• DEI Air Traffic Controllers Given Answers To Exam Questions.

    From John Smyth@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 14 18:58:23 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.republicans, talk.politics.guns XPost: misc.immigration.usa

    Is CNN reporting this?
    MSNBC?
    NPR?
    Why not?

    'EXCLUSIVEListen to leaked audio of DEI activist SHARING air traffic
    controller exam answers with minority candidates'

    <https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14459979/listen-audio-DEI-sharing-answers-air-traffic-control-entry-exam.html>

    'A top 'DEI' activist is caught on voicemail allegedly offering minority
    air traffic controller candidates the chance to cheat in a make-or-break
    entry exam.

    Shelton Snow, a powerful figure in the National Black Coalition of
    Federal Aviation Employees (NBCFAE), can be heard promising advance
    access to test answers in a shocking audio clip obtained by
    DailyMail.com.

    'There are some valuable pieces of information that I have taken a
    screenshot of and I am going to send that to you via email,' says Snow,
    an air traffic operations supervisor based out of New York.

    'I am about 99.99 percent sure that it is exactly how you need to answer
    each question.'

    The inside info was made available in 2014 to African Americans,
    females, and other minority candidates – but whites were left out of the
    loop to 'minimize competition'.

    Exactly how many applicants were able to capitalize on Snow's brazen
    offer to secure coveted controller jobs responsible for the safety of
    millions of fliers remains a mystery.

    But one former NBCFAE member, Matthew Douglas, told DailyMail.com: 'I
    know several people who cheated and I know several people who are
    controlling planes as we speak.'

    The voicemail comes to light as President Donald Trump vows to purge DEI
    – diversity, equity and inclusion – from US aviation, among other
    federal agencies, in the wake of the deadly midair collision at Reagan
    National airport in January that claimed 67 lives.

    Government efforts to quietly enforce DEI policies within the Federal
    Aviation Administration and other federal agencies have come to light
    amid a recent string of plane collisions and accidents across the
    country; pictured above is the Delta aircraft that crashed at Toronto
    airport last month
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    Government efforts to quietly enforce DEI policies within the Federal
    Aviation Administration and other federal agencies have come to light
    amid a recent string of plane collisions and accidents across the
    country; pictured above is the Delta aircraft that crashed at Toronto
    airport last month

    In audio footage obtained by DailyMail.com, Shelton Snow (pictured), the
    front line manager of the National Black Coalition of Federal Aviation Employees (NBCFAE), can be heard promising advance access to test
    answers to minority prospects vying for an air traffic control job in
    2014
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    Shelton Snow
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    In audio footage obtained by DailyMail.com, Shelton Snow (pictured), the
    front line manager of the National Black Coalition of Federal Aviation Employees (NBCFAE), can be heard promising advance access to test
    answers to minority prospects vying for an air traffic control job in
    2014

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    Snow's message was recorded just weeks after the FAA announced the
    biggest hiring shake up in its history during an Obama-era push to
    'widen the aperture' for women and minorities.

    Does DEI need better implementation?

    Yes
    No
    Unsure
    As DailyMail.com exclusively revealed, the federal government agency had controversially replaced its peer-reviewed cognitive exam with a
    'biographical' quiz asking things like 'how would you describe your
    ideal job' and 'classmates would remember me as humble or dominant?'

    Critics say the quixotic blend of multiple-choice questions was designed
    to screen out elite, mostly white students from FAA-accredited college
    courses who excelled in traditional aptitude tests.

    Nonetheless, it was proving incredibly tricky for anyone to pass – with
    a 90 percent failure rate – when Snow decided to intervene.

    The then-President of the NBCFAE's Washington Suburban chapter contacted members in January 2014 with a list of HR 'buzz words' to insert into
    job applications.

    'These buzzwords will flag your resume, thereby giving you the advantage
    over thousands of resumes that may flood the system,' he wrote.

    At a separate teleconference, applicants were urged to highlight their association with the NBCFAE, the largest employee association within the
    FAA.

    An agenda for the December 2023 powwow read: 'This is for us to know who
    our people are in the case that we have one of our own on the board.

    Snow also contacted members in January 2014 with a list of HR 'buzz
    words' to insert into job applications
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    Snow also contacted members in January 2014 with a list of HR 'buzz
    words' to insert into job applications

    At a separate teleconference applicants were urged to highlight their association with the NBCFAE, the largest employee association within the
    FAA
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    At a separate teleconference applicants were urged to highlight their association with the NBCFAE, the largest employee association within the
    FAA


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    'In the past we've always had one and they share our enthusiasm. Can you
    see the strategy.'

    It added: 'We are only concerned about African-Americans, Women (of
    every ethnic background), and other minorities.

    'Please ensure that you share this information with no one that is
    identified outside of that … this is to minimize competition.'

    Snow went further in a voicemail, teasing inside info that would prevent NBCFAE-affiliated applicants from flunking the questionnaire.

    'Washington Suburban associate members, brothers, and sisters … I know
    that each of you are eager, very eager to apply for this job vacancy …
    and trust that after tonight, you will be able to do so,' he says.

    'I am asking that you … allow me to provide you with an email that will
    be extremely crucial in the opening stages of this hiring process.

    'There is some valuable pieces of information that I have taken a
    screenshot of and I'm going to send that to you via email. Trust and
    believe it will be something that you will appreciate to the utmost.

    'Keep in mind, we are trying to maximize your opportunities.'

    Ex-NBCFAE member Matthew Douglas (left) who is Native American, turned
    down Snow's offer of help and failed the exam twice
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    Air Force vet Ben Avni (right) who also failed, called the methodology
    'flawed beyond recognition'
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    Ex-NBCFAE member Matthew Douglas (left) who is Native American, turned
    down Snow's offer of help and failed the exam twice. The exam proved
    incredibly tricky for anyone to pass – with a 90 percent failure rate.
    Air Force vet Ben Avni (right) who also failed, called the methodology
    'flawed beyond recognition'

    The FAA controversially replaced its peer-reviewed cognitive exam for
    aspiring air traffic controllers with a 'biographical' quiz to
    prioritize minority applicants during the Obama era (stock image)
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    The FAA controversially replaced its peer-reviewed cognitive exam for
    aspiring air traffic controllers with a 'biographical' quiz to
    prioritize minority applicants during the Obama era (stock image)

    Congress eventually passed Public Law 114-190 in 2016 which barred the
    FAA from using a biographical assessment as an entry-point exam for new
    hires
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    Congress eventually passed Public Law 114-190 in 2016 which barred the
    FAA from using a biographical assessment as an entry-point exam for new
    hires

    Snow goes on to say during the three-and-a-half-minute clip: 'I'm gonna
    send it to each of you and as you progress through the stages, refer to
    those images so that you will know which icons you should select.

    'Now I have a good mind to send it to one of my HR representatives first
    and give them the opportunity to sign off on it before you actually
    click it.

    'But in the sake of time, I'm gonna send it directly to you because I'm
    about 99.99 percent sure that it's exactly how you need to answer each
    question in order to get through the first phase.

    'People have been getting rejection notices … and I want to avoid that.'

    When the voicemail was leaked by a whistleblower and featured in a 2015
    Fox Business report the FAA came under pressure to investigate.

    Snow admitted he had organized a teleconference to 'walk through' the
    test and explain 'to each person how they should answer the questions.'

    The Department of Transportation's Office of the Inspector General
    nonetheless cleared him to continue his FAA career, concluding in 2016:
    'The findings in this investigation did not warrant a referral to a
    federal prosecutor.'

    Snow went on to become the NBCFAE's Northeast Regional Vice President.
    He was also its top national recruiter for 2012, 2013, 2014, and 2016.

    According to the NBCFAE website, Snow - who had served as an air traffic operations supervisor, went on to become the NBCFAE's Northeast Regional
    Vice President. He was also its top national recruiter for 2012, 2013,
    2014, and 2016
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    According to the NBCFAE website, Snow - who had served as an air traffic operations supervisor, went on to become the NBCFAE's Northeast Regional
    Vice President. He was also its top national recruiter for 2012, 2013,
    2014, and 2016

    Read More
    EXCLUSIVE
    Take the FAA quiz designed to prioritize DEI applicants for vital air
    traffic controller jobs
    article image
    The US Navy veteran still works for the FAA as well as running a dog
    breeding business, Snowstorm Bullies, out of his Long Island home.

    The 50-year-old dad-of-two lists his hobbies as weightlifting,
    motorcycles, and monster trucks on the company's website.

    When DailyMail.com reached out to Snow to ask for his version of events,
    he said: 'With all due respect, I have no comment. Please do not call
    this phone again.'

    The push to diversify our skies began around the turn of the century
    when special interest groups started lobbying the FAA to adopt 'RNO
    [Race and National Origin] and gender-conscious hiring'.

    Controller positions had typically gone to military vets or standout
    graduates from accredited Air Traffic-Collegiate Training Initiative
    (CTI) schools who scored highly on a rigorous cognitive test, the
    AT-SAT.

    But NBCFAE chiefs complained about the 'disparate treatment and under-representation of African Americans,' citing a 2009 study which
    declared air traffic control the 'least diverse' branch of the Federal government.

    When a 2012 'barrier analysis' suggested the AT-SAT was a problem for minorities, it was scrapped in favor of a 'biographical assessment'
    under a 10-year FAA strategy to add 'depth and diversity'.

    Successful applicants would still go on to take a shorter cognitive test
    known as the AT-SA but it was weighted as 2.5 times less important when determining whether a candidate would land a job and begin formal air
    traffic control training.

    Just days after taking office in January, President Trump signed an
    executive order abolishing the government's DEI agenda and stressed that
    hiring shouldn't be on anything 'other than the brain'
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    Just days after taking office in January, President Trump signed an
    executive order abolishing the government's DEI agenda and stressed that
    hiring shouldn't be on anything 'other than the brain'

    The FAA's hiring policies came under sharp scrutiny after President
    Donald Trump controversially blamed the January 29 Ronald Reagan
    National Airport crash on DEI
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    The FAA's hiring policies came under sharp scrutiny after President
    Donald Trump controversially blamed the January 29 Ronald Reagan
    National Airport crash on DEI

    The FAA has never explained the counter-intuitive scoring process which rewarded high marks for candidates who 'need a great deal of time to
    complete assignments' or 'their lowest grade in high school is science'.

    But the switch proved catastrophic for CTI graduates who could ace
    skills-based aviation tests but struggled to get to grips with the
    quirky biographical replacement.

    Congress eventually passed Public Law 114-190 in 2016 which barred the
    FAA from using a biographical assessment as an entry-point exam for new
    hires.

    But that was too late for CTI graduates like Douglas, 36, who failed it
    twice and never became an air traffic controller.

    Douglas, a native American, joined the NBCFAE after he graduated in 2014
    but turned down Snow's offer of help.

    'I could have done what a bunch of other people did,' he told
    DailyMail.com.

    'There's this guy that was handing out the answers and I just stopped
    talking to him. I was like, I don't need these answers, I wouldn't be
    able to sleep at night.

    'I don't know if the FAA vetted these people thoroughly and properly but
    I do know that they were given the opportunity that other kids
    deserved.'

    Ben Arvi, an Air Force veteran with five-plus years of service as an Air
    Battle Manager, only found out about the cheating several years after
    failing the test.

    'I see it as analogous to that SAT cheating scandal that went on a few
    years ago where you had all those rich people paying people to take SATs
    for their kids,' said Ben, 41.

    'I think promoting diversity is a good thing. But the methodology they
    went through was flawed beyond recognition

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