D.C. air traffic controller was 'working 2 different tower positions' before crash: report
One of the air traffic controllers at the Washington D.C. National Airport was reportedly doing the work of two employees before the deadly mid-air collision that killed dozens of people Wednesday night. He tweeted that an unnamed "air traffic control source" confided to the network's transportation reporter Pete Muntean: "there was one air traffic controller working two different tower positions at the time of the collision Wednesday night." Years of employee turnover and low federal spending levels have left both the D.C. airport tower and other airport control towers across the country chronically understaffed, with the Times reporting that many air traffic controllers work 10 hours a day, six days a week. READ MORE: Human factors aviation psychologist identifies 'biggest red flag' in DC plane crashDC air traffic controller was 'working two different tower positions' before crash: report
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