Manila Bulletin

New US Transporta­tion Secretary takes office

-

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Elaine Chao, a former top US labor official, was sworn in on Tuesday to lead the US Transporta­tion Department, which overseas aviation, vehicle, train, and pipeline safety.

Chao, a former US labor secretary and deputy transporta­tion secretary, took office hours after the US Senate voted 93 to 6 to confirm her.

Chao, 63, will face key decisions on how to regulate the growing use of drones and automakers' plans to offer self-driving cars.

She will also be a key player in President Donald Trump's Cabinet if his administra­tion pushes ahead with a major infrastruc­ture spending program, as the businessma­nturned-politician promised during last year's presidenti­al campaign.

"Your leadership and your experience will serve well as the secretary of transporta­tion, overseeing what we anticipate will be historic investment­s in our nation's roads, bridges, airports and above all in our future," said Vice President Mike Pence, who administer­ed the oath of office to Chao.

Chao tweeted: "It is an honor to rejoin the extraordin­ary people of @USDOT and begin working to rebuild America's infrastruc­ture."

The Transporta­tion Department has a $75 billion annual budget and about 60,000 employees. It includes the Federal Aviation Administra­tion, which handles air traffic control.

Chao, the wife of Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and the first AsianAmeri­can woman to hold a Cabinet position, also will have to decide whether US fuel efficiency standards should be revised, as some automakers have sought.

There are dozens of other pending regulatory issues facing the next administra­tion, including railroad safety and staffing rules and whether to set rules requiring airlines to give more passengers with disabiliti­es seats with extra leg room and whether to ban or restrict personal phone calls on US flights.

At her confirmati­on hearing this month, Chao declined to take positions on a number of issues, including whether air traffic control jobs should be privatized, concerns over the safety of shipments of crude oil by rail, foreign airlines' push to move into the US market and regulation of developing technologi­es.

AAA, the largest US auto club with more than 50 million members, praised Chao's confirmati­on. AAA CEO Marshall Doney said the group "firmly believes that significan­t, additional investment­s are needed to maintain existing infrastruc­ture and to enhance the nation's (transporta­tion) system."

The Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers, which represents major US and foreign automakers, said that from "autonomous vehicles to safety to fuel efficiency to infrastruc­ture, Secretary Chao's leadership will profoundly impact our sector and many others."

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines