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Nearly 2,000 Chicago Flights Canceled After Worker Sets Fire At Radar Center 223

SpzToid sends this news out of Illinois: Nearly 2,000 flights in Chicago have been canceled so far today as federal aviation officials slowly resume operations at O'Hare and Midway airports following a fire that was deliberately set at an FAA radar center, apparently by a disgruntled worker. The center handles high-altitude traffic across parts of the Midwest. Controllers there direct planes through the airspace and either hand off the air traffic to other facilities handling high-altitude traffic or direct the planes to terminal radar facilities, including one in Elgin, which in turn direct planes to and from airport towers.
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Nearly 2,000 Chicago Flights Canceled After Worker Sets Fire At Radar Center

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    but this is way too literal.
  • Obligatory (Score:2, Funny)

    by Doug Otto ( 2821601 )
    You mad bro?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 26, 2014 @05:37PM (#48005961)

    This is a high-visibility example, but employers should really learn it can be much cheaper to gently gruntle your workers than to deal with the consequences.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Yeah, what's the cost ratio of one Swingline stapler versus thousands of cancelled flights?

    • This guy was a telecommunications specialist working in the basement. Are you familiar with the type?

      He is a contractor whose direct employer is specified as Company A in the affadavit.

      Apparently he looked in the mirror and did not like what he saw in himself or in his employer.

      He was being transferred from Chicago to Hawaii. Disgruntlement?

      He claims it's a crisis of conscience.

      • by pupsocket ( 2853647 ) on Saturday September 27, 2014 @02:58AM (#48007919)

        Will the person who modded my comment down please read it?

        He did not set the whole facility on fire. He tore up the floorboards and set fire to whatever was underneath his basement workplace.

        He was cutting his own throat with a knife when emergency crew got there.

        He wrote that for the first time in a long time he gave a shit.

        This is not the profile of a disgruntled worker. It sounds more like a story about a repentant member of some secret police -- domestic surveillance squad.

        The reassignment to Hawaii sounds like a promotion, as it was for Snowden.

        We'll know more if the government actually brings this guy to trial. That's why I think they won't.

  • Police said the man is a contractor, not an air traffic controller or FAA manager. ";We understand that this is a local issue with a contract employee and nothing else,"; Aurora Police Chief Gregory Thomas told reporters. ";There is no terrorist act."

    Thank Allah!

    • by ruir ( 2709173 )
      Corporate doublespeak and half truths. So it means they were cheating out the poor sod of security on the job, and probably means, I suppose, they have got "permanent"/consultant contractors, which is say, quite smart for a job of this importance. We also have got this scam running him, and people hate it. Mostly used by the call centre, cleaning crew, IT people, and nurse industry to screw then over.
  • by macraig ( 621737 ) <mark@a@craig.gmail@com> on Friday September 26, 2014 @05:51PM (#48006065)

    So did they send in the new Scorpion team to save the day?

    • So did they send in the new Scorpion team to save the day?

      They tried, but were having trouble finding a 458 that could transform into a 360 and back in the blink of an eye.

      (The dash they flash to while accelerating was a Ferrari 360, not the 458 he was driving)

  • No redundancy? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by billrp ( 1530055 ) on Friday September 26, 2014 @05:55PM (#48006077)
    So there's no provision for having the work done at this center be taken up at other centers? The news reports say radar center, but can't the data be routed elsewhere? What it there were a much larger fire that took down the facility for months? Does that mean Chicago becomes a no-fly zone?
    • Press reports are still very sketchy, but it seems like the suspect was in charge of maintaining the very systems that allow such transfers of control and that he intentionally destroyed key connections between radar and radio installations and the Air Traffic Control system. Why this building contained single points of failure is something I'm sure the NTSB report will focus heavily on, but at some point a connection has to exist between the physical hardware that track aircraft and transmits radio instru

  • by s.petry ( 762400 ) on Friday September 26, 2014 @05:58PM (#48006089)

    I would think that the major hubs in the US didn't operate with this poor of a practice. Honestly, I'm flabbergasted. This is not something you can hide when it's exposed. What I find more surprising is that with this big of a deficiency, they didn't go with the "terrorist" card in order to deflect some of the backlash this should cause.

    I wonder how many other airports are using a system with similar vulnerability.

    I don't see this as just a problem with some guy who obviously did something wrong. Seems like lighting or other natural events could have the same impact.

    • by plover ( 150551 )

      This is an AIR traffic control problem, and is not localized to O'Hare airport. They manage all the flights over the entire region. I'm sure they will extend the operations to the surrounding regional centers to make up for the loss, but due to the sheer volume of traffic the Aurora center used to handle, the other centers will need to add a lot of extra staff to deal with it.

      I suspect they are temporarily operating with local staff called in for the emergency, but that's not sustainable. They'll likely ne

      • . It takes about six hours to drive from the Aurora center to the Farmington center near Minneapolis, and that's not counting going home and packing for an extended stay.

        Drive? Why would they drive that far? It's much quicker to fly.

        • . It takes about six hours to drive from the Aurora center to the Farmington center near Minneapolis, and that's not counting going home and packing for an extended stay.

          Drive? Why would they drive that far? It's much quicker to fly.

          Well, duuh. All the planes are grounded. How are they supposed to fly? ..... ...or was that a big wooosh?

          • Well, duuh. All the planes are grounded. How are they supposed to fly? ..... ...or was that a big wooosh?

            Barring inclement weather, if all the commercial planes are grounded so that traffic is not an issue, it should be well possible to land planes visually for a purpose like bringing in the experts to fix the situation.

            • Barring inclement weather,

              Not even barring inclement weather. The navigation aids were not impacted by this, only center. Departure and approach were still functional, too. Get an IFR clearance and fly it. You don't have to talk to a center to do that.

              • by mpe ( 36238 )
                Not even barring inclement weather. The navigation aids were not impacted by this, only center. Departure and approach were still functional, too. Get an IFR clearance and fly it. You don't have to talk to a center to do that.

                It's the getting the clearance which is the issue. Because of the problem the FAA might reject your flight plan. If the flight is effectivly a charter by the FAA then that isn't likely to happen.
          • ...or was that a big wooosh?

            No, just a joke. :^)

        • by plover ( 150551 )

          The Mythbusters demonstrated it's plausible that driving distances less than 400 miles is faster than flying.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

          It's almost exactly a 400 mile journey that takes 6 hours.

          https://www.google.com/maps/di... [google.com]

          And if you're hauling a month's worth of stuff, or a family, you might not want to stuff it in a single checked bag.

    • by Xipher ( 868293 ) on Friday September 26, 2014 @06:25PM (#48006239)

      Redundancy costs money, and people don't like spending more money. To save cost you cut redundancy.

    • I would think that the major hubs in the US didn't operate with this poor of a practice. Honestly, I'm flabbergasted.

      Huh? What "poor of a practice"? Evacuating a building that is on fire? My God! How stupid can that be? Leave them in the building and let them burn, just as long as no flights are delayed.

      I wonder how many other airports are using a system with similar vulnerability.

      You mean a "system" where people work in buildings where there could be a fire? I think I can answer this one: ALL of them.

      Seems like lighting or other natural events could have the same impact.

      Buildings are rarely evacuated because of lighting. The centers are usually operated at reduced lighting levels anyway. They are also not usually evacuated because of lightning, and while a lightning

      • by mpe ( 36238 )
        Now, what happens when a nutter cuts the cable going out of the building, or sets it afire? Yeah, it has a serious impact.

        Where there is malicious action that can easily circumvent "redundancy". Especially where this involves "insiders" who can know which parts of systems are the least redundant. Since redundant systems are generally intended to be so against random damage.
    • Depends on the cost.

      If an extra building would add $1 to each ticket-- might be worth it.

      But if it adds $20 to every ticket and it happens once per 20 years.. probably not worth it.

      No good information in this case to make a decision on.

  • by tie_guy_matt ( 176397 ) on Friday September 26, 2014 @06:19PM (#48006211)

    Remember when Ronald Reagan fired all of the air traffic controllers because they had the nerve to form a union and strike for better pay? Now the air traffic controllers work on obsolete equipment, get paid very little, have a stressful job with long hours, oh and are the only people stopping planes from running into eachother. I am almost amazed no one has gone crazy before now.

    • Remember when Ronald Reagan fired all of the air traffic controllers because they had the nerve to form a union and strike for better pay?

      You mean, when they conspired to cripple the nation's air-transportation — holding the rest of us hostage? Imagine, Verizon turning off all telephones to demand lower taxes — a public employee has an even stronger monopoly power...

      Now the air traffic controllers work on obsolete equipment, get paid very little, have a stressful job with long hours

      That must all be Reagan's fault, right, 30 years later...

      I am almost amazed no one has gone crazy before now.

      Maybe, it just is not quite as bad as you are describing?

    • I've mentioned a few times here on /. that people blame the poor quality of air travel on Reagan firing the ATCs 30 years ago. Some don't believe me. Some think it's only the Deregulation that people blame.

      Thank you for showing us that there are people who, after three decades, still blame him for firing people who refused to work.

      And with that low enough of a UID, it isn't like you're a newbie here.

    • oh and are the only people stopping planes from running into eachother.

      Believe it or not, there are other people who stop planes from running into "each other". They're called "pilots". Actual human beings who control the airplanes and where they go.

      Of course they aren't perfect at keeping airplanes from running into each other. They're humans. (And computers aren't perfect at it either.) Just like the ATC humans aren't perfect at keeping minimum separation.

      • by mpe ( 36238 )
        Believe it or not, there are other people who stop planes from running into "each other". They're called "pilots". Actual human beings who control the airplanes and where they go.

        They also tend to have a direct personal interest in planes not colliding too. They are also not obliged to follow ATC either. There are rules specifically indicating that if ATC and TCAS are in conflict to follow TCAS. Though a pilot might have to answer to all sorts of people afterwards if they said "unable" without a good reas
    • I am almost amazed no one has gone crazy before now.

      Well, there's always alcoholism.

    • Like all other federal employees, the FAA ATC staff are legally barred from going on strike.
  • HR still says (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Livius ( 318358 ) on Friday September 26, 2014 @06:26PM (#48006245)

    cheap contract workers are better than investing in employees!

    • by mi ( 197448 )
      Nobody owes you a living. Not even if you are a well invested-into employee.
  • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Friday September 26, 2014 @06:37PM (#48006305) Homepage Journal

    Nearly 2,000 flights in Chicago have been canceled so far today as federal aviation officials slowly resume operations at O'Hare and Midway airports following a fire that was deliberately set at an FAA radar center, apparently by a disgruntled worker.

    If a single person can cause so much havoc without killing anyone — and without the condemnation and sympathy for the victim concomitant with any would-be murder — the terrorists don't need to kill.

    Heck, they don't even need to set fire — just phone-in [scpr.org] an anonymous warning.

    A moderately motivated group could also disable a city's subway system for hours — by boarding the trains on carefully picked stations and pretending to have a seizure of some sort. Our kind society's rules (as evidenced in that paragon of humanity New York City) say, you can not be taken out of the train — except by "qualified personnel". So all other passengers will be removed from the car and the train will wait for the EMS to arrive and figure out, what to do with you. If your friends do the same to every other subway lines at the same time — during rush hour — your organization is bound to get donations, all without you killing or maiming a single person...

    • by Livius ( 318358 )

      the terrorists don't need to kill.

      The terrorists just need to say a few things on their cell phones, and let the NSA and paranoia do the rest.

      Bin Laden's goal was to turn the US into what it's become. He succeeded.

      • by mi ( 197448 )

        ... and let the NSA and paranoia do the rest

        I strongly suspect, the NSA are a lot smarter, than your average pig or a school principal. Their reaction will be more appropriate than that of a local police department or school...

        • by Livius ( 318358 )

          Perhaps you are confused about which side the NSA is on. They are not interested in reducing anyone's fear, not even their own.

          • by mi ( 197448 )

            Perhaps you are confused about which side the NSA is on.

            Seems like one of us is confused indeed. They are on America's side and they are sincere. They will not act on a threat — such as a prankster talking about a terrorist act on his phone — if they consider it bogus. Now, it may be possible for such a prankster to fool them — and they may choose to err on the side of caution. But they are quite smart, so fooling them is not easy...

    • by mjr167 ( 2477430 )
      No one said terrorists are smart people... Probably cause smart people have better things to do with their time.
  • by roc97007 ( 608802 ) on Friday September 26, 2014 @07:06PM (#48006443) Journal

    I don't know much of anything about how air traffic control works, but a fire at a single radar station practically shutting down o'hare seems to point towards a single point of failure, that probably ought to be looked at.

    • I don't know much of anything about how air traffic control works either. But with airports being thought of as the main point of terrorist activity, their immediate reaction was probably "Lock down due to possible terrorist activity". Then once they discovered what happened, they properly diverted to whatever backup plan they have for fire situations.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      If only it worked like that. As long as planes don't actually crash they only need one radar, and all the disruption can always be blamed on someone else. Why spend money on preventing things you won't take the blame for?

      In other words, they want maximum profits and minimum costs, not reliability.

  • Backups? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Dereck1701 ( 1922824 ) on Friday September 26, 2014 @07:07PM (#48006445)

    Aren't these kinds of critical systems supposed to have backups? I see DHS/TSA is too busy strip searching children/grandmas, securing chicken farms & writing up justifications for their abuse of authority to bother with the "unimportant" things like securing/fortifying the transportation infrastructure.

    • by ruir ( 2709173 )
      I would be far worried about this kind of industry cheating out people/workers of job security with fake consulting/(sub)contracting roles for years to circumvent labor laws than with backup systems. When you fuck with people and they have got nothing to lose, shit like this is bound to happen.
      • Giving people a reasonable sense of job security is definitely a step in the right direction, but you still have to be ready for the rare nut-job (employee or otherwise). While that includes onsite backup equipment (which they apparently had) it must also include off site backup facilities. I work with my local PD a bit and from what I understand even they have contingency plans for if the 911 dispatch center is evacuated/destroyed. If something happens the entire call load for the county can be redirected

        • "Load balancing" the work like that works nicely.. until you run at 90% load all the time, and you suddenly lose 15% of your capacity.

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