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Ted Cruz calls on Trump to support a higher retirement age for pilots. Worker groups are against.

The Republican Chair of the Senate Commerce Committee has urged Donald Trump to support the international efforts by a trade group for airlines to raise the mandatory retirement age of pilots to 67. This move is opposed by the Air Line Pilots Association who say it could increase the risk to travel.

In a letter, first reported on Sunday, Senator Ted Cruz asked Trump to back efforts during this week's Montreal opening of the United Nations aviation conference.

Cruz, the Senate committee leader overseeing aviation, said that the United States should be a leader on the global stage by raising or abolishing the age of retirement for pilots. Cruz added that the current policy "forces thousands of highly-qualified and experienced pilots to retire early every year."

Congress has rejected the push for raising the mandatory retirement age of airline pilots to 67 years old from 65. Some lawmakers rejected the proposal to raise the retirement age, citing a Federal Aviation Administration statement that called for an analysis of safety and scientific factors before making a decision.

Many countries, including the United States apply the same rule to domestic flights.

The White House has not yet commented.

When delegates meet for their triennial meeting, which begins on Tuesday, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) will examine a proposal by an airline industry group to raise the retirement age of pilots globally to 67.

The U.S. delegation includes Sean Duffy, Secretary of Transportation for the United States and Bryan Bedford, chief of the Federal Aviation Administration.

The International Air Transport Association, which represents around 350 airlines, said that raising the limit by 2 years could be done without affecting aviation safety.

Canada, Australia Brazil, New Zealand and the United Kingdom have all endorsed the IATA proposal, but the United States is yet to take a stand. In July, Senate majority leader John Thune and Republican Senator Marsha blackburn, as well as Democratic Senator Mark Kelly, called for raising the retirement age from 65 to 67.

Willie Walsh of IATA, former CEO at British Airways, said that the age for pilot retirement has changed over time. It was 55 years ago, then 60, and finally 65.

Jason Ambrosi is the president of the Air Line Pilots Association. He said that the group opposes any changes to the pilot retirement age. The group cited studies which found increased health risks as well as a decline in cognition skills with increasing age.

"The United States are the world leader in aviation safety and we should resist attempts to arbitrarily change the regulatory framework which has helped us achieve our record." The group stated that Congress had rejected a change in the age of pilot retirement just last year.

The ICAO, based in Montreal, sets standards for everything from markings on runways to crash investigation. Its 193 members then translate these into regulations. (Reporting and editing by David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)