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Messages - Luke Kolin

Pages: [1] 2 3 4
1
General Discussion / Vatsim Forums down?
« on: March 11, 2012, 02:59:24 PM »
Quote from: Richard Jenkins
Great machines and pretty low prices.

Impressive - if I'm doing my math right, we're looking at around $65/month once I deduct 19% from 59 euros and apply the exchange rate. Am I missing anything?

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]This is where USA-W2 is currently located. They have pretty much moved out of the personal server business.[/quote]

For their sake, I hope so. Those are pretty uncompetitive prices. FWIW 1&1 offers an i3 Xeon (2 cores + HT) plus 12GB of RAM for $99/month, if you need a US server. We've had them for six years and have been pretty satisfied.

Cheers!

Luke

2
General Discussion / Vatsim Forums down?
« on: March 10, 2012, 03:58:25 PM »
Quote from: Richard Jenkins
Servers are cheap in Europe right now and very expensive in California at the moment.

What do you consider "expensive"?

Cheers!

Luke

3
General Discussion / Vatsim Forums down?
« on: March 09, 2012, 02:49:50 PM »
Quote from: Richard Jenkins
USA-W2 is down. Probably going to need a new drive. This may take a few days.

Got backups? If you do I can get you a VM by dinnertime.

Cheers!

Luke

4
General Discussion / Do you know what would be cool
« on: February 15, 2012, 11:13:30 AM »
Quote from: Dhruv Kalra
Then why does it take an average of 3 calls to get your pilots to join a localizer ?

What's the old saying about leading horses to water?

It should also give pause for those expecting a technological magic bullet.

Cheers!

Luke

5
General Discussion / Do you know what would be cool
« on: February 15, 2012, 08:37:43 AM »
Quote from: Matthew Bartels
It would be better if it muted VA teamspeaks and ACARS programs when flights are below 10000

Some ACARS already have such a feature.

Cheers!

Luke

6
General Discussion / A sad state of affairs
« on: April 27, 2011, 06:24:55 PM »
Quote from: John Cierpial
Most things are done (or not done) for a reason.  The reason doesn't need to be known to anyone but the person in charge.

That works in the Army, or in a corporation. It doesn't work in a volunteer organization - the only currency you have to attract and retain volunteers is engagement and participation. If you don't want to communicate to members, you shouldn't be surprised if you can't find enough engaged volunteers.

I presume that VATUSA has an overwhelming number of controllers where all positions are being staffed and they need to turn people away?

Cheers!

Luke

7
General Discussion / ZAU site down
« on: January 15, 2011, 08:30:25 PM »
Quote from: Harold Rutila
Would it not make sense to ensure only people who should have access have access? Seems pretty logical to me.

Keeping the site up would seem logical to me, but what do I know?

Cheers!

Luke

8
General Discussion / Where's Management?
« on: January 12, 2011, 10:58:46 PM »
Quote from: Alex Bailey
I see where you are coming from, but I still can't lead myself to believe that we can compare VATUSA/VATSIM to other organizations carte blanche. I agree that we can determine effectiveness through comparison on some occasion and it is obvious that we all tap our professional experiences and apply (or used to apply) them to the network.

You can't compare VATSIM to a single organization. But over time, the other organizations you belong to (for-profit corporate, volunteer, non-profit corporate, hobbyist) become a frame of reference in aggregate and you learn to weigh them accordingly. After a certain time, you develop enough points of reference and when you get an outlier in terms of metrics and effectiveness, it doesn't matter how unique or different they are - there's a prima facie case that the outlier is ineffective rather than the outlier is unique. It's rebuttable, of course. I've yet to see anything from VATSIM that does so. It has more levels of hierarchy and less results.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]However, companies have individuals who get paid and by virtue of the position can be fired.[/quote]

This is unfortunate, because as we like to point out, it's only a hobby. If someone gets removed as the ATM of some facility it's not going to affect their ability to put food on the table. In that sense it's easier to let someone go, because it's only a hobby. Unfortunately for some folks when that is the most significant accomplishment they can claim, it becomes very difficult. I know - 20 years ago a position in a virtual organization was the most significant thing I could claim. I've been there, and I was wrong then.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]Unfortunately, VATSIM doesn't take that stance and in some instances it seems it would rather defend the troll rather than support the staff who wants to allow them to seek other opportunities, which in turn would benefit the organization as well as the individual who is no longer performing their duties.[/quote]

I think any organization that over-formalizes "conflict resolution" policies is merely asking for trouble. It does nothing but encourage jailhouse lawyers.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I currently sit on the board of directors for a non-profit whose annual budget reaches into the latter half of the six figures. I've attempted to draw comparisons, but I simply can't find much common ground. Both include a bit of hobbyist mentality, involve donated resources (and we bring in income from our operations), and have a staff who are dedicated to improve the cause. Beyond this, I can't make the assertion that a certain number of staff should apply to both equally.[/quote]

That's fair, and perhaps I should qualify (and maybe even backtrack from!) my earlier statements just a little. I mention DVA because we have a lot of members, and the staff/member ratio is very high, much higher than VATUSA. I mention it because it makes the case that a volunteer organization (a volunteer aviation-based organization, no less) can operate successfully with a significantly different staff/member ratio. I don't know whether the right ratio for VATUSA is the same as ours. Probably not. But when I see a broadly similar organization operating with numbers significantly different from my own, I pay close attention.

Another anecdote - at my day job, I report to a Senior VP who reports to the CIO who reports to the CEO. For my team, there's three managers between them and the CEO - some other teams have four. Most other places I've worked at have been similar, some have been much less. (You can tell I've never worked for a truly giant conglomerate.) And here too when I see VATSIM with so many (parallel) levels of hierarchy for a volunteer organization, it's valid to compare it to what I've done professionally and at least suspect that somethings out of kilter.

VATSIM is IMO too often fat, dumb and happy. When pilots do that, they die. Organizations, I suspect, aren't much different except that it takes longer.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]One thing you should realize about VATUSA is that you need to see the division management as a different function than the ARTCC management.[/quote]

I've not quoted much of what you said here but I agree with a lot of it. This statement, less so - while they focus on different things at different levels, to me everyone from VATUSA1 down to the lowest Assistant Deputy Facility Advisory Board Vice-Chairman pro tempore should be considered part of the VATUSA staff, albeit at different levels, and VATUSA should be very interested in how its staff is being deployed across the country. I'll confess again that I'm a ruthless centralizer at times, and VATUSA needs some centralized oversight and allocation of people. You've decentralized a great deal to the facility level, and some parts make sense, others do not.

My thinking has been that if it's not different at the facility level, you centralize it. Something like the old Academy was fantastic because it let you get some standardized training out and then let the facilities round out the local procedures. If you don't have enough people to do it right at the facility level (like web stuff), you centralize it. If you can't centralize it effectively at the VATUSA level

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]With that said, ARTCCs each have their own flavor, or personality if you will. I say let them operate as needed with sufficient oversight by VATUSA to prevent malicious activity and favoritism, which tends to happen at that level more than others.[/quote]

Agreed, and I don't want the local facilities to lose local flavor. But again, local flavor needs to be things that are truly local, which is local policies and a local culture that comes from people working together over time. Centralization aids in avoiding favoritism since once you have the data in one place it becomes very easy to spot the outliers and start questioning what is going on. Local flavor shouldn't interfere with consistent division-wide results unless the variance is expected in advance.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I agree, but let me address your statement with a question. Doesn't this apply to the Board of Governors and Founders as well? [/quote]

Very much so. I have few friends at the latter level.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I didn't see anything that could be brought to the VATUSA level that we weren't already attempting to push voluntarily. Andrew did a lot of work as the webmaster to try and relieve those duties by the ARTCCs, but it was intended to be voluntary and some did use his services.[/quote]

I think it might have been an interesting exercise to make things not so voluntary.  Interesting and valuable change is rarely voluntary.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I was actually driving through your area a day before the snow hit. However, your offer is enticing.  [/quote]

I was in a (barely) warmer part of the US that day. Next time you're in Atlanta, give me a shout.

Cheers!

Luke

9
General Discussion / Where's Management?
« on: January 12, 2011, 10:09:20 PM »
Quote from: David Jedrejcic
I'm just wondering, does your ratio of 3:400 staff to participants involve personally training each of those participants in every level of their progress?  I'm not sure this is a fair comparison.

Do the ATMs personally train every controller in their facility? I left out the instructors and the mentors for that reason.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]So at first, the ATDs are unecessary because they don't do anything, and now they are at fault for doing too much?  What's your point exactly?  I'm afraid I'm lost here.[/quote]

My point is that a fair bit of what the ATDs are doing isn't of great value, or can be done more effectively. It's quite possible to be insanely busy and not doing anything critical, and this might be the case.

Part of the reason why I'm comparing VATUSA/VATSIM against other corporate and volunteer organizations that I've been involved with in past years is that VATSIM seems to have far more levels of hierarchy than any other organization I've dealt with, yet be far less effective and dynamic in its mission.

Cheers!

Luke

10
General Discussion / Where's Management?
« on: January 12, 2011, 07:38:12 PM »
Quote from: Tom Seeley
The turnover of ATMs in the network is relatively frequent. Each time that happens, the ATD may participate in an exit interview, and at least discuss possible replacement recommendations from the outgoing ATM. He will then cause an announcement to be posted, review applications, conduct interviews each of which lasts 30 minutes or more, make a selection, install that individual, and provide support and orientation while the new ATM settles in.

Emphasis mine. Perhaps it might be a better use of your (and the other ATDs') time to focus on why we have such turnover. If we have the wrong people in the job, then change the hiring criteria. If the job is crazy, then change the role of the ATM. But if finding ATMs is such a time-consuming process, then we either need to make it happen less often, or make it take less time. And if it results in a lower quality of hire, no worries - they'll be quitting soon anyways!  (I kid, but only partially.)

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]Every ARTCC experiences occasional problem controllers at one time or another; some more often depending upon their size and complexity. These generally require intervention and or support of the ATD; he may mediate disputes, prepare evidence to present to a DCRM, and remain engaged in the resolution of the dispute.[/quote]

If you're regularly dealing with this kind of thing, then you have a problem. Either the ATM is a jerk, or the controllers are idiots. Either way, it shouldn't be something you waste much time on. It's a hobby - if I was a controller and I didn't like the facility, I'd just transfer out. That's all we do at Delta Virtual - if someone doesn't like a program, they transfer. Strangely enough, our HR staff doesn't spend much time dealing with this stuff. And all the DCRM formalities? Seriously?

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]Pilots occasionally make complaints regarding controller actions or ARTCC policy. These are generally settled with explanation or possibly some revision of standard practices. The process involves multiple emails, possible meetings, and if a revision of policy, review and approval.[/quote]

Your complaint handling requires all this? Sounds like an awful lot of time spent.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]ATDs review proposed SOP submitted by ARTCCs for alignment with VATUSA, VATNA and VATSIM policy such as the GRP. In some cases this may require consultation with the director and/or meetings.[/quote]

How many SOP amendments do you guys make? How many are truly necessary in light of VATUSA actual traffic volumes versus real world?

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]ATDs review and approve proposed LOAs. In some cases these can require considerable input and revision, as in the case of LOAs with a VSOA. In one recent such matter, at least 60 emails were involved between a VSOA, an ARTCC, the ATD, VATUSA and VATSIM.[/quote]

Words escape me.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]ATDs conduct regular checks of the VATUSA member management system to ensure that members do not wait unreasonable time for transfers and other matters.[/quote]

I built a web page to do that in seconds.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]ATDs conduct background checks and approve ARTCC senior staff selections.[/quote]

You check CERT, or do you pull a FICO?

I don't dispute some of the other things you mention farther down in your post, especially at the Division level. But the things you describe above are wonderful candidates for examining whether all you're doing is truly necessary, and what would happen if you pushed back and didn't get involved. 60 e-mails from an LOA request? I'm hard pressed to find more than a dozen e-mails getting us certified as an ATO. What's going on?

Let me ask you a question - do you feel that everything you do is truly necessary? If you did half as much, would VATUSA fall apart? How much less effective would the division be? Before I'm accused of something, I'm not suggesting that you as a person are superfluous. But it's worth questioning whether all the e-mails, meetings and TeamSpeak conferences might be better served re-creating a training academy, or controlling, or instructing, or whatever.

Cheers!

Luke

11
General Discussion / Where's Management?
« on: January 12, 2011, 07:22:08 PM »
Quote from: Alex Bailey
The crux of the matter is that people tend to compare the operations of VATSIM or VATUSA to a real world company, or other volunteer organizations, or virtual airlines. Quite frankly, that comparison cannot and should not be made.

What you're suggesting is that VATUSA is sufficiently unique that absolutely no objective comparison is possible with any other organization, no matter what its nature. Therefore, we have no objective way of determining whether the structure and size of VATUSA is effective. In the real world, this is completely unacceptable and won't get you anywhere. And having worked in structured volunteer and hobbyist organizations for 25 years this year, I can tell you it doesn't pass muster there either.

Part of the challenge I see with VATUSA is that there's a group of individuals within an organization that aggressively promotes the notion that no one outside their group is capable of assessing their effectiveness with any accuracy. They don't seem to be capable of much introspection as to what of their duties are really necessary or required. Those are great signs of an organization incapable of self-improvement.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I see references to Delta Virtual, and no offense to Luke, but you tons more staff than VATUSA. You harp on the duties of the ATD, but your VA has multiple staff positions each with multiple assistants. I'm not saying that this structure is inefficient or inoperable, but you have a structure that mirrors VATUSA staff and yet you're here to criticize how this division operates.[/quote]

Alex, your analysis is completely faulty. You really should withdraw this nonsense.

You're absolutely correct in stating that Delta Virtual has multiple staff positions and several of those have assistants. But to claim that we have more staff than VATUSA is inaccurate. What you're counting as our staff is the equivalent of the ARTCC staffs as well. I have a program (the 737-800) with a manager and two assistants, handling 426 active pilots. Are you suggesting that there are ARTCCs in VATUSA with 3 staff members and 426 controllers? If so, my hat's off to you. If you want to make an accurate comparison, I'm happy to count our staff against the ATMs, DATMS, Event Coordinators, Engineers, Facility Advisory Boards and heavens knows what else exists at the local facility level. It might be interesting.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]You've said it many times in public as well as to me; you aren't a controller and you don't understand how the administration of the ATC side of network operates.[/quote]

Let me tell you a personal anecdote. I manage a group of a half-dozen software architects (what CNN called the "best job in America", and I agree) for a well-known US cable network. One of the less pleasant tasks of my job which I need to do this week is go through the annual review process for each of them. Now they're all exceptionally bright, talented and well-paid individuals, and while I understand some aspects of their job and share some of their skills all of them are far more versed in core areas of their duties than I will ever be. Now despite that liability, rest assured that absolutely no one would ever dream of suggesting that until I've done their job I'm incapable of assessing their performance, nor would I do anything more than say "that's quaint" and promptly proceed to do just that. (My own boss would do the same thing, except he'd chew me out for half an hour first for making such an absurd claim.)

So yes, I haven't been a controller. But to paraphrase Potter Stewart, when it comes to effective and efficient organizations, "I know it when I see it", and VATUSA isn't it. Based on what Tom's described in this thread, there's a fair amount of time being spent that probably can be avoided, and when I see existing and former office holders describing their duties in vague terms or challenging outsiders' ability to assess the organization's performance, that's smoke. And when there's smoke.....

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]many can see the maliciousness laced through each of your questions.[/quote]

With respect Alex, but I don't care enough about any of you to be malicious.

I merely find the VATUSA structure (well, a great deal of the VATSIM structure as well) to be ineffective. The technology stack is painfully old and obsolete, we seem to have a fair bit of staff turnover (the revolving door at VATUSA, ATMs quitting in a snit) and the whole mess with GRP indicates an organization more focused on policy than results (and a Founders' group that seems to have a passive-aggressive attitude towards pushing change in "their" network).

But it's not done out of malice to you, or any of the officeholders. I think if you attribute malice to my suggestion that your talents would best serve the network in a different role, then maybe something's wound a little too tight. The entire point of rationalizing the VATUSA structure is to recognize the fact that there's a dire shortage of good, committed people in the organization. Let's not waste them doing things that aren't as important as others. I'm not sure why you attribute malice to that, but it's not common. VATSIM is full of people who blindly accept the status quo, and even more who defend their acceptance because even the obsolete technology we've put together is indistinguishable from magic for a large percentage of the community.

You should not confuse malice with a lack of acceptance of the answers you provide, based on different experience than yourself. If I held ill will towards VATSIM, I wouldn't have waited and gotten involved with the ATO partnership with VATSIM and spent the time required to implement it. It's unfortunate that the answer to criticism is either to accuse me of malice or incompetence.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I must admit that when I initially took the position, I filled all of the vacant positions out of precedence rather than a true understanding of what each would do with the team I was responsible for directing. I began to wonder why we needed so many ATDs, why we needed a communications manager, and what the consequences would be if I decided to cut back positions. However, I did not want to lose the people who were staffing these positions. The contributions by each ATD, by Ric, and everyone else on staff were too great to ask them to step down.[/quote]

I think you confuse the elimination and reorganization of positions with letting people go, and that's not what a good manager should do. If you have a good team of individuals (and I've seen nothing about any of them individually to suggest otherwise) there's nothing preventing you from changing the structure to best apply these individuals - maybe that requires bringing things out of the ARTCC level to VATUSA, maybe it involves pushing things upwards, etc.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]Luke, you should explore the ATC side of the network and see first-hand the intricacies of its operation.[/quote]

The time requirements to become an ATC (which seems to be a pre-requisite for anything in VATSIM) and the time requirements aren't something I can prioritize against my other duties (I have two jobs - one pays much better and the second is infinitely more interesting and gives me more scope for accomplishment than anything VATSIM could offer). Instead, at some point we should grab a beer and you can explain to me how onerous and complicated it is. As a sign of my lack of malice, I'll pay.

Cheers!

Luke

12
General Discussion / Where's Management?
« on: January 11, 2011, 11:57:40 PM »
Quote from: David Jedrejcic
So I answered your question, and you responded with not accidental, but intentional insults.  Along with a stinging (albeit funny) prod at my answer.

To be entirely candid, I think your answer was rather vaporous. To describe your role as helping others "achieve their visions" says next to nothing, and if the ATMs are experienced and familiar with Division policies (and I expect they are) then I'm not sure how much is required on that front.

Again, I don't mean to deliberately insult you, only to tweak you a little that you pull out the insult card and ask you the same question as I'd ask you if I was interviewing you for a job and you had this on your resume - so what did you actually do? I'm still trying to find out what the ATDs do that is so critical to VATUSA.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]Regardless, I wouldn't mind discussing all of these details one at a time if I had the impression that you respected my opinions and input as well, but I don't get that impression.[/quote]

I do respect your opinions, but let me add a caveat. You're in a bureaucratic position defending its existence, and that always requires taking with a grain of salt. There's likely no malice involved, but people who have come up in a particular system accept its structure and are more willing to defend it.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]Additionally, I am still unclear as to what the goals of these comments are.  Is it to say that VATUSA is inefficient?  Is that it?  If that's it, then I will do my part to reverse this trend by getting off the forums, as my participation in them over the past two days has been nothing short of a complete waste of time.[/quote]

Yes. There's folks questioning how many staff VATUSA truly needs (and probably VATSIM in general). I don't think getting off the forums will do anything. Why do you think it will - the conjecture is that you could spend 100% of your time on the forums, or Facebook or watching Oprah and life would continue. It's nothing personal about you, by the way - it would be the same no matter who was an ATD.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]In the current administration, and with the current workload, I believe our staffing level is adequate, and I know that my colleagues are doing their jobs. I think that should suffice for any organization.[/quote]

In most bureaucracies, I am sure the people involved are doing their jobs. But as part of that process, do they have the perspective to determine if their jobs are worth doing in the first place? That's the question - and based on your answer it's a possibility you don't seem to have considered.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]But since you are involved with both, perhaps you can enlighten us all as to "why that is."[/quote]

It's a reasonably well-known virtual airline. Why that is? Let me throw out the simplest possibility - we operate well without the equivalent of an ATD position because the position isn't really required. Occam's Razor and all that....

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I answered your question.  You're welcome.[/quote]

Thank you. Hopefully I have answered some of yours.

Cheers!

Luke

13
General Discussion / Where's Management?
« on: January 11, 2011, 10:01:20 PM »
Quote from: David Jedrejcic
Consider the possibility (just a possibility) that the current leadership has a more efficient use of their staff than previous administrations.  A less efficient leadership may require more personnel to achieve the same goal, and if we encounter that in the future, I should hope that raising the staffing levels to achieve the GOAL is the priority, and not to keep the roster in check due to some ill-founded "limit" on the number of staff members allowed.

If a new leadership requires more people to do the same task, then perhaps they're not the right people for the job?

If I became VATUSA1 and decided I needed 25 people to function effectively, would that be OK? How about 100? 500? Clearly you realize that there's some absolute numbers that make sense (and others that don't), rather than applying a nebulous form of relevance that prevents us from making any sort of claims whether VATUSA is under- or over-staffed.

Management in the real world is all about making decisions and judgment calls about how many people are adequate for a team and working within that framework. And there are always external parties who are more than willing to make that call for you if you come back with nebulous claims about how it's impossible to come up with a concrete number. They are very helpful that way!

Cheers!

Luke

14
General Discussion / Where's Management?
« on: January 11, 2011, 09:57:05 PM »
Quote from: David Jedrejcic
Channeling all of those ideas, and helping the ARTCC staff members to achieve their visions, and making sure they are within the guidelines of the Division and VATSIM itself is my role now.

That's nice, and worth what John Nance Garner attributed to his penultimate office.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]That is, not to mention dealing with individual controllers that have issues (the details of which one will never see on a forum post), dealing with all of the promotions, staff changes, and for lack of a better term - revolts (small and large) that arise within my Region.[/quote]

If you have so many controller issues and revolts within your Division that it requires an ATD for every 4 or so ARTCCs, then the average VATSIM controller is a melodramatic idiot or there's a serious problem going on which deserves major turnover. (But since everyone keeps saying that our ATMs are so eminently qualified for their jobs, I'll claim the former.) Either way, if there's that much work to be done, there's a bigger problem at hand.

[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I do, however, infer from your post that you must believe that ATDs, and VATUSA staff in general, do nothing at all.  And in case I have not made this painfully obvious in my posts above, I find that implication insulting.[/quote]

I don't claim that you do nothing at all. But to be candid I do believe that you overstate the requirements of your job, and if you find that insulting - welcome to America. Everyone seems to be insulted about something or other. Let me insult you further, if you don't mind. I have a VP of Operations that does something similar to VATUSA1 - he has about a dozen ATM-equivalents, with no more than two assistants each, which rolls down to 2,200 members who log more time, take more exams, etc. than all of VATUSA. (I don't think you guys have 2,000 active controllers, but I could be wrong.) He has no intermediate layer equivalent to VATUSA's ATDs, and yet everything seems to work well?

Why is that? That's my frame of reference coming into this discussion - I see volunteer organizations that can operate effectively at much larger scales than VATUSA. So let's not get insulted, let's find out why that is.

Cheers!

Luke

15
General Discussion / Where's Management?
« on: January 11, 2011, 08:37:07 PM »
Quote from: Tom Seeley
It's really gratifying to know that all the effort is appreciated. "I don't know what each of the staff members do." Well then, that must mean they're not doing anything, I guess.

I keep asking what an ATD actually does, and I never get a good answer. I asked earlier in the thread, and the silence was deafening. I'm still interested in hearing one, though.

Cheers!

Luke

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