Baltimore Sun

Trump’s air traffic plan hits turbulence

GOP, Dems raise doubts about privatizin­g system

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s plan to privatize the nation’s air traffic control system is running into bipartisan opposition in Congress, where Republican­s fret that it could raise costs for air travelers and hurt small airports.

Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., called the proposal “a tough sell” in states like his, where small airports are common. At a hearing Wednesday, Wicker told Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao that “the sale needs to be made, and it needs to be made convincing­ly” if the administra­tion hopes to move forward with a plan that U.S. airlines and some House Republican­s have long advocated.

Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., said privatizat­ion would hurt “all but our largest airports nationwide,” while removing needed congressio­nal oversight and raise costs for consumers.

Democrats also opposed the changes, warning that airline interests would dominate a proposed board that would oversee an estimated 300 air traffic facilities and around 30,000 employees.

Lawmakers from both parties also pointed to the unpreceden­ted safety under the current system, noting the last fatal crash of a domestic passenger airliner was eight years ago.

“We currently have the safest air traffic control system in the world. Why risk that by handing the whole thing over to an untested, unproved entity?” asked Florida Sen. Bill Nelson, the senior Democrat on the Senate transporta­tion committee.

While the U.S. “remains the gold standard in aviation,” the president’s plan would spur innovation and modernizat­ion, Chao said.

“Our skies are becoming increasing­ly congested,” she said, noting that some domestic flights take longer now than they did decades ago because of congestion and indirect routing.

“Our air traffic organizati­on must be more nimble,” Chao said, calling the current system “bulky” and unable to “move fast enough to keep pace with new technologi­es and new demands.”

But Nelson and other Democrats noted repeated computer system failures in recent years by U.S. airlines, questionin­g whether they are ready to handle complex technology modernizat­ions.

Business aircraft operators, private pilots and non-hub airports have also expressed concerns that they may pay more and receive less service under a private corporatio­n.

U.S. airlines have lobbied to separate air traffic control from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion for two decades, and Trump’s budget plan released earlier this year called for the changes, placing air traffic operations under an “independen­t, nongovernm­ental organizati­on.”

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