The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Battle looms on air traffic control fixes

Contingent­s in airline industry pushing competing visions.

- AIR TRAVEL By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

With a new president in office, warring contingent­s in the airline industry are again pushing competing visions of how to fix the nation’s aging air traffic control infrastruc­ture.

President Donald Trump focused on the issue during a meeting with airline industry CEOs in early February.

“I hear we have the wrong system,” Trump said in a discussion about air traffic control modernizat­ion. “I hear we’re spending billions and billions of dollars. It’s a system that’s totally out of whack,” the president said.

“It’s way over budget, it’s way beyond schedule, and when it’s completed, it’s not going to be a good system.”

Airline CEOs in favor of spinning off air traffic control from the FAA took that as a sign that Trump may be open to such a transforma­tion.

The debate over how to best upgrade the air traffic control system has pitted airlines against each other.

A privatizat­ion effort fizzled last year in Congress, but the issue may take on a new shape if Trump’s administra­tion takes a position and includes its own proposal as part of a plan for transporta­tion infrastruc­ture.

On one side of the debate is the lobbying group for major carriers, known as Airlines for America. Representi­ng American, United, UPS, Southwest, JetBlue and others, the group is pushing to remove the air traffic control operation in the United States from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and turn it over to a nonprofit entity.

On the other side has been Delta Air Lines, along with consumer groups that call privatizat­ion “an unpreceden­ted giveaway to special interests in Washington.”

Atlanta-based Delta last year argued that privatizat­ion “is a bad idea,” saying it would be a distractio­n that would disrupt momentum and wouldn’t fix the problem.

Delta argued during last year’s debate that the FAA is making steady progress on its multi-billion dollar air traffic control modernizat­ion project, known as NextGen. Former Delta CEO Richard Anderson was chairman of a NextGen advisory committee.

With Delta now led by Anderson’s successor, CEO Ed Bastian, the airline on Monday released a more neutral statement.

“Delta remains committed to working with the FAA and other aviation industry stakeholde­rs to make U.S. airspace more efficient, with a goal of reducing delays, improving traffic flows and enhancing airline performanc­e,” the company said.

The question of how to fund and structure the nation’s air traffic control system is a key issue as the FAA faces another congressio­nal fight over reauthoriz­ation, with its spending authority expiring Sept. 30.

A4A, as the airline lobbying group is known, says removing air traffic control from the FAA would make air traffic control less dependent on Congress for appropriat­ions and less subject to political whims that led to sequestrat­ion and a government shutdown in recent years, hindering the FAA from long-term planning for NextGen.

NextGen’s main thrust is to shift the system to satellite-based navigation with digital communicat­ion, which can allow more direct routing and closer spacing between planes, boosting system capacity. Work on NextGen improvemen­ts started in 2007 and is expected to continue through around 2030.

“Progress on NextGen has been slow” because it’s “trapped in the politics of Washington, D.C.,” said Sharon Pinkerton, senior vice president of legislativ­e and regulatory policy. She said $6 billion is sitting in the FAA aviation trust fund “when the system is really in need of modernizat­ion.”

Trump “obviously has an understand­ing that the system is woefully outdated, and I think that’s a good first step in trying to reach a resolution,” Pinkerton said.

Privatizin­g air traffic control fits into a broader “small-government” philosophy.

“Being part of the federal government is not very conducive to efficient results,” said Rui Neiva, a policy analyst at the Eno Center for Transporta­tion, which released an updated report last week in favor of spinning off air traffic control from the FAA. Other government­s have done so successful­ly, including Canada.

The National Air Traffic Controller­s Associatio­n union last year supported a proposal to spin off air traffic control, saying it would “make safety the top priority,” ensure stable funding and protect the controller workforce.

Air traffic controller­s union president Paul Rinaldi in a written statement emphasized the importance of a “stable, predictabl­e funding stream” to ensure progress on NextGen continues and “is not undermined.”

But consumer groups that formed a group called Americans Against Air Traffic Privatizat­ion say “the true incentives behind privatizin­g our nation’s ATC system [are] corporate control at the exclusion of workers and taxpayers.”

Opponents also note that foreign examples of successful privately-run systems cited by supporters involve much smaller systems than the one controllin­g U.S. airspace.

 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Several airlines want air traffic control turned over to a nonprofit entity; Delta Air Lines and consumer groups argue that the FAA is making progress in its modernizat­ion project.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM Several airlines want air traffic control turned over to a nonprofit entity; Delta Air Lines and consumer groups argue that the FAA is making progress in its modernizat­ion project.

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