Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q5011783> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 39 of
39
with 100 triples per page.
- Q5011783 subject Q7409112.
- Q5011783 subject Q8227648.
- Q5011783 subject Q8309752.
- Q5011783 abstract "The air traffic control centers of Brazil are known by the acronym CINDACTA, or "Centro Integrado de Defesa Aérea e Controle de Tráfego Aéreo (Integrated Air Traffic Control and Air Defense Center). Four CINDACTAs are in operation, located in four different cities and each responsible for different regions of Brazil's airspace.Cindacta I located in Brasília, near Pres. Juscelino Kubitschek International Airport: the square comprising Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Belo Horizonte and BrasíliaCindacta II located in Curitiba, near Bacacheri Airport: Southern Region, Mato Grosso do Sul and the southern part of São PauloCindacta III located in Recife, near Recife/Guararapes-Gilberto Freyre International Airport: Northeast Region and the ocean between Brazil and Africa and EuropeCindacta IV located in Manaus, near Eduardo Gomes International Airport: Brazilian Amazon RegionThe use of military air traffic controllers for civilian traffic is not unusual, but has been deprecated in most developed countries. In the US, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) operates a wholly parallel system with that of the US Air Force and NORAD. This is also the case of Eurocontrol and each of its member nations' air defense systems. Brazil's use of an integrated command poses some unique challenges to the government. As members of the military, controllers are not allowed to form unions (such as the case of NATCA in the US) or to strike. While the air traffic control system saw significant improvement with the implementation of SIVAM in the northern portion of the country, there were many warning signs that the system as a whole was heading towards an untenable situation. In 2003, the Brazilian Air Force warned of the need for upgraded equipment and additional funding. For three years, DECEA, the Air Force department in charge of air traffic control budget requests were denied. The government's Tribunal de Contas da União (Union Accounting Tribunal), an agency similar to the US Government Accountability Office, issued a report after the crisis which echoed the FAB's concerns, stating that a lack of planning and underfunding of the air traffic control system by the federal government was to blame for the crisis.".
- Q5011783 thumbnail Brazil_CINDACTAs.png?width=300.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q1060042.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q11223.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q1136194.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q15.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q155.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q174.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q175.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q244451.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q2844.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q2901827.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q335357.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q387704.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q40236.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q42800.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q43319.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q4361.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q46.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q4740869.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q48344.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q49776.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q657271.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q663492.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q6970244.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q7409112.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q748010.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q749118.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q8227648.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q8309752.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q854272.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q8678.
- Q5011783 wikiPageWikiLink Q909488.
- Q5011783 comment "The air traffic control centers of Brazil are known by the acronym CINDACTA, or "Centro Integrado de Defesa Aérea e Controle de Tráfego Aéreo (Integrated Air Traffic Control and Air Defense Center). Four CINDACTAs are in operation, located in four different cities and each responsible for different regions of Brazil's airspace.Cindacta I located in Brasília, near Pres.".
- Q5011783 label "CINDACTA".
- Q5011783 depiction Brazil_CINDACTAs.png.