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Budget request from FAA includes a proposal to hire 2,300 air traffic control officers

Federal Aviation Administration announced Monday that it is proposing to hire 2,300 trainee air traffic controllers to address the 'persistent shortage of personnel.

FAA is?about 3500 air traffic controllers behind its targeted staffing levels. It employed 13,164 air traffic controllers at the end of September, or 6% less than a decade ago. Many controllers work six-day weekends and mandatory overtime. The?FAA air traffic control academy is also having serious retention issues.

The FAA wants to spend $95.4 million on bringing 2,300 new controller trainees aboard, compared to 2,038 by 2025. The FAA also wants $39 million for increased aviation safety oversight as well as to strengthen commercial space transport oversight, compliance, and enforcement.

Congress approved $12.5 billion last year to upgrade the U.S.?air?traffic?control system, and to increase hiring.

Sean Duffy, Transportation Secretary, said last week that he wanted another $7 to $10 billion in new software and tech upgrades.

The USDOT Office of Inspector General announced in February that it was investigating high failure rates among trainees of air traffic control. In December, the FAA reported that it lost between 400 and 500 trainees due to the shutdown of government last year.

Congress approved funding earlier this year to hire 2,500 more?controllers by 2026.

The FAA offers retirement-eligible control rs who are below the mandatory?retirement?age of 56 an annual lump sum payment equal to 20% of their base pay. The FAA increased starting salaries by 30% for candidates attending the FAA Training Academy and has shortened the time to hire process from more than four months.

The FAA has begun moving its headquarters to the main USDOT Building and the Trump Administration wants $60 million for the relocation of thousands of employees. (Reporting and editing by David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)