Senators fight privatization of air traffic controllers

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Senators fight privatization of air traffic controllers

WASHINGTON (AP) =97 Twenty-six Democratic senators told President Bush=20
Tuesday they will oppose any attempt to transfer responsibility for air=20
traffic control to the private sector. The senators signed a letter to Bush=
=20
that calls air traffic control "a quintessentially governmental function."=
=20
The administration has not proposed privatizing air controllers, but it has=
=20
indicated an interest in the idea. About 100 controllers in town for a=20
meeting of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association joined Sen.=20
Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., who wrote and circulated the letter. "We're here=
=20
to send a message that the safety of our skies should not be put in the=20
hands of the lowest bidder," Lautenberg said. He said the idea of=20
privatizing air traffic controllers "is like turning over the Army to=20
private hands, and seeing if you can get them to work overtime on the=20
weekends." All commercial airports have government controllers, although=20
many small, private airports use private companies to run their air traffic=
=20
control towers.

Former President Bill Clinton signed an executive order in 2000 calling air=
=20
traffic service "an inherently governmental function." Last year, Bush=20
amended that order by deleting those four words.The FAA notified the=20
controllers that their jobs would be reclassified as "commercial."=20
Controllers said the change means the government could hire a private=20
company to take over air traffic control.They continue to press their case=
=20
despite assurances from Federal Aviation Administrator Marion Blakey that=20
her agency will not turn their roles over the private sector."These (air=20
traffic control) functions are not subject to competition and will not be=20
contracted out," she wrote in a December letter to controllers.FAA=20
spokesman Greg Martin said the agency reconsidered the proper=20
classification for the controllers under instructions by the White House=20
Office of Management and Budget. Martin added that the air controllers have=
=20
been classified as a type of commercial activity "so critical ... that they=
=20
are not subject to competition or contracting out."

The letter from Lautenberg and 25 of his colleagues acknowledges that the=20
reclassification does not necessarily mean air traffic control will be=20
turned over to private companies. But the senators say the move "sets up a=
=20
slippery slope that could eventually lead to privatization." Bush's=20
proposed budget for the current fiscal year called for improving management=
=20
and coordination of air traffic services. It said that if those goals were=
=20
not realized, the administration would look at "other options, including=20
partial privatization and franchise operation of components of the air=20
traffic system." And in November, the White House proposed making it easier=
=20
to turn over as many as 850,000 federal jobs to the private sector.


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