The USA's Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has launched a recruitment campaign aimed at gamers. The FAA
wants them to consider becoming air traffic controllers. There is a shortage of workers in the sector, so the government hopes
people skilled at gaming could fill the growing number of vacancies. The US currently needs at least 3,000 controllers. Nick
Daniels, president of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, said: “Our union welcomes innovative approaches to
expanding the candidate pool, including outreach to individuals with high-level skills, such as gamers, so long as all pathways
maintain the rigorous standards required of this safety-critical profession.”
The recruitment drive has a video with an Xbox logo on it. The tag line is explicitly aimed at gamers. It says: “You've been
training for this… Become an air traffic controller. It's not a game. It's a career.” The promo adds: “You'll keep millions of people safe
every year. And make a lot of money.” The enticing salary is $155,000 a year. US Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy said the
country needs to tempt “a growing demographic of young adults who have many of the hard skills it takes to be a successful controller”.
Some current controllers have said gaming could be a useful skill. They said it had "an influence on their ability to think quickly, stay
focused, and manage complexity”.
Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ce84rvx0e6do and https://abcnews.com/US/new-air-traffic-control-hiring-campaign-targets-gamers/stor
In the second paragraph of the text II, the terms “recruitment drive,” “promo,” and “campaign” (implied from the first paragraph)
constitute a lexical chain. Regarding the expression “this safety-critical profession” used by Nick Daniels, it functions as a: