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US Senate committee votes on FAA nominee June 25,

The U.S. Senate Commerce Committee is set to vote on Donald Trump's nomination for the Federal Aviation Administration head. This comes as the agency struggles with safety concerns and a persistent shortage of air traffic control officers. Bryan Bedford, the CEO of Republic Airways, has been critical of the FAA leadership and culture. He told the Senate Commerce Committee that he will hold Boeing "accountable" for delivering a safe, high-quality plane.

Boeing declined to make a comment. Bedford revealed he spoke with Elon Musk on February 25, who, according to documents published Wednesday, said that he wanted to hire a "technologist to run the FAA." Bedford disagreed with Musk and suggested that the FAA could "hire or contract competent technology help." Bedford stated that Musk believed the FAA's biggest problem was the lack internal development and software tools.

Musk did not respond immediately to requests for comments. Sean Duffy, Transportation Secretary in Paris this week, gave the strongest indication that the Trump administration was moving towards lifting the cap of 38 planes per month on Boeing's 737 MAX Production imposed in January 2020 after a midair emergency involving a 737 MAX 9 lacking four key bolts. Duffy told CNBC that Boeing is on the right track. "I want the FAA to move when Boeing is ready to expand its capacity." After a midair collision between an American Airlines jet and a U.S. Army chopper on January 29, near Washington Reagan National Airport, calls to modernize our nation's air-traffic control system increased. The 67 passengers on the plane died. The FAA has facilities that are at least 50 years old. These aging systems have caused delays on numerous occasions. Newark Airport has been plagued by technology issues that have delayed hundreds of flights. Flights have been delayed by a persistent controller shortage. Many controllers work six-day weekends and mandatory overtime. About 3,500 air traffic control positions are not enough to meet the FAA's target staffing levels. Rod Nickel edited the Rod Nickel Reporting by David Shepardson

(source: Reuters)