The mission-critical nature of air traffic control surely means that you have standby staff in place in case of sickness

In the competitive field of infrastructure shambles, cancelled flights at Gatwick are an also-ran. All the same, the embarrassment factor ought to be acute. How can a shortage of staff in the air traffic controllers – we are talking about as few as 10 individuals off sick – mean the UK’s second largest airport has to ground 164 flights this week? Where is the slack in the system? Where is the backup?

The superficial explanation from Nats, the company running the control tower at the West Sussex airport, is easy enough to follow. “With 30% of tower staff unavailable for a variety of medical reasons including Covid, we cannot manage the number of flights that were originally planned for this week,” it says. Thus capacity will be capped this week at 800 arrivals or departures a day.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Times change but the Guardian’s values don’t: 200 years, and we’ve only just begun

On the Guardian’s 200th anniversary, our editor-in-chief sets out how media can…

Labour says it will insulate 2m houses in first year to cut bills

Ed Miliband says move will ease energy price crisis and reduce dependence…

Fish fingers containing Russian whitefish still on sale across UK

Exclusive: Most major supermarkets have carried on buying Russian-caught fish since Ukraine…

Critically ill Afghans suffer as Taliban tighten Pakistan border

Shortage of specialised doctors in Afghanistan means patients seek lifesaving care in…