DOT, airlines join to pressure Congress
The Transportation Department and airline industry stakeholders will join to seek funding to finish modernizing the air traffic control system
The Transportation Department and airline industry stakeholders announced
this week that they will work together to pressure Congress for funding
to finish modernizing the air traffic control system on schedule.
Facing many immediate problems with flight delays and cancellations,
DOT met this week with all the top members of the airline industry. While
coming up with some short-term solutions, the department also stressed its
focus on long-term fixes, including the traffic control system modernization
and initiatives such as the Free Flight program.
"We also have to be about the business of continuing to take forth the
vision of the need to modernize the air traffic control system and to take
that to the Congress, to the American people, so that we can expedite our
commitment and our work in that regard," DOT Secretary Rodney Slater said.
Free Flight Phase One is scheduled to be completed in 2002. It is a
key modernization effort that will provide a new network of communications
systems, on-board computers and global positioning satellites to allow pilots
to choose the best route based on current conditions.
Phase Two, which Federal Aviation Administration chief Jane Garvey announced
in May, will enable air traffic controllers to determine better routes.
It will also include a redesign of the national airspace and start work
on a set of research and development projects.
All of this will require that DOT and the FAA get the funding they have
expected.
The airlines, pilots, air traffic controllers, and many others will
all benefit from these modernizations, and so must be committed to working
with DOT, said Duane Woerth, president of the Air Line Pilots Association.
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