SEO Title
Air Traffic Controller Drought Calls for New Approach to Training
Subtitle
CAE aims to make the recruitment and training process more efficient
Subject Area
Onsite / Show Reference
Company Reference
Teaser Text
CAE launches Air Traffic Services initiative to help air navigation service providers recruit and train a new generation of air traffic controllers.
Content Body

Air navigation service providers (ANSPs) around the world still struggle to recruit, train, and retain air traffic controllers as staffing levels still have not recovered from Covid-era layoffs and retirements. In the U.S. alone, the FAA needs to fill about 3,000 vacancies in a situation that appears to mirror the pilot shortage.

Aviation training group CAE offers to remedy the challenge through its new Air Traffic Services (ATS) program, which will launch in October with NavCanada. Between then and the end of 2028, the Montreal-based company expects to prepare more than 500 students in a process beginning with between three and six months of initial training before their assignment to on-the-job training positions at NavCanada facilities around the country.

“One of the things we think we can bring to this situation is our global footprint and the access we have to a talent pool,” Marie-Christine Cloutier, CAE’s vice president of civil strategy for performance, strategy and marketing, told AIN. “We are looking to form partnerships with ANSPs and help them to be more efficient to ramp up [staffing levels] quickly. There is a lot of competition [for recruits] and this is a very demanding job.”

The ATS training offering can adjust to meet the specific needs of each ANSP, which might include recruiting instructors. In some cases, recruits from one part of the world could serve roles in another region.

NavCanada has been investing in its recruitment process, expanding its presence at trade shows and student fairs. It uses questionnaires to assess the potential of prospective candidates who likely have little or no exposure to aviation. “They tend to be very cerebral and scenario-based in how they think,” Cloutier explained. “We need very calm people.”

CAE provides classroom training and devices to simulate a control tower with a 180-degree view of aircraft operations, with elements such as weather presented to students. “We need to make it interesting and we’re also trying to make the process more efficient because currently there is a high rate of remedial training needed for students who don’t pass [the course] the first time,” Cloutier said. “We want the pass rate to increase and we’re looking at different things we could apply.”

The company already uses a tool called CAE Rise for grading students and provides analysis of training data to identify areas where changes might be needed to improve outcomes.

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AIN Story ID
370
Writer(s) - Credited
Solutions in Business Aviation
0
AIN Publication Date
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