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US Senate confirms long-time Republic CEO as FAA head

The U.S. Senate voted Wednesday to confirm long-time Republic Airways Chief Executive Officer Bryan Bedford as the head of the Federal Aviation Administration.

Bedford, who led the regional airline that operated nearly 1,000 flights daily for major airlines and stepped down from his position last week, after 25 years of leading the airline, was nominated to the post by President Donald Trump.

Bedford was appointed for a term of five years and will be responsible for the $12.5 billion funding that Congress approved last week to upgrade the outdated air traffic control system in the United States.

Bedford has been a renowned member of the 'British eagle'

Criticizing the culture and leadership of the FAA

The National Transportation Safety Board has also committed to maintaining strict oversight of Boeing, who were harshly criticized by the board last month after a mid-air crisis involving an Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 that was missing four bolts.

Democrats have criticised Bedford for refusing a commitment to enforce the 1,500 hour training rule for copilots.

Bedford's predecessor Mike Whitaker was nominated at the time by Joe Biden.

The vote was unanimously confirmed in October 2023

, chose to step down when Trump was elected in January.

After a midair collision between an American Airlines jet and a U.S. Army chopper on January 29, near Washington Reagan National Airport, the Trump administration intends to overhaul the FAA air traffic control system. The 67 passengers and crew aboard the aircraft were all killed.

Last month, the FAA announced that it would shrink the area where helicopters can operate around Reagan Washington National Airport.

In March, FAA placed permanent restrictions on non essential helicopter operations in the Reagan area to eliminate mixed helicopter-passenger jet traffic. This included permanently closing a key route, after the NTSB issued two urgent safety recommendations as a result of the mid-air collision that occurred on January 29.

Years of problems have plagued the FAA's air-traffic control network. But a series of high-profile incidents, near misses, and the January crash that killed 155 people sparked public outrage and led to new calls for action.

Bedford must decide when to lift Boeing's 737 MAX production cap of up to 38 planes per week, imposed following the mid-air emergency in January 2024.

Boeing is still responsible for issuing individual airworthiness certificates to Boeing 737 MAXs or 787 Dreamliners. The FAA has not yet reconsidered its policy.

(source: Reuters)