Baltimore Sun

Group: Air traffic control on Trump radar

He favors spinning off operations from FAA, lobbyist says

- By Joan Lowy and David Koenig

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump told airline and airport executives Thursday that he supports privatizin­g America’s air traffic control system, according to a top airline industry lobbyist who was in the meeting.

Nick Calio, president and CEO of Airlines for America, the trade associatio­n that represents the major airlines, said after the White House meeting that Trump was “extraordin­arily positive” when airline executives urged him to spin off air traffic control operations from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and place them under the control of a private, nonprofit corporatio­n.

Business aircraft opera- President Donald Trump meets in the White House with airline executives on Thursday. tors fear the corporatio­n’s board would be dominated by airlines and that they would lose access to larger airports to make more room for airlines and be asked to pay more to finance the system.

Asked if Trump committed to back a privation bill, Calio said: “I think he’s on track to do that.”

The White House did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on his remarks.

Unlike the U.S., most countries separate their air traffic control operations from their aviation safety oversight agency. But it is unusual to actually privatize air traffic operations. Canada is an exception.

Airlines — with the notable exception of Delta — have complained the FAA is taking too long to modernize the air traffic system. Republican Rep. Bill Shuster, chairman of the House transporta­tion committee, introduced legislatio­n to privatize the system last year, but the bill stalled after opposition from other top lawmakers and from business aircraft operators.

Some lawmakers in both parties object to removing air traffic operations from the control of Congress because it would reduce their influence over aviation. But proponents say the FAA’s modernizat­ion program, called NextGen, has been hampered by government shutdowns and budget uncertaint­ies. By removing the air traffic system from congressio­nal control, they hope to provide the certainty necessary to make long-term financial com- mitments.

The privatizat­ion effort has the backing of the National Air Traffic Controller­s Associatio­n, although other FAA unions are opposed.

Gary Kelly, CEO of Southwest Airlines, told Trump during the meeting the top priority for helping airlines would be to “modernize the air traffic control system.” He complained that money spent on the system has not helped improve it in the past.

“I hear we’re spending billions and billions of dollars, it’s a system that’s totally out of whack,” Trump said. The president asked why airline corporatio­ns had allowed the government to invest in a faulty system. Kelly said airlines are not “in control” of those decisions.

Trump said he believes the system could potentiall­y work better if FAA was run by a pilot. The current administra­tor, Michael Huerta, isn’t a pilot.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ??
EVAN VUCCI/AP

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