WASHINGTON, D.C.- The Trump administration turns to teenage computer gamers to help solve chronic air traffic control (ATC) staffing shortages.
Officials say Americans who regularly play video games often possess natural attributes that suit them for the demanding role of air traffic controller.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced a new Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) hiring surge that targets young Americans who play video games.
The campaign opens at midnight on April 17, 2026, and will close as soon as the FAA receives 8,000 applications.

Trump Targets Gamers for ATC
The Department of Transportation and Federal Aviation Administration developed the idea after exit interviews with departing controllers highlighted how video gaming builds the ability to think quickly, stay focused, and manage complexity.
With an estimated 200 million Americans playing video games regularly and no traditional college degree required, the administration sees a large pool of potential candidates.
According to PYOK, this approach adapts hiring methods to reach the next generation. “To reach the next generation of air traffic controllers, we need to adapt,” commented Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy.
He added that the campaign’s innovative communication style and focus on gaming taps into a growing demographic of young adults who have many of the hard skills it takes to be a successful controller.

Long-Standing Staffing Shortages
The US Air Traffic Control (ATC) system has faced chronic understaffing for years. A high washout rate among new recruits and a mandatory retirement age of 56 keep attrition rates high. As a result, the number of new controllers entering service often fails to offset losses.
In 2024, the Biden administration met its hiring quota without major difficulty. The main challenge lay in running enough training courses to close the overall gap.
At that time, the FAA needed around 13,000 active air traffic controllers but operated with only around 10,000.
Training capacity stood at a maximum of 1,800 new controllers per year. By the end of 2024, the FAA achieved a net gain of just 36 controllers after accounting for retirements and resignations.

Recent Progress and Improvements
Since taking office, the Trump administration has prioritized closing the shortfall. Within roughly one year, the FAA workforce reached about 11,000 air traffic controllers, marking a solid improvement yet still roughly 2,000 short of targets.
Officials slashed five months from the lengthy hiring process and raised annual training capacity to 2,400 recruits.
The FAA now aims to hire at least 2,200 new controllers in fiscal year 2026 as part of a broader plan to bring in 8,900 through 2028.
These steps support safe operations for passengers on major carriers such as Delta Air Lines (DL), American Airlines (AA), and United Airlines (UA) at key airports, including those serving New York (JFK, LGA, EWR) and other busy hubs across the national airspace system.

Why Gamers Align with Controller Demands
Air traffic controllers must track multiple aircraft, make rapid decisions, and maintain focus under pressure.
Video games frequently develop these exact abilities. The FAA applies rigorous screening through aptitude tests, medical checks, and extended training at its academy in Oklahoma City (OKC). Only candidates who pass every stage advance.
This targeted outreach responds directly to workforce needs and demographic realities in aviation.
It invites young talent to pursue a high-responsibility career that safeguards millions of daily flights.
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