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After fatal collision, US agency will investigate FAA oversight in Washington airspace

After a collision on January 29, involving an American Airlines regional plane and an Army helicopter, which killed 67 people, a U.S. government agency announced that it would open an investigation into how the government manages airspace around Reagan Washington National Airport. The Office of Inspector General of the U.S. Transportation Department is auditing Federal Aviation Administration management of airspace, and the allowance of exemptions for the use of ADS-B by military aircraft. Senators, the National Transportation Safety Board, and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy have all criticized the FAA for not acting on reports of near miss incidents prior to the January collision.

Jennifer Homendy, Chair of the NTSB, said during a hearing on the collision that "every sign indicated there was a risk to safety." "You moved people around instead of accepting responsibility for the fact that everyone in FAA and the tower was saying there was an issue... Fix it. "Do better"

The FAA declined to comment immediately.

The accident, which took place just southeast of the Potomac River airport, was the worst U.S. aviation disaster in over 20 years.

After a close call on May 1, which forced two civilian aircraft to abort their landings, the FAA banned the Army in May from helicopter flights near the Pentagon. This week, the FAA said that the helicopter flights were still on hold despite the fact that the agency had announced it had signed a revised agreement with the Army in July.

In March, the NTSB reported that between 2021 and 2015, there have been 15,200 incidents of air separation near Reagan Washington National Airport involving commercial aircrafts and helicopters. This includes 85 close calls.

U.S. Senator Maria Cantwell applauded the audit and said it would "demand answers as to why the FAA overlooked more than 15,000 dangerous incidents involving helicopters, and allowed military aircraft fly without essential safety equipment in DCA’s congested space." DCA is the airport code of Reagan Washington National Airport.

Cantwell urged the Army Inspector General to "step up and launch" their own audit.

Last month, Senator Ted Cruz, along with several other Republican Senators, unveiled legislation that would require military helicopters to use ADS-B technology for tracking aircraft near civilian planes, and all civilian aircraft to use ADS-B. The helicopter that was involved in the January accident did not have ADS-B installed at the time. (Reporting and editing by Paul Simao; David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)