http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-09-23/talks-on-private-air-traffic-control-turn-serious-in-u-s-.html
“We should have this discussion,” Paul Rinaldi, president of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, the union representing more than 15,000 FAA-employed controllers, said at a June 27 conference on NextGen. “I don’t have the answers, but I do know the current system is broken.”
Yes it is.
However, it will be an uphill battle to change things:
President Bill Clinton’s proposal to turn over air-traffic control to a government corporation was dropped after getting support from only two lawmakers, Donohue said.
Proposals by Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama to charge fees for flights -- a funding mechanism used by almost all nations that have at least partly removed air-traffic control from government -- also went nowhere in Congress.
Of course, this is one thing Canada is doing right:
One possible model is the one adopted in Canada, where air-traffic control is overseen by a nonprofit corporation funded by user fees instead of tax money.
You would think that congress would want to shirk as much tax burden as possible.
This story really turned some heads. With comments from Robert Poole (who really comments on everything ATC related as that is basically his job); Dillingham, Rinaldi, and Crichton; this is like a who`s who in the fight to change this system over.
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-09-23/should-the-u-dot-s-dot-get-out-of-the-air-traffic-control-business
http://associationsnow.com/2013/09/is-privatization-next-for-air-traffic-controllers/
(Is it just me or does this article reek of plagiarism?)
http://www.bizjournals.com/pittsburgh/blog/morning-edition/2013/09/feds-may-privatize-air-traffic-control.html
And of course, with the first whiff of privatization in the air, the traders start licking their lips:
http://www.sbwire.com/press-releases/global-air-traffic-control-market-industry-analysis-size-share-growth-trends-and-forecast-2013-2019-335760.htm