NATCA canvasses restructuring of aviation agencies

Lagos airportNigeria Air Traffic Controllers’ Association (NATCA) has called for the restructuring of various aviation agencies in the country in line with the primary functions establishing them.

Speaking at the 44th annual general meeting and conference of NATCA held in Akure, Ondo State the president of NATCA Mr. Victor Eyaru said restructuring will reduce the bearing of unnecessary burdens of duplication of departments and directorates as against the originally designed structures.

He called on the federal government to reduce corruption and wastages in the system by extending the current probe in the oil industry to the aviation sector.

According to Eyaru, air traffic controllers formed only 12 percent of the total staff strength of NAMA as against 45 and 70 percent for other sister organisation outside the country, saying it was the reason for paucity of fund in the agency slowing down timely renewal of facilities and training of core aviation professionals in Statutory areas to ensure proficiency in air safety.

NATCA urged the federal government to extend most of the airports aprons, complete abandoned terminal buildings and create more jobs in view of the coming of a new national carrier.

They decried the abandonment of Lagos airports taxiway for more than six years adding that it has reduced the capacity of the airport and prevented aircraft from accessing vital areas of the country’s business airport.

”It is ripe here to call on the Federal government to urgently address issues bothering on the construction of a new control tower for Kaduna airport to replace the one that got burnt on 20th April 2014”, he added.

Eyaru explained that the fire watch room where ATCS was provided for at the airport was unsafe since there was no proper view of the maneuvering areas as required by ICAO.His words: “only 40 out of 300 have been trained in Performance Base Navigation thereby hampering its scheduled provision with effect from December 2012 with the airspace, more trained in Aeronautical search and rescue for more that 5 years”

He warned that unnecessarily delay in completing the Aeronautical Information Services Automation project might have undermined its usefulness to the system, as most of technologies in the industry will become obsolete soon.

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