Take a look at a
1944 pre-PATCO ATC facilities in the Solomon Islands. Air- conditioned, plenty
of good lighting and Lucky Strikes for ten cents-a-pack. For What more could you ask? USN Construction Battalions (Seabees) put
these towers up in a day, or so (can you tell?). The controller is USMC

PATCO –
Professional Air Traffic Control Organization

President Ronald Reagan
National Archives and Records Administration
On August 3, 1981,
President Reagan gave the PATCO strikers 48 hours to return to work.
Morning
Edition, August
3, 2006 · Twenty-five years ago, on Aug. 3, 1981, more than 12,000
members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization walked off the
job, setting off a chain of events that would redefine labor relations in
America.
In response to the walkout, President
Ronald Reagan issued one of the defining statements of his presidency. He said
the striking air-traffic controllers were in violation of the law; if they did
not report to work within 48 hours, their jobs would be terminated.
Reagan carried out his threat.
Today, tensions are once again high
between the Federal Aviation Administration and the union that eventually
emerged to replace PATCO, the National Air Traffic Controllers Association.
NATCO and the FAA cannot agree on a new contract, so the FAA plans to impose
its own contract, which includes major wage concessions.
Ruth Marlin, executive vice president of
NATCA, says these concessions will make it harder for air-traffic controllers
to do their job.
"Experienced controllers who transfer
to busier facilities would take a large pay cut to do it," Marlin says.
"So what we'll see is new hires going into very busy airports -- Dallas,
Fort Worth, Atlanta, Chicago. We've never trained new hires at places like
that."
New hires would be paid far less than they
are today, she says.
"This proposal is not simply a, 'We
want to roll back the gains that were made in the last contract,'" she
says. "It is de-professionalizing air-traffic control."
FAA spokesman Jeff Basey says his agency
is starved for cash. Under the last contract, the annual cost of paying
air-traffic controllers has climbed by $1 billion. He says the union is walking
away from a contract that not only protects salaries but will also raise them
through performance-based measures. According to the union, salaries average a
little more than $100,000, plus benefits.
When PATCO went on strike in 1981, Ken
Moffet was the chief federal mediator. He says the union wanted a shorter work
week and higher pay. Moffet says the strikers believed if they were gone, the
safety of the flying public would be at risk. But that wasn't entirely the
case.
Moffet calls the strike a
"calamity," not just for the fired air-traffic controllers, but for
unions everywhere. Back in 1981, labor negotiations centered around the size of
workers' raises. Subsequently, management began going after all unions for
concessions and laying people off, he says.
Georgetown University historian Joseph
McCartin is writing a book about the PATCO strike. Prior to PATCO, it was not
acceptable for employers to replace workers on strike, even though the law gave
employers the right to do so, he says.
The PATCO strike eased those inhibitions.
Major strikes plummeted from an average of 300 each year in the decades before
to fewer than 30 today.
"Any kind of worker, it seemed, was
vulnerable to replacement if they went out on strike, and the psychological
impact of that, I think, was huge," McCartin says. "The loss of the
strike as a weapon for American workers has some rather profound, long-range
consequences."