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#1
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Okay, so the Bush Administration says it wants to privatize ATC services,
apparently saving the taxpayers millions (billions?) of dollars. The controllers say "No way!", claiming that putting ATC into the hands of private businesses will jeopardize air safety, etc. G.A. pilots say "No way!" because the Gubmint will want to start charging "User's fees" to those of us who fly, making an already costly activity prohibitively expensive. So what's the solution here? Obviously something is wacky with current costs if privatizing a SINGLE control tower (Vandenberg AFB, in California) can save over $500,000.00 in a 3-year period! If this is true, why can't the current controllers sit down with management and find ways to save that kind of money, thus defusing the issue? It seems to me the numbers here are just too huge. Somebody is not telling the whole truth... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
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In article CTS_a.146659$uu5.22344@sccrnsc04, Jay Honeck
wrote: It seems to me the numbers here are just too huge. Somebody is not telling the whole truth... Like an Oreo, the truth lies in the stuffing. What we are looking at is "political payoff". Best example is to look what has happened to the military. Over 50% of the support services have been privatized to campaign contributors. Business who have outsourced their services have been badly burned by brain-drain (loss of key employees knowledge) and spiraling contract costs resulting in reduced services. New management comes in and repeats the process. It's a revolving door. When you retain your own employees, you retain the flexibility to control your costs and your business. |
#3
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In article CTS_a.146659$uu5.22344@sccrnsc04, "Jay Honeck"
wrote: So what's the solution here? Obviously something is wacky with current costs if privatizing a SINGLE control tower (Vandenberg AFB, in California) can save over $500,000.00 in a 3-year period! If this is true, why can't the current controllers sit down with management and find ways to save that kind of money, thus defusing the issue? civil service, union, Congress It's similar to any out-sourcing investigation. -- Bob Noel |
#5
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:CTS_a.146659$uu5.22344@sccrnsc04... So what's the solution here? Obviously something is wacky with current costs if privatizing a SINGLE control tower (Vandenberg AFB, in California) can save over $500,000.00 in a 3-year period! If this is true, why can't the current controllers sit down with management and find ways to save that kind of money, thus defusing the issue? It seems to me the numbers here are just too huge. Somebody is not telling the whole truth... In this case I expect it's a case of Air Force unique issues and Air Force accounting. Having spent 5 years at VAFB, I can say that tower duty there would be pretty boring for an AF controller. There were about a half dozen helos and an aero club for based a/c. Most of the traffic I saw out there was transient training a/c (BUFFs, P-3s, tankers, etc.) that came in, did a few low approaches and split. The field (and tower) were only open 7 am to 5 pm. The problem is that an AF controller is critically manned (always) and controllers have to be proficient at all aspects of their job. They can be mobilized and deployed anywhere on short notice and have to fill in at approach control, tac air control or any number of jobs. All that requires constant training. If he can't get the training locally, it means routine TDY for training. That means extra expense and extra staff to handle the work while everyone rotates thru training. Just being a tower controller at a field is not an option. The part about being critically manned means that the controllers are going to be moving a lot. It's a domino effect of filling vacancies and adjusting experience mixes at bases world wide. The accounting is that the AF will include all those costs of training, retraining, personnel moves, etc., as part of the costs. So contracting out the work where there will be 4 or 5 controllers who can be nothing more than tower controllers with presumably much less turnover is likely to save a bundle. On top of that, $500K over 3 years equates to approximately the cost of 1 full time professional (as in highly skilled) employee with all benefits and overhead thrown in. Gerry |
#6
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![]() Jay Honeck wrote: This seems hugely over-blown. I'd be interested in how you arrived at that? In major businesses (like AT&T, IBM, etc.), the cost of an employee is roughly three times his or her salary. Costs include office space, pension, health care, and a portion of the salaries of the people that make out paychecks and W-2s. It all adds up. George Patterson They say that nothing's certain except death and taxes. The thing is, death doesn't get worse every time Congress goes into session. Will Rogers |
#7
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:Z2Z_a.148115$YN5.97663@sccrnsc01... On top of that, $500K over 3 years equates to approximately the cost of 1 full time professional (as in highly skilled) employee with all benefits and overhead thrown in. This seems hugely over-blown. I'd be interested in how you arrived at that? -- Been dealing with labor rates for 25+ years -- Air Force, gov't contractors, big companies, medium companies. Most places, the cost of an employee is about 3 times their salary. It's pretty consistent. Even in a small business with no benefits, an employee will cost 1 1/2 to 2 times salary. With those overhead rates, that $500K would pay for one person earning about $55K/yr. Not an unreasonable number for an AF or civil service controller. |
#8
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In article , "Gerry
Caron" wrote: Been dealing with labor rates for 25+ years -- Air Force, gov't contractors, big companies, medium companies. Most places, the cost of an employee is about 3 times their salary. It's pretty consistent. Even in a small business with no benefits, an employee will cost 1 1/2 to 2 times salary. most of the loaded rates I see have the cost of an employee to be about twice their salary. But 2x, 3x, too bad the employee can't see it. :-/ -- Bob Noel |
#9
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![]() "john smith" wrote in message ... "G.R. Patterson III" wrote: In major businesses (like AT&T, IBM, etc.), the cost of an employee is roughly three times his or her salary. Costs include office space, pension, health care, and a portion of the salaries of the people that make out paychecks and W-2s. It all adds up. Pension??? What company pays future pension payments for current employees? Every company that has a pension plan. If they offer a 401k and make matching contributions, those are pension payments. If they have a defined benefit plan, it has to be funded to cover future liabilities of the plan. Do a search on "ERISA" Today's WSJ had a really good article on the subject. A short read explains why these plans are falling out of favor. |
#10
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Jay Honeck wrote:
On top of that, $500K over 3 years equates to approximately the cost of 1 full time professional (as in highly skilled) employee with all benefits and overhead thrown in. This seems hugely over-blown. I'd be interested in how you arrived at that? The actual cost of any employee is their salary/wages plus (benefits if any) plus a share of the overheads that are required to keep that employee, (eg offices/buildings, support-staff, utilities, etc, etc, etc) Depending upon the industry, the real cost of an employee to an organisation is somewhere between 2 and 4 times what the employee is paid. |
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