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Two bidders compete to be the project manager for a massive FAA US airspace overhaul

According to the top official of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, there are only two candidates who want to be the project manager for a multibillion-dollar effort to overhaul the air traffic control system in the United States.

FAA plans to select a winner for the contract by the end October. Sources said that multiple companies would have applied earlier in the process.

Air traffic control systems in the United States are aging and suffer from frequent technology failures. Sean Duffy, Transportation Secretary, has stated that the FAA was forced to use eBay at times in order to obtain spare parts. In a government report published last year, 51 out of 138 air traffic systems were deemed unsustainable.

Congress approved in July a plan worth $12.5 billion to upgrade the nation's outdated air traffic control system and increase controller hiring, following years of complaints about airport congestion and delays. Duffy said that he will push Congress to provide an additional $19 million for air traffic reform.

Peraton, owned by Veritas Capital and a company specializing in national security, has confirmed that it has submitted a bid for the management of this project. Parsons, an IT company that specializes in the national security market and global infrastructure, confirmed Wednesday that it had bid against IBM.

Donald Trump, the President of the United States, said in April that there are five companies who could perform the work. He suggested Raytheon Technologies or IBM as possible candidates.

A senior source stated that he wasn't surprised by the fact that two companies applied, given that it is difficult to reform an air traffic control system that includes more than 100 computer systems and older equipment. He added that the FAA is capable of completing the project, and it has the support from the industry.

On Sunday, bids were due for the "prime integrater" position, which is the largest overhaul ever of the U.S. Air Traffic Control Infrastructure. The integrator's role will be to manage the project. Parsons announced its interest to the FAA in June, even though it was asked for proposals by August.

In an interview conducted on the sidelines the U.N. Aviation Agency's triennial meeting in Montreal, FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford stated that "I believe we have two very good integrators."

Bedford said that some of the FAA's larger prime contractors decided to not partner with the FAA. They just thought they would go with the winner.

Bedford continued, "We're running a process and we'll bring it up with Secretary Duffy and President Trump." "We'll present them with all the information and let them choose the option that they are most comfortable with," Bedford said.

Sources say that the Trump administration is faced with the challenge of overhauling a complex system in four years, at a time the FAA is losing experienced personnel.

Duffy stated in a telephone interview that "we need to rebuild a system with true redundant components which can be tested." "We cannot have lines that go down ..... We need to use new software in order to make our airspace more efficient."

The flight operations at two Dallas airports have returned to normal after a telecommunications failure caused more than 2,000 disruptions. Reporting by Allison Lampert, in Montreal; and David Shepardson, in Washington. Editing by Chris Sanders & Aurora Ellis.

(source: Reuters)