After eight months of fruitless negotiations with the controllers' union, however, the FAA declared that negotiations were at an impasse and, as the law requires, sent its final wage and benefit offer to Congress for review. Unless Congress disapproves the offers within 60 days, the FAA's final and best offer will be the compensation package governing controller salaries for the next five years. June 5 is the deadline, and the union and its congressional allies have fewer than two weeks left to get Congress to act on their behalf.
Under the FAA's final offer, total controller compensation would rise to $187,000 over five years, in contrast to the more than $200,000 that the controllers have been demanding since last September. As a result of this and other differences in the offers, taxpayers will save $600 million if Congress allows the FAA's contract to take effect.
Incredibly, a bipartisan majority in the House of Representatives is siding with the controllers in their effort to force the taxpayers to provide them with one of the most generous pay and benefit packages available to any group of American workers. Led by Representatives Jerry Costello (D-IL) and Steven LaTourette (R-OH), these Members want to force the issue to a vote on the House floor through an obscure legislative device called a "discharge petition." If the discharge petition succeeds, the House would then have to vote up or down to force the issue into arbitration. Congress would be giving the controllers another chance to get their pay package closer to the $200,000 they have been demanding.
Background
At the behest of the Clinton Administration in 1996, Congress enacted legislation that gave the government's air traffic controllers the right to bargain with the federal government over pay, benefits, and work rules-a privilege unavailable to the vast majority of other federal workers, then or now.[1] With this new bargaining power, the air traffic controllers extracted in 1998 a sweetheart deal of extraordinary generosity from a compliant White House.
According to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), base pay for the 14,500 controllers soared 75 percent over the next seven years, rising from $64,877 in 1998 to $113,615 in 2005. Including premium pay for location upgrades and other salary add-ons, average controller cash compensation reached $128,000 in 2005. When benefits are included, total compensation averaged $166,000 in 2005. For a select group of 1,300 controllers, seniority, premium pay, and overtime boosted their total pay and benefit package above $200,000 in 2005. Despite this generous compensation, the air traffic controllers union is seeking a new contract with higher pay that the FAA estimates would cost taxpayers and the beleaguered aviation industry an extra $2 billion over the contract's five-year lifetime.[2]
Negotiating a New Contract
In defense of their high pay and their demand for more, the National Air Traffic Controllers Association (NATCA), the air traffic controllers union, contends that its members' generous compensation is justified by their stressful work and the critical importance of ensuring the safety of millions of airline passengers. The union also contends that the indices to which their pay is contractually linked, not the 1998 contract, caused the pay escalation.[3]
While compensation should be commensurate with the required skills and the effort expected of the workforce, a review of compensation for other professions requiring similar skills and on which the public safety depends found that controller pay is unusually generous, as shown in Table 1.
Despite generous salaries and early retirement benefits, the
controllers want more and have proposed a new five-year contract
that includes an 18 percent pay increase, which would increase cash
earnings from $128,000 to $151,000 and total compensation to over
$200,000 by the last year in the contract. The federal government's
counteroffer would allow cash pay to rise from an average of
$128,000 in 2005 to $140,000 over the five-year contract, and total
compensation would rise from $166,000 to $187,000.[4]The
government also proposes to create a new pay tier for new hires to
repair the financial damage done by the 1998 contract.
In response to the proposed new pay tier, the controllers argue
that expected controller retirements in the near term (10 percent
over the next year and 75 percent over the next decade) will save
$543 million over the next five years as the more highly paid
senior controllers retire and are replaced by lower-paid new
entrants under the existing scale.[5]The
FAA counters that the old contract, compared with the new pay tier,
would provide new entrants with substantial pay increases during
their early years that would offset any initial savings.
Since the existing contract expired in September 2005 and efforts
to negotiate a new one have reached an impasse, the FAA invited the
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS) to join the
discussions to help reach a deal. Even with the FMCS, the impasse
persisted, and negotiations broke down in early April 2006. The
delay in reaching a new agreement is caused in part by the flaws
and peculiar provisions in the 1998 agreement that work both for
and against the controllers union, depending upon the rate of
progress in the negotiations. To the controllers' considerable
benefit, they continue to receive pay increases after expiration of
the existing contract in September 2005. Under terms of that
contract, between the contract's expiration and an agreement on a
new one, controllers still receive annual pay increases "at a rate
that is the greater of the government-wide increase plus 0.8
percent or the agency-wide increase." In other words, despite the
absence of a new contract, controllers will continue to receive
larger pay increases than their counterparts elsewhere in the civil
service receive. As a consequence, the union's incentive to
negotiate a compromise agreement with the government is greatly
diminished.
However, the 1998 contract was not totally one-sided. It provided
the government with some remedies in the event that the union
became intransigent and abused its privileges as granted under the
contract. Specifically, the 1998 contract included a safety valve
that allows the FAA to impose a contract on the controllers,
subject to congressional action, if good-faith negotiations came to
a complete impasse.
That impasse arrived on April 5, 2006. As a result, the FAA's final
offer will become the effective labor contract unless Congress
intervenes in the union's favor. Yet with Congress under growing
pressure to control spending better and hold the line on taxes,
Members may not be inclined to aid a privileged class of government
workers whose base salaries are already more than four times the
average annual salary of their constituents employed in the private
sector.
To thwart this outcome, several Members of Congress have introduced
legislation to overturn the congressional role provided by the
federal laws governing FAA-controller contract negotiations.
Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) introduced S. 2201 in the Senate, and
Representative Sue Kelly (R-NY) has introduced its companion bill
(H. R. 4755) in the House of Representatives to limit the
government's ability to curb the excessive growth in controller
wages. If enacted, their proposal would eliminate the FAA's option
of imposing a contract on the controllers when negotiations reach
an impasse (a right that the federal government effectively has
over the millions of other well-paid civil servants); terminate
congressional responsibility over that portion of the FAA budgetary
process; and transfer the final decision on the contract (and the
federal budget) to an independent arbitrator.
Regardless of the legislative outcome, the Department of
Transportation (DOT) and FAA leadership should be commended for
holding the line against the union's excessive demands and attempts
by the controllers' congressional supporters to undermine efforts
to restrain spending. The government's success to date has also
come at the expense of the union's highly paid lobbyists, members
of a thriving industry in Washington, D.C., that is increasingly
driving the federal budget process.[6]Notably,
the union's professional lobbyists have failed to garner many
congressional cosponsors for the Obama-Kelly legislation beyond the
predictable big spenders and union supporters.
Notwithstanding the intense resistance from the union and its
congressional supporters, the FAA's proposal is comparatively timid
considering the many financial and operational problems facing this
government monopoly, which is struggling to operate in a fast
changing world. While other nations have improved their aviation
services and reduced air traffic control operating costs through
the privatization and/or commercialization of all or some of their
national aviation systems, America's aviation control system
continues to operate in the warm and generous embrace of a
government monopoly.
Recent FAA Privatization Successes
A DOT Inspector General review found that contracting out
187 Level 1 towers to private controller services saved taxpayers
$250,000 per tower per year prior to the 1998 wage contract. Given
the subsequent escalation in controller salaries, the Inspector
General estimates that a contracting program applied to the
remaining 71 FAA-managed Level 1 towers would save $881,000 per
tower per year. Congress should encourage the FAA to pursue this
opportunity to save an estimated $63 million per year in taxpayer
money.[7]
Despite bipartisan pro-union resistance in the House and Senate,
the FAA successfully contracted out the 2,500 employee positions in
flight service centers to a private company for a savings of $2.2
billion over the next 10 years. It achieves these savings by
implementing new technologies and restructuring operations. These
new technologies will allow the number of flight service centers to
shrink from 58 to 20 and the number of government workers to fall
from 2,500 to 1,500 while providing the same or better
services.
What the Administration and Congress Should Do
Instead of pretending that such a monopolistic structure
possesses any value in the modern world, the Administration and
Congress should build on the FAA's successful resistance to the
union's excessive wage demands, as well as on related privatization
successes, by pursuing a comprehensive restructuring strategy that
will move the FAA into the 21st century. To achieve this end,
Congress should:
- Allow the Administration's best offer contract to take effect on June 5, 2006.
- Encourage competitive contracting and privatization opportunities, such as those that already have reduced costs and improved safety in the system.
- Develop legislation to privatize the entire air traffic control system. Over the past decade, many other countries have moved to privatize or commercialize their entire air traffic control systems. Indeed, notwithstanding President Clinton's ultimate cave-in to the controllers union in 1998, his Administration conducted a detailed and positive review of such a privatization,[8] and Vice President Gore's Reinventing Government effort reviewed this outcome favorably. As much of the world continues to flee from the destructive consequences of socialism, the U.S. could at least join the auxiliary movement by committing to a formal study of the costs and benefits.
Conclusion
The Administration has had some success in enacting reforms that
undermine the forces of privilege and entrenchment within the
federal bureaucracy. One of those notable successes was the FAA's
enhancement of the quality of the flight service centers at a
considerable savings while improving service and technology.Resisting the controllers' demands for excessive pay increases presents another challenge and an even greater opportunity. Once contract negotiations are successfully settled, the FAA should set a goal of contracting out the remaining government-operated Level 1 towers to achieve the estimated savings of $63 million. To this end, the Republican Study Committee's recent proposal to privatize FAA activities as part of its FY 2007 budget proposal[9] is timely and should receive the support of other Members of Congress.
-Ronald D. Utt, Ph.D., is Herbert and Joyce Morgan Senior Research Fellow in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
[1]Federal Aviation Reauthorization Act of 1996, Public Law 104-264.
[2]FAA data are from Marion C. Blakely, FAA Administrator, letter to Senator Barack Obama (D-IL), January 13, 2006.
[3]National Air Traffic Controllers Association, "The Numbers Don't Lie," January 26, 2006, at www.fairfaa.com/the_numbers_dont_lie.asp (April 5, 2006).
[4]All salary data are from Blakely letter to Senator Barack Obama.
[5]National Air Traffic Controllers Association, "The Numbers Don't Lie."
[6]See Ronald D. Utt, Ph.D., "A Primer on Lobbyists, Earmarks, and Congressional Reform," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 1924, forthcoming.
[7]Ronald D. Utt, Ph.D., "Will Congress Protect the Unionized Government Monopoly at the FAA?" Heritage Foundation Executive Memorandum No. 887, June 19, 2003, at www.heritage.org/Research/GovernmentReform/EM887.cfm.
[8]See U.S. Department of Transportation, "Air Traffic Control: Analysis of Illustrative Corporate Financial Scenarios," May 3, 1994.
[9]Republican Study Committee, "RSC FY 2007 Budget: Contract with America Renewed," March 8, 2006, pp. 34-35, at www.house.gov/pence/rsc/doc/RSC_2007_BUDGET.pdf
(April 5, 2006).