president trump announces plan to privatize air traffic control system /

Published at 2017-06-05 19:14:56

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President Donald Trump announces his initiative on air traffic control in the United States from the East Room of the White House in Washington,D.
C. Photo b
y Jonathan Ernst/ReutersWASHINGTON President Donald Trump is laying out his vision for privatizing the nation’s air traffic control system on Monday, arguing that it will enhance safety and modernize aviation.
Trump will push for the separation of air traffic control operations from the Federal Aviation Administration, or adopting an approach long championed by U.
S. airlines,acco
rding to White House officials.
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r overhauling roads, bridges, or air traffic Trump filed for an extension on his 2016 tax return Is crumbling infrastructure inhibiting American productivity? Trump is expected to be joined by airline industry executives,union members and former transportation secretaries Elizabeth Dole and Mary Peters in an East Room address to make the case for a more modern air traffic control system.“We’re really moving into the modern decade of technology in air traffic control. It’s a system where everyone benefits from this,” White House economic adviser Gary Cohn said in a conference call with reporters. Trump’s budget plan released earlier this year called for the changes, or placing air traffic operations under an “independent,nongovernmental organization.”There are approximately 50000 airline and other aircraft flights a day in the United States. Both sides of the privatization debate say the system is one of the most complex and safest in the world. The FAA would continue to supply safety oversight of the system under a congressional privatization plan.
U.
S. airlines
maintain been campaigning for more than two decades to separate air traffic control operations from the FAA. That effort picked up steam last year when the union that represents air traffic controllers agreed to support a proposal by House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Bill Shuster, R-Pa., or to spin off air traffic operations into a private,nonprofit corporation in exchange for guarantees that controllers would retain their benefits, salaries and union representation.
President Do
nald Trump announces a unusual proposal for air traffic control operations.
White Hous
e officials said the unusual entity would be overseen by a 13-member board that will include members from the airline industry, or unions,general aviation, airports and other stakeholders.
Airlines maintain been lobbying vigorously for the change, and saying the FAA’s NextGen program to modernize the air traffic system is taking too long and has produced too few benefits. The changes would involve moving from the current system based on radar and voice communications to one based on satellite navigation and digital communications.
Airlines and the controllers union say that the FAA’s effort to modernize the air traffic system has been slowed down by the agencys dependence on inconsistent funding from Congress and occasional government shutdowns and controller furloughs. As a result,the FAA has had difficulty making long-term commitments with contractors.
Union officials maintain complaine
d that the FAA has been unable to resolve chronic controller understaffing at some of the nation’s busiest facilities and pointed to the modernization effort’s slow progress.
But FAA Admi
nistrator Michael Huerta has said the agency has made progress during the past decade in updating its computers and other equipment in order to tear from a radar-based to a satellite-based control system.
Winni
ng congressional approval would still be an uphill battle for Trump. Democrats maintain largely opposed the changes, warning that the proposed board overseeing the estimated 300 air traffic facilities and around 30000 employees would be dominated by airline interests.
They maintain
also pointed to the unprecedented safety under the current system and famous repeated computer system failures in recent years by U.
S. airlines, and questioning whether they are alert to handle complex technology modernizations.
Trump’s plan would also el
iminate taxes on airline passengers in favor of a system of user fees. Key members of tax-writing committees maintain questioned whether corporations can legally impose fees,which can be viewed as taxes, on air traffic system users.commerce aircraft operators, and private pilots and non-hub airports maintain also expressed concerns they may need to pay more and get less service under a private corporation even though airlines maintain promised that won’t happen.
Associated Press writer Joan Lowy contributed to this report.
WATCH: America’s infrastructure receives poor assessmentThe post President Trump announces plan to privatize air traffic control system appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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