Cuba Seeks "Revolutionary" Air Traffic Controllers
August 2, 2016
By Daniel Benitez (Cafe Fuerte)
HAVANA TIMES — With flights to Cuba on the rise, the Cuban Aiports and
Aviation Services company has launched a call to train 50 air traffic
controllers, who will earn a basic monthly salary of 455 Cuban pesos
(CUP), about 18 convertible pesos (equivalent to 16 USD).
The advertisement published by the president of the Cuban Aviation
Corporation, Ramon Martinez Echavarria, explains that after a 12 month
course, those chosen can earn 100 CUP (5 USD) more for their skills, 105
CUP for learning and 44 CUC in bonuses, which will raise their total
income to about 70.4 CUC, which would be the equivalent to about 62 US
dollars per month.
With this salary, being an air traffic controller in Cuba would be one
of the best paid jobs in a country where the average monthly wage is
about 28 USD, although if you take into account the high level of stress
and responsibility that this job implies, it's still nowhere enough.
Requirements needed
Amongst the nine requirements you need in order to become a candidate
for this "super salary" you have to be between 20 and 30 years old, a
high school graduate or equivalent, prove your English skills before an
examining board, pass different health and mental exams, serve your
military service, in the case of men, and an evaluation of the
"revolutionary nature" of the applicant.
Points 7 and 9 of the requirements are very clear: the applicant must
pass a socio-political interview and "hold a social and political
posture in line with the Revolution's principles."
According to the government website Cubadebate, the call for air traffic
controllers has come about because of an organic update of staff, as
worker shifts are 6 hours long and there are 800 flights a day.
Out of those who will be chosen at the end of the training, five will
work in Santa Clara, four in Santiago de Cuba, three in Varadero, three
in Cayo Coco, three in Havana and 25 in the AREA Control Center. The
rest of them will be sent to the Isle of Youth, Cienfuegos, Camaguey,
Guantanamo and Baracoa.
Flights on the rise
The unusual ad offering a paid training course, has come to light just
weeks before the long awaited direct flights between the US and Cuba
begin and the resulting increase in airport operations from autumn onwards.
The imminent launch of these direct flights from the US to Cuba has
created doubts among US aviation officials and federal legislators about
Cuban airports' capacity for security and technical equipment, forcing a
response from the Security Department at Cuba's Civil Aviation Institute
(IACC). The US Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has visited
Cuban airports and came to an agreement in July with Cuban authorities
about airport security.
In Cuba, comparisons are frequently being made between its citizens and
the US. In this case, the fact that a US air traffic controller earns an
average of $122,950 USD per year in 2015, which is $59.11 USD per hour,
according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, isn't mentioned anywhere.
That's to say, for doing the same job in the US, an air traffic
controller earns in an hour what a Cuban would in a month.
However, US air traffic controllers aren't even the best paid in the
world. In 2010, the 10 Spanish air traffic controllers who earned the
most were pocketing nearly a million euros, while Irish controllers were
making an average of 160,000 euros per year.
Source: Cuba Seeks "Revolutionary" Air Traffic Controllers - Havana
Times.org - http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=120294
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