Imagine being a dispatcher for the spacing guild. Must be some wild days.
A dispatcher for Spirit recently quit and was hired by Blue Origin as an Orbital Launch Controller. Maybe not so far off… Granted I believe he had a masters and maybe another degree, and I believe military experience as well. But still. It’s an option, kind of neat.
The way I see it, is the technology being developed and out there? Yes. And it is coming at lightning speed. But it is the regulations, red tape, bureaucracy, lobbying, etc. that take forever. Anytime a regulation needs to be changed or incorporated, it takes years. Often we curse this, but in this case, thank God. Just look at NOTAMs for instance. They have been talking about “cleaning them up” and making them more concise and easier to read for how many years now? Yes the FAA came out with a new NOTAM website but they have been discussing things like “grass mowing” type NOTAMs being removed and keeping only the absolute safety pertinent critical ones in. Every city and airport wants to cover their back sides in case the slightest thing goes wrong, so they throw in every tiny NOTAM they can think of to do so. If they can’t even get those more organized, then I suspect, changing the regulations to full on allow single pilot operations, and then eventually zero pilot operations, which could lead to zero dispatchers as we know them, would take decades.
The thing I would be more worried about as a dispatcher is if they reduce pilot operations, they may make it where the pilot is both pilot and dispatcher. They could eventually be going to zero pilot operations and having the pilot now sit at a desk doing both jobs “flying” or controlling the automated plane. Dispatchers may need to have their pilot license in the future or drone license. Anyway, the day that they actually clean up the NOTAMs will be the day that I start shaking in my boots a little more… Now cleaning NOTAMs may actually be a great job for AI.
@ppragman dispatchers already release on average about 40 +/- flights a shift and have on average 10-15 +/- flights in the air at the same time. If AI replaced dispatchers it would make it more like being a flight follower in Europe, where they literally follow thousands of flights a day and just make “adjustments as needed” here and there. They just do not write the releases, plan the routes, etc. or hold operational control.
Operational Control. The regulations would have to redefine , replace that all together.