Monthly Archives: October 2013

Indentured Servitude is Alive and Well in the U.S.


An Airport Traffic Control (ATC) Tower

An Airport Traffic Control Tower (ATCT)

Take it from a former controller who has in his 34 years in the business worked at some pretty busy facilities under less than ideal conditions with obsolete or failing equipment and uncooperative weather:  There are few if any jobs more stressful than air traffic control.  Period.  It’s certainly more stressful than being, say, a congressman or a senator.

Imagine working New York TRACON (Terminal Radar Approach Control) during a busy inbound rush of air carriers, failing equipment, and a line of thunderstorms pushing into the area from the west.  Throw into that mix an inflight emergency or two and perhaps an aircraft with minimum fuel that needs to get on the ground right now.

Then let’s add to all that stress.

Let’s tell those controllers that they have to go to work, but a group of about thirty congressmen and a senator or two who didn’t agree with the results of the last election are going to refuse to allow the United States Congress to pay them.

These already overworked, stressed controllers have mortgages to make, utilities to pay, car payments, grocery bills, kids in college . . . but none of that makes any difference.  They are required by federal law to work.  For free.  Indefinitely.

Think that’s fair?  That’s what’s happening right now, this very second.  In New York.  In Dallas.  In Atlanta.  In Chicago.  In Los Angeles.  In myriad other busy facilities across this great nation.  All because of thirty-some-odd Congressmen and at least one delusional, grand-standing Senator from Texas who has ambitions beyond the senate seat he’s held for less than ten months.

Tomorrow, these controllers will be paid for only 48 of the 80 or more hours they worked — the 48 hours they worked before the shutdown that occurred just thirteen days ago.  Those controllers received that bad news when they got their “pay” statements last Thursday.  Two weeks from tomorrow the amount in their paychecks drops to Z-E-R-O despite working another 80 or more hours during the next pay period.

How long do you think you could financially hold on under such conditions?  How long do you think it’ll be before some of these controllers have to resign to find jobs that pay the bills?  How long do you think it’ll be before retirement-eligible controllers with 20 or 25+ years of badly needed experience and who are currently mentoring an already far-too-young and inexperienced group of new controllers decide that they should go into retirement just to pay the bills?  (Controllers, by the way, are only allowed to work to the last day of the month in which they turn 56 because of the stresses inherent to their jobs, and because before that reduction in the retirement age, very few controllers could make it to mandatory retirement because of failing health and deteriorating abilities and reaction times.  These are the professionals who your congressman is stiffing on pay for work they’ve already done.)

How long before that radar control room guiding your airliner is staffed like this?:

The Control Room of a Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON)

The Control Room of a Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON)

And while these people are working for free, I’d like for you to consider this:  Those congressmen?  The ones who before the last election proclaimed the 2012 elections a “referendum on Obamacare?”  The congressmen who are now having a temper tantrum because, at their core, they apparently only believe in democracy when it suits them?

Those congressmen work on average just two days out of every five-day workweek, earn at a minimum $174,000 a year (Speaker Boehner gets a whopping $223,500 for not doing his job), are vested for retirement benefits after only five years on what I laughingly call “the job,” get federally subsidized healthcare (which those thirty want to deny people who make one tenth as much as they), and they continue to receive those pay and all those benefits while your air traffic controllers are forced to do without.  Those congressmen certainly aren’t hurting financially during this self-induced “crisis,” but your air traffic controllers certainly are.

How dare any elected representative do this to employees who work for them?  How dare any elected representative put employees’ families through this kind of stress and uncertainty?  How dare anyone whose job is given to them by a democratic process repudiate the outcome of a democratic election because they do not agree with the results?

It is way past time to start reducing the stress levels of your already overstressed air traffic controllers, and to start raising the stress levels of your elected representative.  And if you live in the state of Texas, as do I, it’s way past time to tell the wealthy Senator Ted Cruz (55th wealthiest member of the U.S. Senate) that if he doesn’t agree with democracy, then it’s well beyond time to democratically terminate his employment come next election.

These people, quite frankly, disgust this former Republican who, effective October 1 of this year, no longer affiliates himself with what once was truly the Grand Old Party . . . but is no more.

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Filed under Author, Aviation Safety, Opinion Piece, Social Networking, Writing

Fun Photo Friday — Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta


I hope you’re not tired of looking at hot air balloons by now, because I’ve saved some of the best images for last.  Click and enjoy the show:

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Filed under Aviation Safety, Fun Photo Friday, Photography, travel

42nd Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta — Part 4


Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta

Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta

In a moment I’m going to give a brief pictorial on How to Inflate a Hot Air Balloon, but first some news from this year’s Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta.

First, some statistics:

  • There were 548 normal balloons and 97 “special shape” balloons registered for this year’s event
  • Over 700,000 people are expected to attend this year’s event
  • Opening day (Saturday, which we attended) saw over 550 balloons take the the air

Alas, not every landing associated with the Balloon Fiesta is necessarily a soft or a happy one:

  • One 61-year-old woman suffered a broken ankle on Saturday following a hard landing (Story Link)
  • That same morning another balloon got entangled on a single power line (Story Link)
  • On Wednesday a balloon caught fire and the gondola crashed after running into multiple power lines (Story Link)

Dramatic Photo from http://www.KOAT.com (story link with more pictures above)

Now onto today’s tutorial.

So, you’re probably wondering how you go from this:

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

To this:

Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta

Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta

Well, even if you don’t care, I’m going to show you anyway.  After rolling out the balloon and attaching the gondola, the crew will hold open the envelope at the gondola end and blow air into it using a fan:

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

The balloon slowly inflates over a period of twenty minutes or so depending on size:

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Of course while this is going on you do get the occasional inquiring young mind wondering what the heck is going on:

2013 ABQ Balloon Fiesta 051

Is That a Pillow, Mama?

The balloon continues to inflate with cold air:

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Eventually it fills enough to safely ignite the liquid propane burner, directing the flame into the envelope without the danger of burning the fabric:

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Filling with hot air now causes the envelope to lift, which in turn places the gondola into an upright position ready for launch:

Full of Hot Air — Must Be a Congressman

Full of Hot Air — Must Be a Congressman

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

Inflating a Non-Congressional Hot Air Balloon

The burner continues to feed heated air into the envelope until lift is achieved:

The Dawn Patrol takes to the Skies

The Dawn Patrol takes to the Skies

Don’t forget tomorrow’s Fun Photo Friday with some of my favorite photos from this event.

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