FAA slows GPS plans

The Federal Aviation Administration is pulling back the throttle on its muchbeleaguered satellite navigation program.

The Federal Aviation Administration is pulling back the throttle on its

much-beleaguered satellite navigation program.

FAA Administrator Jane Garvey told Congress last week that it had assembled

an independent panel to review work on the the Wide-Area Augmentation System,

which will provide pilots with Global Positioning System satellite signals.

The FAA plans to slow work on the project, which, according to the Transportation

Department's inspector general, is costing the FAA almost $4 million a month.

"It means scaling back on WAAS to reduce the burn rate," Garvey said.

Slowing work on the project will allow the independent panel — made

up of experts from Stanford University, Ohio University, Mitre Corp. and

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory — to assess the software problems and assemble

recommendations to fix them. Raytheon Co. also is involved in the panel's

research.

WAAS, being developed by Raytheon, will use a network of ground stations

to refine GPS signals so that they are reliable enough for flight navigation

across the country and precision approaches to airports.

But the FAA does not expect basic navigation capability to be available

until 2002, which is two years later than the most recent schedule and more

than four years later than originally expected.

The FAA has also extended completion date for precision approach — when

visibility is limited — because of continuing software problems.

About 80 percent of the panel's work is focused on designing ionospheric

correction algorithms that correct errors in positioning data caused by

solar activity, said Per Enge, Stanford professor and co-chairman of the

WAAS Independent Performance Panel.

"We're at the peak of the solar cycle. The ionosphere won't be this

bad again for another 11 years," Enge said. Using data about the current

conditions, the panel will refine the WAAS algorithms and prove that they

are safe, he said. Raytheon's code is not far off from the desired code,

he added.

Enge stressed that the process of using an independent, open, peer-reviewed

panel is not new. The Local Area Augmentation System, a ground-based enhancement

to satellite navigation signals used on or near airports, involved an integrity

panel early in the design phase, he said.

The FAA and Raytheon stopped work early this year on WAAS after discovering

during testing that it did not meet certain safety requirements.

The WAAS integrity monitor, which alerts an aircraft pilot when a GPS

signal is not accurate, failed to detect an instance where "hazardously

misleading information" was transmitted, according to testimony from Kenneth

Mead, DOT's inspector general. Mead spoke last week before the House Appropriations

Committee's Transportation and Related Agencies Subcommittee.

The most recent WAAS delay is only one of several air traffic safety

and modernization programs that continue to rack up increased costs and

schedule slips, DOT officials told the subcommittee.

The Standard Terminal Automation Replacement System, still requires

substantial software development to improve the human-computer interface,

and the Airport Movement Area Safety System, which will help prevent runway

accidents, is still not operational after eight years of development, said

Kenneth Mead, DOT inspector general.