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3 Region Meeting in PDX

Last week many members of the Executive Board attended a Three Region Meeting in Portland and received briefings on various subjects. Paul and Trish were there and gave an update on the political climate of our profession and clarified the Unions position on Privatization, as it has gone misreported in the National News Media. 

Briefing by Paul Rinaldi and Trish Gilbert

For the past several years the appropriations mechanism which funds the FAA has been a mess. From Modernization to Sequestration, the FAA Operations Budget is flat and the facilities budget is in pieces. The current method of funding the Agency leaves little room for modernization and increased staffing. After a history of 23 short term extensions, the first ‘long term’ FAA bill is up for renewal. Paul and Trish expressed concern for this format of funding theatrics being the best for our profession. While ERAM is finally being rolled out to the final facility the technology is already 30 years old. Meanwhile, the US political machine is attacking government workers at every turn, in just this year Republican Budget proposals are asking for up to a 9% pay decrease through increased pension contributions. With only 11K CPCs down from about 15K and 2500 currently eligible to retire, we stand at the precipice of a staffing disaster. The FAA is a huge bureaucracy and it slows down negotiations to move on important modernization projects and other ideas that could help improve the operation.

With all this in mind, Paul asks of us, is the status quo really working? The issue seems to be that the funding stream for the FAA is tied to appropriations and for an Agency like the FAA to make long term moves it needs an independent funding mechanism. This is why Paul and Trish, with great trepidation are considering supporting a move for the FAA to a government corporation. They have stressed that the right for ATCs to collectively bargain and retain our current pay and benefits is of the utmost priority. To that end, NATCA has retained a Firm who is highly experienced with such transitions and has most notably guided the Canadian ATC system through its transition. Paul wanted to express the frustration that he has for the National News Media for only taking this carefully nuanced position and summing it up to a “NATCA Supports Privatization” headline. NATCA will not ever support a For-Profit model, it only supports a stable funding system and an organization which prioritizes safety, never profits.

Contract Towers

The past few years NATCA has been organizing Federal Contract Towers. Most recently we have organized Chandler, AZ and Bethel, AK. SERCO, the corporation who runs these towers has come out in full opposition, in some cases employing union busting techniques to harass the people who ‘spearheaded’ the process. 

As NATCA organizes these towers it may become possible for past employees at these locations to added their time spent in the tower to their CBUE NATCA seniority time. Rick Lund is looking into how this will affect seniority for the next bid.

Drug and Alcohol Briefing

We received a Briefing on Drug and Alcohol testing. For any screening it is recommended that you have a Rep present at all times. The Rep can go anywhere the tester goes with the exception of a direct observation which is very rare and must be specifically authorized with cause. (ie. you are on a last chance agreement) If you see anything out of the ordinary or have questions at anytime during the testing process, bring it to the Reps attention.

We were walked through the procedures for some new equipment for breathalyzer tests. The new equipment is very accurate and will not return false positives as some equipment had in the past for breath strips and mouthwash. 

The new Breathalyzer has a built in calibration process to ensure the test starts with a .000 BAC reading. you are then asked to blow. 

Any blow higher than .02 will trigger a second test. If that test comes back as higher than .04 you have failed the test. You will have medical and security clearances pulled, you may be offered an opportunity to enter a rehabilitation program.

If you test between .02 and .04 you will return a NOT-READY-FOR-Duty status. You will be sent home, but note that you will not be allowed to drive from the facility.

Please remember the reporting requirements for Alcohol related infractions. If you have an off duty incident which involves alcohol (not just driving), you must report this before your next scheduled shift not later than 48 hours. Additionally, some Lawyers advise their clients to refuse a FST(field sobriety test). While this may be a defensible position civility, if you refuse a FST, the agency suspects you have something to hide, and can take action against you.

Training Review Boards

The briefing on TRBs stressed the purpose of a training review board; to ensure the proper procedures were utilized to give the Developmental the best chance at success. The purpose of the Union in a TRB is to protect the process and not to protect an employee without the proper skills to do the job.

Common points a Rep looks at when preparing for a TRB include

  • Position time: is the Developmental getting training time in accordance with the training plan?
  • Lack of SET: if it is not used, it calls into question if all the available tools were used to target skill deficiencies.
  • Training team meetings: were meetings updating the team on the Developmental progress held monthly in accordance with the Order?

We should all be reminded that the most important aspect of a TRB is constructing a picture of what the training process looked like for each individual. Therefore, the largest contributor to this is a well documented -25 OJT training report form.

Other Briefings include those from the Safety, Pay, Constitution and IT committees nothing major to update on those fronts. 

 

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ZSE UPDATE/All members meeting from 3/30/2015

Staffing

The A and B Area are sitting at 45 bodies while the C and D Areas have 44.  TMU currently is at 11 CPC’s where they are expecting to gain 3 more during this year.  Of course they also plan on losing at least two during that time.

We have four transferring CPC’s due to arrive this year:  1 in June, 2 in July and 1 in October.  As for new hires, we really have no idea what that looks like.  We were scheduled to receive 29 new hires for FY2015 and with that we were suppose to get 8 in February (we got 0) and 8 in March (where only 2 made it) and so far we’ve received one in April.  We’re not really sure what the rest of the year looks like for ZSE, but I know that the Agency is re-evaluating the placement of new hires.

 OKC is currently washing out students at a rate of around 50%, which is an alarming high number, and based on some of the feedback from the instructors down there, the new Bio-Q process is not an improvement in screening new controllers.

As for attrition, we don’t stand to lose a lot of controllers over the next 20 months (except for the D area where it looks like they’ll lose 5 in 5 months) and we do have a lot of trainees here in the pipe line (A-12 trainees, B-12, C-11 & D-10).  Additionally we have seven more CPC transfers due to arrive within the next 22 months.

 

HWY 164 Construction Project

Beginning April 13th, the City of Auburn will commence with the HWY 164 widening project, starting from in front of our facility to just past Hemlock.  The purpose for this project is to make this area safer as they’ve reported several accidents and deaths over the past 5 years.

The bad part for us is twofold, 1) they are putting up a barrier to prevent us from making a left turn (west) out of the facility and 2) to go west bound we now must make a right turn, merge over two lanes in a matter of 400 feet to get in the left turn lane and then make a U-turn at the new light on Hemlock.  Coming from Enumclaw, you will be able to make a left turn into the facility.

The Project Manager/City Engineer assured us that the new lights will be “talking” with each other therefore building us a gap to make the right turn and merge over to the left turn lane. 

This is not an ideal situation for us to say the least.  In the meantime, we are working on trying to get a waiver to allow and exit only egress on the southeast side of the facility (onto Hemlock).  Currently under the security regs, they do not allow more than one gate area access at an ARTCC.  Additionally, the agency does not have any funds to install an “exit only” gate here at ZSE. 

Here is what to expect during the construction.

·         Road lane closures will be from 9 am to 3 pm Monday – Friday.

·         A flagger will be positioned outside the ZSE entry/exit area when there is an impact to our traffic flow.

·         The barrier will be the last thing installed, therefore left turns out of the facility can still be accomplished during construction.

So we have a little bit of an uphill battle here and we’ll continue to press on until we can get that exit only gate.  

 

Flight Surgeon Update

A couple of weeks ago Jeff and I were invited by the Flight Surgeon for a briefing followed by a Q & A.  Here are some of the topics he covered.

Terminology – Incapacitation means that your medical has been temporarily been suspended.

Disqualification – Your medical has permanently been suspended, therefore you either need to find a new job within the agency or you’ll be looking at a medical retirement. 

Kidney Stones – Generally incapacitated for 30 days and you could be required to report to the fight surgeon every 30 days after for up to two years.

Sleep Apnea – Incapacitation of a minimum of 30 days.  Includes a sleep study, a Cpap and a follow-up at your expense.  You will need a yearly check in with the flight surgeon to where you have to show that you have been using you cpap for at least 75% of the time (for the whole year), or at least 6 hours a night.

Refractive (Lasik)eye surgery – Incapacitated until you meet the vision standards with a 6 month follow up.

Medicine checks – The operation center is open from 8 am to 8 pm Monday-Sunday.  Your responsibility is to check with your FLM to see if the medicine your taking is disqualifying or not.  If it’s outside the centers timeframe, then that’s managements issue.  You could also bypass management and call the flight surgeon directly.

DUI’s – If you BAC is below .15 you will not be subject to a rehab treatment plan.  However you will be incapacitated until the flight surgeon receives a copy of the arrest record which can take up to 3 to 4 weeks to attain. 

 If your BAC is over .15 then you’ll be presented with a rehab treatment plan that could require a minimum of 4 weeks in an out-patient program followed up by 2-3 meetings a week with an EAP counselor for the first few months, then down to weekly meetings after about 6 months.  The plan usually lasts for a year where you will also be subject to random alcohol tests every week.  Lastly you will have to sign a “last chance” agreement where you must abstain from alcohol for the rest of your ATC career.

In a nutshell, you get a DUI that is over .15 BAC, you’ll probably be spending about $20K in legal fees and treatment.

Don’t get a DUI!  J

Self Referral – If you self refer yourself to a treatment program, the agency will issue a “last chance” agreement when you’ve completed the program.

One of the many benefits of NATCA is the service of AMAS.  They have worked with our flight surgeons and know the standards.  If you have any questions about medicine and how it affects your medical or any other medical questions, please give AMAS (720-857-6117) a call.

Lastly, if/when you see your family physician, for example either blood work for high blood pressure or even just a check up, any notes he takes about you, ask to see them.  The notes your doctor takes about you may be shared with the flight surgeon and depending on how things are documented or if he even gives his opinion about your status could jeopardize your medical. 

The Flight Surgeon's office number is 425-227-2300 (Dr. McDermott)

Tech update

Sometime towards the end of May, ZSE will be installing a SI/SO patch on the floor for each sector in area.  The SI/SO will then be tied to the Cru-Art, therefore you will be required to sign on the position your working.  National is still working on an MOU, so we don’t know all of the specifics as of yet.

 

Solidarity Event

Kip Karsh will be organizing a Whirlyball event to take place sometime this fall/winter.  Kip will soon have more details about the event and a sign-up sheet to see who would be interested.

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Solidarity Night Polls

First Annual Whirlyball Tournament


As discussed at the last all members meeting, we are planning a Solidarity Event at http://whirlyballseattle.com/ located in Edmonds WA for the upcoming fall.  Please participate in the following poll so we can gauge which evening shows the most interest.  Also, we would like to know if there is enough interest in organizing R/T transportation from Auburn since the event is 45 minutes North of the Center.   (There is alcohol on site for members to purchase, please don't drink and drive)

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Profesional Standards

Natca would like to introduce the newest members to our local Professional Standards team.

Pablo Pescador (C area) and M’Lynda Henninger (A area) just returned from Pro-Standards training and are officially your newest  Pro Standards reps.  They join the current team which include Jeff McElvain (A area), Tony Germann (A area), Andy Olson (B area), and Denise Spencer (D-area).  We are all reps for the facility, not just respected areas.   

 

What is Professional Standards and how it benefits you…..

 

The simplest way to explain it, Pro Standards is a stand alone program for addressing issues in a peer-to-peer manner. It gives us, BUEs, an opportunity to address performance and conduct issues before such issues rise to a level requiring action on the part of the Agency.  If you report to Management, they have a requirement to document and discipline.

 

If you have an issue, find a rep.  It is CONFIDENTIAL!  

 

Possible issues:

  • hostile work environment
  • distractions in the work place
  • individual conflicts
  • problems of a professional or ethical nature
  • conduct
  • ineffective operating methods/techniques
  • inappropriate language/actions
  • Positive reports:
  • identifying exceptional performance
  • recognizing actions that enhance the standing of the profession

 

What we can’t do:

  • disagreements over the CBA
  • substance abuse Article 73
  • ATSAP events NOT forwarded by the ERC (technical limitation)
  • immediate threat to the NAS
  • legal/criminal  issues
  • medical related issues
  • security violations/ gross negligence

 

This program is Union designed, Agency backed and EVERY controller can use it.  It thrives on confidentiality and no documentation. If you have an issue, or a question, find a rep.

http://prostandards.natca.net/

 

 

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Wifi Network Update

If you haven't submitted you Media Access Control (MAC) Addresses for your wireless devices, you may be blocked from the NATCA Network after January 1st. Please click here to submit your Address to maintain access.

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