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FAA seeks $10B from Congress to overhaul aging air traffic system
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FAA seeks $10B from Congress to overhaul aging air traffic system Major aviation groups have this week endorsed the call for increased spending on these critical air traffic reforms - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is seeking an additional $10 billion from Congress to overhaul the nation's aging air traffic control system, anticipating a doubling of air traffic within the next two decades. FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said it is rapidly...
FAA seeks $10B from Congress to overhaul aging air traffic system
Major aviation groups have this week endorsed the call for increased spending on these critical air traffic reforms
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The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is seeking an additional $10 billion from Congress to overhaul the nation's aging air traffic control system, anticipating a doubling of air traffic within the next two decades.
FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said it is rapidly deploying $12.5 billion previously approved by lawmakers after years of neglect.
"We're behind 20 years. The system is extremely safe, but it comes at the price of inefficiency and inconvenience," Bedford said. He added, "Americans tolerate this hugely inefficient system... And as long as it's safe, I think that sort of saps the will to fix it."
The FAA is investing billions to replace outdated air traffic control telecom infrastructure and radar surveillance systems. This follows failures like significant outages affecting Newark and Washington, and a 2023 system failure that caused a brief nationwide ground stop.
Major aviation groups have this week endorsed the call for increased spending on these critical air traffic reforms.
The FAA is shrinking radar and telecom modernization into a three-year timeline, down from 15 years, and has already replaced 57% of its copper infrastructure.
Bedford wants to launch a new system to overhaul flight scheduling to improve flight management in September. It aims to prevent significant congestion and delays by using AI to coordinate schedules and trajectories before departures.
Bedford said the airlines build significant extra time into their schedules because of inherent delays in flights. "If we pull all of that cost out of the system, inconvenience comes out of the system," he said.
The FAA is internally rewriting the rules on how the airspace management process works. Bedford wants airplanes connected with low Earth orbit satellites that would turn every plane into a weather station and lead to fewer delays.
Bedford, who hit a year on the job last week, is working to redesign airspace to make flights more efficient and has imposed additional restrictions on helicopters after the fatal collision of an American Airlines AAL.O jet last year with a U.S. Army helicopter that killed 67 people. He plans to soon unveil a "Flight Plan 2027" on the next round of FAA reform targets.
Bedford is undecided about whether the FAA will move forward with requiring ADS-B, a key advanced aircraft-tracking technology, as Congress considers legislation. "Everybody agrees that everything operating in the airspace should be broadcasting," Bedford said.
One big step is expected in late 2027 when air traffic control will move from analog to digital communications. The FAA will later shift all 313 facilities from running on individual computers to the cloud.
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