5-6-1 a. In controlled airspace for separation, safety, noise abatement, operational advantage, confidence maneuver or when a pilot requests. Allow aircraft operating on an RNAV route to remain on their own navigation to the extent possible.
If an operational advantage exists, I am going to take them off the STAR. Period. A STAR is a tool afforded to ATC to assist with arriving traffic. I don't consider a STAR or SID as part of the route as a SID and STAR are authorized by ATC (and outside the US, assigned by ATC) as a tool to get the pilot safely to and from their requested route and not actually part of the route.
IE,
Looking at this route from ATL to DFW:
JCKTS6 JAMMR MEI JAN CQY6
The route is JAMMR direct MEI direct JAN (JAMMR..MEI..JAN). JCKTS6 and CQY6 are nothing more than on and off ramps going from their departure to their route and from their route to their destination airport. That is my interpretation and that theory is what was taught to me in my ATC school and training.
[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]you give me a vector you then have to give me a vector to join the approach and many controllers are missing that.[/quote]
Not necessarily. What if they took you off the arrival for separation that you just couldn't see? Maybe taking you around a departure, taking you around a slower moving aircraft on the same arrival, etc? Nothing stops them from vectoring you off and then re-routing you direct to the IAF. It's pretty easy and done all the time. Would you rather be vectored off or placed in a holding pattern? Or be the departing aircraft left low?
[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]There are mountains that you have to navigate through and around to reach airports you start vectoring and the next thing you know, you vector someone into a mountain.[/quote]
Sorry, but no. That is the completely wrong way to think. While yes, if you take someone off their route you become responsible for separation.. not all vectors lead to a collision. How often do you hear on the news that ATC turned a plane into a mountain? Damn near never. I've heard more planes hitting mountains due to pilot error (not paying attention, etc) than ATC error. And why pick mountains? Over in ZFW, you have radio towers, skyscrapers, etc. Do you not vector people to final in fear of them hitting a skyscraper? That's how your statement came across.