Tampa airport defies U.S. air traffic controller shortage
Add Axios as your preferred source to
see more of our stories on Google.


Tampa International Airport has one of the lowest vacancy rates in the country for air traffic controllers, per recent Federal Aviation Administration data.
Why it matters: There's been a heightened focus on tower staffing after back-to-back plane crashes in recent weeks — the latest being a Delta plane flipping upside down Monday while landing.
The big picture: The chances of dying from commercial air travel are 1 in 13.7 million, according to MIT researchers, which makes flying one of the safest ways to travel.
- But a lot of people are unnerved by the headlines.
- And since air traffic controllers are critical in preventing collisions, the fact that there's a nationwide staffing shortage potentially leading to overworked controllers may not be helping those fears.

Zoom in: The average vacancy rate for controller positions in the U.S. is about 24%, according to goals set by the FAA and the controllers' union.
- The average for Florida's 20 control towers is about 18%. Tampa has a 13% vacancy rate and needs nine more controllers to reach its goal of 67 controllers.
- The lowest rates statewide: Daytona (0%) and Pensacola (-2.9%), which exceeds its goal by one controller.
What we're watching: Whether shaken public confidence in flying will impact ticket sales.

