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US Senators to announce agreement on Aviation Safety Legislation

Sources say that two U.S. Senators will announce on Thursday a deal regarding aviation safety legislation. This comes after the January fatal collision between an American Airlines regional plane and an Army helicopter, which killed 67 people.

Senate Commerce Committee Chair Ted Cruz, a Republican and Maria Cantwell the top Democrat on the panel, are close to a bipartisan deal regarding legislation requiring aircraft owners to equip their fleets by 2031 with advanced aircraft-tracking technologies known as ADS-B and other safety reforms.

The agreement will pave the way for the bipartisan vote of the committee to take place next week. The U.S. House of Representatives has not yet decided when to take up the bill.

The bill would mandate the use ADS-B on all civilian aircraft and military helicopters flying near civilian planes. The helicopter that was involved in the accident did not use ADS-B when it collided with the plane near Reagan Washington National Airport on January 28th.

The exemptions to ADS-B for military helicopters would be eliminated, including those used by federal officials and training, proficiency, or flight flights.

Bill is expected to also require comprehensive airport safety reviews nationwide, not only at Reagan. It will evaluate the risks posed by military aircraft, drones and emergency first responders as well as powered lift operations for commercial flights.

Sean Duffy, Transportation Secretary and members of both parties in Congress, has questioned the Federal Aviation Administration's failure to take action for many years regarding close calls with military helicopters near Reagan.

The bill requires the Army Inspector General's Office, which had previously declined to conduct a safety audit, to now initiate one. It also mandates that the FAA and military services sign binding memorandums to exchange aviation safety data from military accident reporting systems.

After a close call, the FAA banned the Army's helicopters from flying around the Pentagon in May. (Reporting and editing by Nick Zieminski; David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)