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US Senator calls for safety reforms following fatal crash between Army helicopter and regional jet

Ted Cruz, the chair of the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee, said Tuesday that he would propose broad air safety measures after a January collision between an Army helicopter near Reagan Washington National Airport and an American Airlines regional plane killed 67. Cruz, a Republican, said that the legislation would mandate the use of ADS-B by U.S. Army aircraft near civilian planes. It would also require a review of helicopter route across the country, and the Army Inspector General to examine "systemic failures" which may have led to the fatal crash. Both parties of Congress have asked why the Federal Aviation Administration has not acted for years in response to close calls that involved helicopters near Reagan. The National Transportation Safety Board will hold a three-day investigation on the collision in late this month. Cruz stated that "Radar blindspots, telecommunications failures, capacity bottlenecks and radar blindspots expose the vulnerability of a system built for an earlier era." A group of seven Democratic Senators introduced legislation last month that would mandate new FAA safety assessments after fatal passenger airline crashes and require ADS-B. Senators and regulators are concerned about close calls with Army helicopters. Since 2021, the NTSB reported that there have been more than 15,000 close calls near Reagan involving commercial aircraft and helicopters, with a lateral separation of less 1 nautical mile, and a vertical separation of less 400 feet. In early May, the FAA barred the Army's training and priority transport flights near the Pentagon following a close call on May 1, which forced two civilian aircraft to abort their landings. Last month, the FAA announced that it was in negotiations with the Army regarding future military flights around Reagan. Cruz's bill also requires that all aircraft operating in the same airspace as ADSB Out must use ADSB In. The FAA has placed permanent restrictions on helicopters that are not essential around Reagan Airport to reduce mixed helicopter-passenger jet traffic. This includes closing a key route. In April, the FAA announced that it would take action to prevent helicopter and passenger plane collisions near Las Vegas' busy airport.

(source: Reuters)