The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FAAI in holding pattern as House recess looms

Efforts to privatize mired in indecision, distractio­n.

- By Ashley Halsey III

Almost two months after President Donald Trump with great fanfare endorsed removing them from the payroll, the fate of more than 30,000 federal employees will not be decided before the House adjourns for its summer recess.

House Transporta­tion Committee Chairman Bill Shuster, R-Pa., had hoped to find both the necessary votes and time on the House floor for considerat­ion of a bill that would spin the nation’s air traffic controller­s and thousands of people working on modernizin­g the aviation system into a private nonprofit corporatio­n.

But in the maelstrom of last-minute action before the House heads home Friday, the bill has not been scheduled for what was expected to be a contentiou­s debate on the floor. The proposal still faces bipartisan opposition in the Senate.

With precious few days in session in the coming weeks, Congress faces a Sept. 30 deadline for reauthoriz­ation of funding for the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. The House bill approved by Shuster’s committee includes the decoupling of the controller­s and modernizat­ion workers from the FAA. A Senate bill has no such provision.

If the two houses remain at loggerhead­s, the likely result will be the second extension of FAA funding at current levels in as many years. The

Sept. 30 deadline was the result of a 2016 extension after they disagreed over the same issue.

Indecision on the bill is another setback for a White House already enmeshed in a health-care debate and consumed with investigat­ions of communicat­ion between the Trump campaign and Rus

sian operatives. Debate over those issues has shoved the question of splitting the FAA deep into the shadows.

When Trump endorsed severing the FAA workers June 5, he summoned an audience to the White House and was flanked by the current and three former secretarie­s of transporta­tion.

Trump said the FAA had wasted $7 billion on modernizat­ion efforts and should not be trusted with continuing the program, adding the aviation agency “didn’t know what the hell they were doing.”

The concept of limiting the FAA to regulatory functions, like most other federal agencies, while privatizin­g the air traffic controller­s has been kicking around Washington for decades. With Shuster at the helm of the House committee, and Trump’s endorsemen­t, it seemed to have gathered momentum this year.

“I, along with the entire leadership team in the House, am committed to moving this bill through the House and into a conference committee with the Senate,” Shuster said this week. “Every day, our bill gathers new support, both from Republican­s and Democrats, on and off [Capitol] Hill. The more time we have to explain this bill, the more support there is.”

He pointed to a letter endorsing that plan that several former Clinton administra­tion officials — including former Transporta­tion Secretary Federico Peña — sent to House members last week.

Shuster can point to a long list of organizati­ons that support the move — including one of the two big unions whose members would be affected — but there has been blowback from those who fly small planes and corporate jets, and from smaller airports that fear being lost in the shuffle if airlines come to dominate the corporatio­n.

There is also bipartisan opposition in Congress from some who harbor similar worries or who simply don’t think anything so precious as the national airspace ought to be governed without Congress having a big say. That concern is particular­ly pronounced in the Senate, which moved a bill out of committee that ignored the desires of Trump and Shuster.

“The near-daily parade of consumers’ airline horror stories should illustrate to Congress just how little passengers’ interests matter to a hyper-consolidat­ed airline industry,” Sally Greenberg, executive director of the National Consumers League, said in a conference call with reporters on July 12.

While some say the FAA is making progress on an estimated $36 billion modernizat­ion program and critics say any progress is too little, too late, the big battle is over how much influence the airlines would have on the board of a new nonprofit corporatio­n.

Trump and Shuster have proposed a 13-member board

two members appointed by the secretary of transporta­tion and two elected by the other board members. The rest of the panel would include one member each from the major airlines, the regional airlines, the cargo airlines, small-plane owners, corporate plane operators, the air traffic controller­s, the airports, commercial pilots and the corporatio­n’s chief executive. That chief executive would be selected by the board.

Critics worry that the board could become heavily populated by those sympatheti­c to the airlines, at the expense of small-plane operators and smaller airports that get minimal or no service by commercial airlines.

 ?? CLIFF OWEN / AP FILE ?? FAA air traffic controller­s work in the Dulles Internatio­nal Airport Air Traffic Control Tower in Sterling, Va. The fate of more than 30,000 federal aviation employees hangs in the balance as the House approaches its summer recess.
CLIFF OWEN / AP FILE FAA air traffic controller­s work in the Dulles Internatio­nal Airport Air Traffic Control Tower in Sterling, Va. The fate of more than 30,000 federal aviation employees hangs in the balance as the House approaches its summer recess.

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