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Testimony:

Before the Subcommittee on Aviation, House Committee on Transportation 
and Infrastructure:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:30 a.m. EDT:

Tuesday, June 15, 2004:

Federal Aviation Administration:

Plan Still Needed to Meet Challenges to Effectively Managing Air 
Traffic Controller Workforce:

Statement of JayEtta Z. Hecker, Director, Physical Infrastructure Team:

GAO-04-887T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-04-887T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Aviation, House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure

Why GAO Did This Study:

In the summer of 2000, the air traffic control system lacked the 
capacity to handle demand efficiently, and flight delays produced near-
gridlock conditions at several U.S. airports. A combination of factors, 
including the crises instigated by the events of 9/11, temporarily 
reduced air traffic, but air traffic is now back to near pre-9/11 
levels. The ability of the air traffic control system to handle 
expected traffic in coming years may depend in part on the Federal 
Aviation Administration’s (FAA) effectiveness in planning for a long-
expected wave of air traffic controller retirements.  

GAO’s testimony focuses on (1) the magnitude and timing of the pending 
wave of air traffic controller retirements, (2) the challenges FAA 
faces in ensuring that well-qualified air traffic controllers are ready 
to step into the gap created by the expected large number of 
retirements, and (3) challenges that will affect the ability of the air 
traffic controller workforce to meet future changes in the airline 
industry and use of airspace. GAO’s statement is based on past reports 
on the air traffic controller workforce, including GAO’s 2002 report 
that surveyed controllers and analyzed controller workforce data. GAO 
has updated this work through interviews with and the collection of 
data from key stakeholders in the aviation community. This work was 
performed in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards.

What GAO Found:

FAA faces a bow wave of thousands of air traffic controller retirements 
over the coming decade. GAO’s 2002 report warned that almost half of 
the controller workforce (about 7,000 controllers) would retire over 
the next 10 years and about 93 percent of controller supervisors would 
be eligible to retire by the end of 2011. In addition, GAO’s analysis 
showed that retirements could increase dramatically at the busiest air 
traffic control facilities. FAA and the Department of Transportation’s 
Inspector General have also reported that a surge in controller 
retirements is on the way.

Past and Projected Air Traffic Controller Retirement Eligibility, by 
Fiscal Year (2002 Report): 

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

FAA faces numerous hiring and training challenges to ensuring that 
well-qualified controllers are ready to fill the gap created by the 
expected retirements. For example, it can take 2-4 years or more to 
certify new controllers, and FAA’s training facility and air traffic 
control facilities, where years of on-the-job training occur, have 
limited capacity. While FAA must make hiring decisions from a long-term 
perspective, it has generally hired replacements only after a current 
controller leaves. In 2002, GAO recommended that FAA develop a 
comprehensive workforce plan to deal with these challenges. However, 
FAA has not finalized a plan, and its recent actions call into question 
whether it has adequate strategies to address these challenges. For 
example, since the beginning of this year, FAA lost nearly 400 
controllers and has hired only 1 new controller. Its fiscal year 2005 
budget proposal does not request any funding to hire additional 
controllers.

Challenges will also affect the ability of the air traffic controller 
workforce to meet future changes in the airline industry and use of 
airspace. Challenges include the need for FAA to overcome management 
problems with acquiring systems to modernize the air traffic control 
system and to adjust to shifts in the use of airspace, including 
increases in the use of smaller aircraft and changes in air traffic 
patterns around the country. 

What GAO Recommends:

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO 04-887T.

To view the full testimony, click on the link above. For more 
information, contact JayEtta Hecker, (202) 512-2834 or heckerj@gao.gov. 

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

We appreciate the opportunity to participate in today's hearing on the 
challenges the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) faces in 
effectively managing its air traffic controller workforce: in 
particular, challenges in planning effectively to address the large 
number of controller retirements expected over the next decade in order 
to help avoid any related disruptions to air travel. We all recall that 
in the summer of 2000, the air traffic control system lacked the 
capacity to handle demand efficiently, and flight delays produced near-
gridlock conditions at several U.S. airports. A combination of factors-
-the downturn in travel caused by the general economic slowdown and of 
course the crises instigated by the events of 9/11--temporarily reduced 
traffic significantly and reduced pressure on the air traffic control 
system--but air traffic is now back to near pre 9/11 levels.

The ability of the air traffic control system to handle expected 
traffic in coming years, including the status of FAA's preparations for 
handling the long-expected wave of air traffic controller retirements, 
has again become a pressing issue. Air traffic controllers play an 
integral role in maintaining the safety and efficiency of the nation's 
air traffic control system, and ensuring an appropriately sized and 
trained workforce is of high importance. We applaud the subcommittee's 
focus on this critical issue and seek to contribute to the discussion 
by focusing on the following three topics: (1) the magnitude and timing 
of the pending wave of air traffic controller retirements, (2) 
challenges FAA faces in ensuring that well-qualified air traffic 
controllers are ready to step into the gap created by the expected 
large number of retirements, and (3) challenges that will affect the 
ability of the air traffic controller workforce to meet future changes 
in the airline industry and use of airspace.

Our statement is based on our past reports in three areas: the air 
traffic controller workforce, including our 2002 report in which we 
surveyed controllers and analyzed controller workforce data;[Footnote 
1] air traffic control modernization; and airline competition. We have 
updated this work through interviews with and collection of data from 
key stakeholders in the aviation community, including several current 
and former senior FAA officials. We performed our work in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards.

In summary, Mr. Chairman, we found that:

* FAA faces a bow wave of thousands of air traffic controller 
retirements over the coming decade. Our 2002 report warned that almost 
half of the controller workforce (about 7,000 controllers) would retire 
over the next 10 years and that FAA estimated it would experience 
retirements of controllers at a level 3 times higher than that 
experienced over the 5-year period from 1996-2000. On top of the 
substantial retirements, at the time, FAA also projected that an 
additional 2,000 controllers would be needed by 2010 to address 
forecasted increases in demand for air travel. We also found that about 
93 percent of the 1,862 controller supervisors would be eligible to 
retire by the end of 2011, which could exacerbate the problem of 
maintaining adequate controller staffing. In addition, our analysis 
showed that the busiest terminal facilities and the "en route" centers, 
used to manage aircraft beyond a 50-nautical-mile radius from airports, 
would experience a sizable increase in controllers reaching retirement 
eligibility. FAA and the Department of Transportation Inspector General 
have also reported that a surge in controller retirements is on the 
way; the question is - Will FAA be ready for it?

* FAA faces numerous challenges related to ensuring that well-qualified 
controllers are ready to step into the gap created by the expected wave 
of retirements but it has not implemented strategies to meet them. Key 
among these challenges is efficiently hiring and training new 
controllers in numbers large enough to meet anticipated shortfalls. For 
example, since it takes 2-4 years and sometimes longer for a newly 
hired controller to become certified, hiring and training decisions 
need to be made from a longer-term perspective. However, we found in 
prior work that FAA's process of generally hiring replacements only 
after a current controller leaves does not adequately take into 
consideration this training time. Hiring challenges include effectively 
screening candidates to help ensure that they have the aptitude needed 
to control air traffic. Efficiency in hiring will become even more 
important as FAA faces the large surge in controller retirements, for 
hiring people who do not make it through the training process wastes 
money and time--and may affect both the cost of the controller 
workforce and the ability of FAA to fill positions quickly enough to 
maintain a sufficient controller workforce to meet its mission. 
Training challenges include the limited capacity at the training center 
in Oklahoma City and at the air traffic control facilities. In 
addition, because of the significant amount of on-the-job training that 
currently occurs through one-on-one training, to effectively handle a 
large number of new controllers, there needs to be an overlap period 
during which experienced controllers likely to retire soon and newly 
hired controllers are both on board. While this will result in a 
temporary increase in the cost of the air traffic controller workforce, 
eventually more senior, high salary controllers will retire and be 
replaced by new controllers at lower salaries, possibly reducing 
expenses; and the need for overlap between these two groups can be 
reduced. Our 2002 report recommended that FAA develop a comprehensive 
workforce plan to deal with these challenges, but FAA has not finalized 
a plan and its recent actions call into question whether it will have 
adequate strategies to address these challenges. For example, last 
year, FAA hired 762 controllers, but according to a senior National Air 
Traffic Controllers Association official, many of these hires took 
place at the end of the year, and because of limited space in training 
facilities, many of those hired were unable to begin entry level 
training immediately. Moreover, since hiring those controllers at the 
end of the year to reach a level of 15,635, FAA has lost nearly 400 
controllers and has hired only 1 new controller through May of this 
year. Its fiscal year 2005 budget proposal does not request any funding 
to hire additional controllers to address the wave of retirements.

* Challenges will also affect the ability of the air traffic controller 
workforce to meet future changes in the airline industry and use of 
airspace, and these challenges underscore the importance of 
comprehensive workforce planning that considers and addresses the 
entire context in which air traffic controllers operate. Among these 
challenges is the need for FAA to overcome significant and longstanding 
management problems it has had with acquiring new air traffic control 
modernization systems within cost, schedule, and performance goals, 
including the need to effectively involve controllers in the 
development, deployment, and refinement of these new systems and 
consider how these new systems will affect the workforce. Another 
challenge will be adjusting to shifts in the types of aircraft used in 
commercial aviation (e.g., more flights by smaller aircraft, such as 
regional jets or air taxis), general aviation, and fractional 
ownership, where individuals or companies purchase a share in an 
aircraft for their occasional use. These shifts could have implications 
for the Aviation Trust Fund. Another challenge likely to impact the 
controller workforce will be keeping pace with the dynamic nature of 
the airline industry, in which major and low cost airlines are likely 
to change flight patterns, in part by adding or removing hubs. For 
example, industry sources have recently reported that US Airways plans 
to reduce service to Pittsburgh. Such changes may alter the flow of air 
traffic in particular areas, emphasizing the need for an air traffic 
control system that is nimble and can seamlessly continue to provide 
services as demand shifts.

FAA Faces a Pending Wave of Air Traffic Controller Retirements:

Although the exact number and timing of the controllers' departures are 
impossible to determine, scenarios we developed indicate that the total 
attrition of controllers from FAA will grow substantially in the short 
and long terms. As a result, FAA will likely need to hire thousands of 
air traffic controllers in the next decade. At the end of fiscal year 
2003, FAA had 15,635 controllers, and according to its staffing 
standard, it is targeting a controller staffing level of 15,136 in 
fiscal year 2004, 15,300 in fiscal year 2005, and 16,109 in fiscal year 
2009. However, so far this year, the agency has lost nearly 400 
controllers due to retirements and as of May had hired only 1 
controller. FAA has reported similar projections of a wave of air 
traffic controller retirements, and in a 2004 report, the Inspector 
General also reported on the coming wave, citing FAA's estimate that 
nearly 7,100 controllers could leave the agency by 2012.[Footnote 2] 
Our 2002 report found that FAA estimated it would experience 
retirements of controllers at a level three times higher than that 
experienced over the 5-year period from 1996-2000. On top of the 
substantial number of retirements, at the time, FAA also projected that 
an additional 2,000 controllers would be needed by 2010 to address 
forecasted increases in demand for air travel.

Our 2002 report analyzed, among other things, the retirement 
eligibility levels for various portions of the controller workforce and 
found that the annual number of controllers first becoming eligible for 
retirement would peak in fiscal year 2007, when about 10 percent of the 
air traffic controllers will become eligible to retire. (See fig. 1.) 
In addition, we found that by 2011, about 68 percent of the current 
controllers would be eligible to retire.

Figure 1: Past and Projected Air Traffic Controller Retirement 
Eligibility, by Fiscal Year:

[See PDF for image]

Note: This figure appeared in Air Traffic Control: FAA Needs to Better 
Prepare for Impending Wave of Controller Attrition (GAO-02-591, June 
14, 2002).

[End of figure]

We found a similar situation with the retirement eligibility of 
supervisors. Because supervisors are important to air traffic control 
operations and because they tend to be older than others controlling 
traffic, we examined retirement eligibility and survey results of 
supervisors at FAA as of June 2001. We found that supervisors will also 
become eligible to leave FAA in very high numbers over the next decade. 
Specifically, we found that 1,205, or 65 percent of current 
supervisors, would become eligible to retire between 2002 and 2011. 
(See fig. 2.) However, with 28 percent of current supervisors already 
eligible to retire and another 65 percent reaching eligibility by 2011, 
a total of about 93 percent of 1,862 current supervisors will be 
eligible to retire by the end of fiscal year 2011. As a result, FAA may 
face substantial turnover in its supervisory ranks over the next 
decade. This turnover could put a further strain on FAA's ability to 
maintain a sufficient certified controller workforce, as experienced 
controllers will be tapped to fill open supervisory positions, leaving 
fewer to control air traffic or provide training for new controllers.

Figure 2: Past and Projected Retirement Eligibility for Supervisory Air 
Traffic Controllers:

[See PDF for image]

Note: This figure appeared in Air Traffic Control: FAA Needs to Better 
Prepare for Impending Wave of Controller Attrition (GAO-02-591, June 
14, 2002).

[End of figure]

Because of the crucial role certain facilities play in the national air 
space system, we analyzed the impact of retirement eligibility on the 
21 major "en route" centers (air route traffic control centers used to 
manage aircraft beyond a 50-nautical-mile radius from airports), the 10 
busiest airport towers, and the 10 busiest TRACON facilities (terminal 
radar approach control facilities used to track airplanes and manage 
the arrival and departure of aircraft within a 5-to-50 nautical mile 
radius of airports). Based on our analysis of FAA's employee database, 
we found the en route centers and the busiest terminal facilities will 
experience a sizeable increase in the number of controllers reaching 
retirement eligibility. As figure 3 shows, retirement eligibility in 
these facilities grows over the next decade.

Figure 3: Past and Projected Retirement Eligibility for En Route 
Centers, 10 Busiest Towers and 10 Busiest TRACONs, by Fiscal Year:

[See PDF for image]

Note: This figure appeared in Air Traffic Control: FAA Needs to Better 
Prepare for Impending Wave of Controller Attrition (GAO-02-591, June 
14, 2002).

[End of figure]

Based on our analysis for the towers, we found that the Denver tower 
had the highest proportion of retirement-eligible controllers as of 
September 30, 2001, with 14 of its 51 controllers (27 percent) eligible 
to retire. We found that by the end of fiscal year 2006, 45 percent of 
Denver's current controllers would be eligible to retire, and by the 
end of fiscal year 2011, 46 of its 51 controllers (90 percent), will 
reach retirement eligibility.

Our analysis of the 10 busiest TRACON facilities showed that the 
Dallas/Fort Worth TRACON had the highest level of current controllers 
eligible to retire at the end of fiscal year 2001, with 36 of its 147 
controllers (24 percent) eligible. We found that by the end of fiscal 
year 2006, the cumulative percentage would grow to 46 percent, and by 
the end of fiscal year 2011 would reach 87 percent, as 128 of the 147 
controllers currently at the facility would reach retirement 
eligibility.

In examining the 21 major en route centers, we found that the 
Jacksonville center had the highest proportion of retirement-eligible 
controllers at the end of fiscal year 2001, with 79 of its 376 
controllers (21 percent) eligible for retirement. According to our 
analysis, by the end of fiscal year 2006, at least 29 percent of 
current controllers would be eligible for retirement at 10 centers--
Albuquerque, Atlanta, Boston, Fort Worth, Houston, Jacksonville, Los 
Angeles, Memphis, Seattle, and Washington, D.C.

We are not alone in seeing a bow wave of controller retirements 
approaching over the next several years. This month, FAA provided us 
with projections that 329 controllers would retire in fiscal year 2004, 
and that this level would double by fiscal year 2007 to over 650 in 
that year, and double again to 1170 by fiscal year 2013. These levels 
are significantly higher than the average of less than 200 retirements 
per year over the past 5 years (1999-2003). Similarly, the Department 
of Transportation Inspector General reported this month that increasing 
numbers of controllers will become eligible to retire through 2012, 
with a peak of retirement eligibility around fiscal year 2007, and that 
FAA had estimated that nearly 7,100 controllers could leave FAA by 
fiscal year 2012.

FAA Faces Challenges to Hiring and Training an Adequate Number of Well-
Qualified Controllers but Lacks Strategies to Meet These Challenges:

There are several challenges related to hiring and training large 
numbers of air traffic controllers in the short amount of time 
available. Although we identified these challenges in 2002 and 
recommended that FAA create a comprehensive workforce plan that 
addresses these challenges, FAA has not yet created a plan. Moreover, 
its recent actions suggest that it has not implemented strategies to 
meet these challenges and put into place a system that will bring on 
board air traffic controllers in time to deal with the projected 
retirements of many controllers. However, senior FAA officials told us 
that the agency's new Air Traffic Organization is currently preparing a 
comprehensive business plan, including a comprehensive controller 
workforce plan, which is due to the Congress in December 2004.

A key component of workforce planning is ensuring that appropriately 
skilled employees are available when and where they are needed to meet 
an agency's mission. This means that an agency continually needs 
trained employees to become available in time to fill newly opened 
positions. We reported in 2002 that FAA's hiring practice was generally 
to hire new employees only when current employees leave, which does not 
adequately account for the time needed to train controllers to fully 
perform their functions. The amount of time it takes new controllers to 
gain certification depends on the facility at which they work, but 
generally, training takes from 2 to 4 years and can take up to 5 years 
at some of the busiest and most complex facilities. Moreover, during 
the training period, the current training process depends upon 
substantial one-on-one training, during which an experienced controller 
works directly with a controller in training, monitoring the trainee's 
actions, so there must be an overlap of experienced controllers and 
newly hired controllers. FAA regional officials, who are responsible 
for ensuring that FAA's air traffic facilities are adequately staffed, 
were particularly concerned about FAA's general hiring practice. 
Specifically, the officials were concerned that significant increases 
in retirements would leave facilities short of qualified controllers 
while new trainees were hired and trained.

Our report also noted that the lack of experienced controllers could 
have many adverse consequences. For example, several FAA regional 
officials stated that if a facility becomes seriously short of 
experienced controllers, the remaining controllers might have to slow 
down the flow of air traffic though their airspace. If the situation 
became dire, FAA could require airlines to reduce their schedules, but 
this would be an unlikely, worst-case scenario, according to some FAA 
regional officials. Also, because there would be fewer experienced 
controllers available to work, some FAA facility officials stated that 
those controllers could see increased workloads and additional, 
potentially mandatory, overtime. In addition to potentially resulting 
in increased work-related stress and sick leave usage, it could also 
cause experienced controllers to retire sooner than they otherwise 
might. For example, based on our 2002 survey of controllers, we 
estimated that 33 percent of controllers would accelerate their 
decision to retire if forced to work additional mandatory overtime.

Identifying sources of future potential employees with the requisite 
skills and aptitude is also important. Efficiency in hiring will become 
even more important as FAA faces the wave of controller retirements, 
for hiring people who do not make it through the training process 
wastes money and time--and may affect both the cost of the controller 
workforce and the ability of FAA to fill positions quickly enough to 
maintain a sufficient controller workforce to meet its mission. FAA has 
historically hired new controllers from a variety of sources, including 
graduates from institutions in FAA's collegiate training institute 
program, the Minneapolis Community and Technical College, former FAA 
controllers who were fired by President Reagan in 1981, and former 
Department of Defense controllers. FAA can also hire off-the-street 
candidates to become controllers. The success of hiring candidates who 
actually become controllers depends in large part on identifying 
potential candidates who have the appropriate aptitude for controllers' 
work. Historically, FAA used its initial entry-level training at its 
academy to screen out candidates who could not become successful 
controllers. According to FAA officials, as many as 50 percent of off-
the-street applicants have dropped out before finishing the required 
training program, at a cost of $10 million per year, a rate that 
highlights the difficulty of successfully hiring candidates to replace 
the thousands of new controllers expected to retire. FAA has recently 
begun to test a new screening exam that it hopes will better ensure 
that potential new hires have the skills and abilities necessary to 
become successful controllers. It will take a number of years to 
determine if the new test has the desired results.

Training challenges include the limited capacity at the training center 
in Oklahoma City and at the air traffic control facilities. In 
addition, because of the significant amount of on-the-job training that 
currently occurs through one-on-one training, to effectively handle a 
large number of new controllers, there needs to be an overlap period 
during which both experienced controllers likely to retire soon and 
newly hired controllers are both on board. While this will result in a 
temporary increase in the cost of the air traffic controller workforce, 
eventually more senior, high salary controllers will retire and be 
replaced by new controllers at lower salaries, possibly reducing 
expenses; and the need for overlap between these two groups can be 
reduced.

Our 2002 report recommended that FAA develop a comprehensive workforce 
plan for controllers to deal with these challenges, but FAA has not 
finalized a plan and its recent actions call into question whether it 
will have adequate strategies to address these challenges. For example, 
last year, FAA hired 762 controllers, but according to a senior 
National Air Traffic Controllers Association official, many of these 
hires took place at the end of the year, and because of limited space 
in training facilities, many of those hired were unable to begin entry 
level training immediately. Moreover, since hiring those controllers at 
the end of the year to reach a level of 15,635, FAA has lost nearly 400 
controllers and has hired only 1 new controller through May of this 
year. Its fiscal year 2005 budget proposal does not request any funding 
to hire additional controllers to address the wave of retirements.

Challenges Will Also Affect the Ability of the Controller Workforce to 
Meet Future Changes in the Airline Industry and Use of Airspace:

There are also challenges in the broader context of the air traffic 
control system that will affect the ability of the air traffic 
controller workforce to meet future changes in the airline industry and 
use of airspace. These challenges need to be considered as FAA develops 
and implements a comprehensive plan for its controller workforce. 
Challenges include the need for FAA to (1) overcome significant and 
longstanding management problems it has had with acquiring new systems 
to modernize the air traffic control system intended to facilitate the 
safe and efficient movement of air traffic by controllers and (2) 
adjust to shifts in the use of airspace, including increases in the use 
of smaller aircraft and changes in air traffic patterns around the 
country.

Controller Workforce Planning Inextricably Linked to FAA's Air Traffic 
Control Modernization Efforts:

Controller workforce planning needs to take place in the larger context 
of FAA's Air Traffic Control modernization efforts in order to make 
optimal use of the agency's investments. However, as our past work has 
shown, FAA needs to address longstanding problems it has had in 
deploying new air traffic control systems on schedule, within budget, 
and with promised capabilities to facilitate the safe and efficient 
flow of air traffic by controllers. These new systems are intended to 
improve the safety and efficiency of the nation's air traffic control 
system, with some offering the potential to improve the productivity of 
the controller workforce. To maximize the usefulness of new systems to 
controllers and to help ensure that safety is not eroded by the 
introduction of new capabilities, sustained controller involvement is 
needed as new systems are developed, deployed, and refined. When there 
is an ineffective link between technology and needs, money and time 
will be wasted, and the effectiveness of the air traffic controller 
workforce may be reduced. Moreover, these new systems may change the 
productivity of the controller workforce, an effect that will need to 
be taken into account as FAA refines its estimates of future controller 
workforce needs.

For example, our past work on the Standard Terminal Automation 
Replacement System (STARS)--the workstations used by controllers near 
airports to sequence and control air traffic--highlights the importance 
of controller involvement in the development, deployment, and 
refinement of air traffic control systems. In 1997, when FAA 
controllers first tested an early version of this commercially 
available system, they raised some concerns about the way aircraft 
position and other data were displayed and updated on the controllers' 
radar screens. For example, the controllers said the system's lack of 
detail about an aircraft's position and movement could hamper their 
ability to monitor traffic movement. In addition, controllers noted 
that many features of the old equipment could be operated with knobs, 
allowing controllers to focus on the screen. By contrast, STARS was 
menu-driven and required the controllers to make several keystrokes and 
use a trackball, diverting their attention from the screen. To address 
these concerns, among others, FAA decided to develop a more customized 
system and to deploy an incremental approach, thereby enabling 
controllers to adjust to some changes before introducing others. This 
incremental approach costs more and is taking longer to implement than 
the original STARS project. Despite the importance of controller 
involvement in the development, deployment, and refinement of new air 
traffic control systems, such activities can be very time-consuming, 
often take controllers off-line, and place additional pressure on an 
already constrained workforce. FAA needs to take into account these 
demands on the controller workforce as part of its comprehensive 
workforce plan.

Increases in Use of Smaller Aircraft and Changes in Air Traffic 
Patterns Around Country May Also Affect the Air Traffic Controller 
Workforce:

Changes in patterns of aircraft usage are likely to affect the needs of 
the air traffic controller workforce. The increased use of regional 
jets, the possibly expanding use of air taxis, ongoing general aviation 
aircraft usage, and fractional ownership, where individuals or 
companies purchase a share in an aircraft for their occasional use, 
could all increase the number of smaller aircraft in the sky, placing 
increased demands on the air traffic controller workforce. In addition, 
possible changes in air traffic patterns around the country may also 
impact this workforce.

In 2001, we reported that we had found consensus among the studies we 
reviewed and the industry experts we interviewed that the growing 
number of regional jets had contributed to congestion in our national 
airspace.[Footnote 3] The industry experts we spoke with repeatedly 
expressed concern about the impact of adding so many aircraft so 
quickly to airspace whose capacity is already constrained. Because 
hundreds of new aircraft had been added to already congested airspace 
while comparatively few turboprops had been taken out of service, many 
of the experts believed it was inevitable that congestion and delays 
would increase. They also noted that with many more regional jets on 
order, congestion and delays were not likely to diminish in the near 
future. Earlier this month, the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of 
AirTran Airways noted that the air traffic control system may have 
difficulty absorbing the hundreds of regional jets now on 
order.[Footnote 4]

In coming years, air taxis may also add to crowding in the skies. FAA 
officials told us that they have been briefed on proposals for using 
air taxis to carry about four passengers each in selected metropolitan 
areas where there is heavy surface traffic congestion. The use of such 
air taxis could increase the demand on controllers to provide air 
traffic services in these metropolitan areas, where it is likely that 
there is already heavy air traffic. Furthermore, it is possible that 
any increases in general aviation or fractional ownership could also 
increase the amount of traffic in the skies--traffic that must be 
effectively directed by air traffic controllers to ensure the safety of 
the airways. Moreover, because fees collected for the Aviation Trust 
Fund are based largely on ticket taxes assessed on paying airline 
passengers, the change in the mix of aircraft could have implications 
for the Aviation Trust Fund.

Given the dynamic nature of the airline industry, in which major 
airlines and low cost airlines may change their flight patterns by 
adding or removing hubs, the number of flights in any one location may 
spike or drop abruptly. Recent examples include Independence Air's move 
to set up operations at Washington Dulles International Airport and 
reports by industry sources of a US Airways plan to reduce service to 
Pittsburgh. These types of potential shifts in the location of demand 
for air traffic services underscore the need for a nimble air traffic 
control system that can seamlessly continue to provide services as 
demand shifts.

Concluding Observations:

FAA faces a complex task in effectively addressing the bow wave of 
controller retirements that is heading its way. The number of factors 
involved, including the need to time hiring so as not to overload 
training capacities and the need to be responsive to the changing 
demands of a dynamic industry, highlight the importance of a carefully 
considered, comprehensive workforce plan. This plan needs to include 
strategies for addressing the full range of challenges in order to 
seamlessly transition from the current workforce to a future workforce 
that is well qualified, trained, and can accommodate changes in the use 
of our airspace. However, although we recommended to FAA 2 years ago 
that it develop a comprehensive plan for this purpose, it has not yet 
finalized a plan. Senior FAA officials told us that the Air Traffic 
Organization is currently preparing a comprehensive business plan, 
including a comprehensive controller workforce plan, which is due to 
the Congress in December 2004. This is an important opportunity to 
establish strategies to meet the challenges ahead. Today these 
challenges continue to underscore the need for action in developing 
strategies that take into account (1) the expected timing and location 
of anticipated retirements, (2) the length of the hiring and training 
processes, (3) limitations on training capacities, and (4) changes in 
the airline industry and use of airspace that may affect the air 
traffic controller workforce in coming years. Without focused and 
timely action on all of these fronts, the gap created by the expected 
bow wave of controller retirements could reduce the effectiveness of 
the air traffic control workforce to meet its mission just as increased 
activity in the skies makes its effectiveness more critical than ever 
to the safety of our airways.

This concludes my statement. I would be pleased to respond to any 
questions that you or other Members of the Subcommittee may have at 
this time.

Contacts and Acknowledgments:

For further information on this testimony, please contact JayEtta Z. 
Hecker at (202) 512-2834 or by e-mail at heckerj@gao.gov. Individuals 
making key contributions to this testimony include, David Lichtenfeld, 
Beverly Norwood, Raymond Sendejas, Glen Trochelman, and Alwynne Wilbur.

FOOTNOTES

[1] Air Traffic Control: FAA Needs to Better Prepare for Impending Wave 
of Controller Attrition (GAO-02-591, June 14, 2002). 

[2] Opportunities to Improve FAA's Process for Placing and Training Air 
Traffic Controllers In Light of Pending Retirements, (Department of 
Transportation Inspector General, Report Number: AV-2004-060, June 2, 
2004).

[3] Aviation Competition: Regional Jet Service Yet to Reach Many Small 
Communities (GAO-01-344, February 14, 2001).

[4] Testimony of Joseph Leonard, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer 
of AirTran Airways before the Subcommittee on Aviation, House Committee 
on Transportation and Infrastructure, June 3, 2004.