The Maui News - Weekender

Airlines back more spending, staff to fix failed FAA system

- By DAVID KOENIG

DALLAS — Airline executives bristled last year when government officials, led by Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg, blamed the carriers for causing thousands of flight cancellati­ons and mistreatin­g their customers.

The shoe is on the other foot now after a technology outage at the Federal Aviation Administra­tion grounded planes for a time earlier this week, but airline leaders are taking a different tack.

They’ve avoided harsh words and score-settling. Instead they’re calling on Congress and the Biden administra­tion to give the FAA more staff and more money to upgrade its systems.

“The FAA, I know, is doing the very best they can with what they have, but we need to stand behind the FAA,” Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said Friday.

American Airlines CEO Robert Isom praised the FAA for “calling a time out” Wednesday morning — temporaril­y barring planes nationwide from taking off — while it fixed a system that provides safety and other informatio­n to pilots and airline dispatcher­s. He said it showed that safety comes first.

“Investment is required,” Isom told CNBC. “It’s going to be billions of dollars, and it’s not something that is done overnight.”

The airline executives, of course, have an interest in making sure that the FAA can function. The agency manages the nation’s airspace and hires air traffic controller­s who must juggle a mix of passenger and cargo jets, smaller private planes, helicopter­s and drones.

Bastian said the FAA’s lack of adequate staffing is causing longer flight times and making it harder to operate in congested parts of the Northeast and Florida.

“There is no question that the investment in a modernized air-traffic control system will drive a tremendous amount of efficienci­es as well as growth, which will mean better service for the American public,” he told reporters.

Airline executives no doubt want to remain in the good graces of the bureaucrat­s who regulate them. Isom went out of his way to praise the leadership ability of Buttigieg, who heads the FAA’s parent organizati­on.

Airlines have been pushing the FAA to modernize the air-traffic control system for years. They argue that a faster and complete rollout of a so-called NextGen plan to modernize the national airspace system will benefit the traveling public by making flights more efficient and reliable.

The FAA’s technology is certain to be a key issue this year, as Congress considers legislatio­n that would govern the agency for the next five years. But the initial response from Capitol Hill has been to demand answers from Buttigieg about this week’s debacle.

Late Friday, more than 120 members of Congress said in a letter to Buttigieg that “the FAA was well aware of the issues facing the NOTAM system” which failed this week. NOTAM stands for notice to air missions.

In the letter signed by 71 Republican­s and 51 Democrats they said Congress directed the FAA in 2018 to modernize the NOTAM system, and FAA requested money to replace “vintage hardware” that supports it.

Buttigieg’s office declined to comment on the letter but said in a statement that the NOTAM system had been functionin­g properly since Wednesday with no unusual flight delays or cancellati­ons.

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