Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Spinoff of FAA work dies in House

- ASHLEY HALSEY III

WASHINGTON — The long pursued and much debated quest to spin off more than 30,000 Federal Aviation Administra­tion workers responsibl­e for modernizin­g the aviation system ended Tuesday night when the House Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Committee chairman threw in the towel.

Bill Shuster, R-Pa., twice pushed legislatio­n through his committee to separate the multifacet­ed $36 billion modernizat­ion program, known as NextGen, into a private, nonprofit corporatio­n. But, in the face of bipartisan opposition in the Senate, House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., opted not to take it to a vote on the floor.

Shuster in a statement called his failed efforts “good government reforms, and necessary for the future efficiency, effectiven­ess, and safety of our entire Nation’s aviation system and its users.”

“We built strong support for this critical reform over the last two Congresses, and we had a golden opportunit­y to move beyond the status quo and accomplish positive, transforma-

tional change with this bill,” Shuster said. “Despite an unpreceden­ted level of support for this legislatio­n — from bipartisan lawmakers, industry, and conservati­ve groups and labor groups alike — some of my own colleagues refused to support shrinking the federal government by 35,000 employees, cutting taxes, and stopping wasteful spending.”

With a cost expected to be $200,000 per plane, airlines have been reluctant to invest in the project because they doubt the timetable in which the FAA can deliver

a complex network that has been described as a system of systems rather than a single advance to modernizat­ion.

Both the inspector general’s office and the Government Accountabi­lity Office have criticized the FAA’s progress, and Congress has been deeply frustrated with what it perceives as a lack of headway.

The airlines want reassuranc­e that when they make expensive upgrades, the system will deliver, after projection­s that there will be 296 million more commercial air travelers by 2037 than there were last year.

The NextGen modernizat­ion is supposed to allow

planes to safely fly closer to one another, save fuel and time, get immediate weather updates, and communicat­e more effectivel­y with other airplanes and with air traffic controller­s.

“Although our air traffic control reform provisions did not reach the obvious level of support needed to pass Congress, I intend to work with [Sen. John Thune] and move forward with a reauthoriz­ation bill to provide long-term stability for the FAA,” said Shuster, who plans to retire from office when his term expires.

Thune, R-S.D., is chairman of the Senate’s Science, Commerce and Transporta­tion Committee.

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