn’t been a thought. But unfortunately, we have raised that concern.”

Most of the sleeping incidents have come in nighttime hours while plane traffic is light. The incidents have led to criticism of the difficult, often-changing work schedules many air traffic controllers have.

The FAA has rejected calls to allow controllers working in pairs to take shifts sleeping on the job, despite assertions that it is a common, if unsanctioned, practice and that it provides badly needed rest in the dead of night. However, Babbitt announced over the weekend that controllers will now be forced to have at least nine hours off between shifts, one hour more than previously required.

Related Posts:
Night Shift Air Controllers Often Flout No-Napping Rule
Snoozing Air Controllers Spur Decision to Add Staff on Night Shifts
Authorities Probe the Case of the Missing Air Traffic Controller

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One comment to “Discovered Watching a Film Instead of Planes, Controller Suspended”

  1. Parmelia

    Posts like this briegthn up my day. Thanks for taking the time.

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