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US Senate Committee votes to advance Aviation Safety Bill

The U.S. Senate Commerce Committee voted unanimously on Tuesday to approve aviation legislation following a deadly January crash involving a regional American Airlines jet and an Army helicopter which killed 67 people.

The bill mandates that aircraft operators equip their fleets by 2031 with ADS-B, an advanced aircraft-tracking system. It also includes other safety reforms such as enhancing oversight of mixed jet-and-helicopter traffic and flight paths near commercial service airports. The Army Black Hawk involved in the fatal crash did not use ADS-B.

Ted Cruz, the chair of the Senate Commerce Committee, said that this bill "closes an unsafe loophole which allowed military aircraft to fly in our skies without being able to communicate their location quickly and accurately with other aviators as commercial aircraft do."

The bill would mandate the use ADS-B technology by all civilian aircraft and military helicopters in close proximity to civilian aircraft.

ADS-B, or automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast, is an advanced surveillance technology that transmits an aircraft's location.

Both Democrats and Republicans, as well as Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, have questioned the Federal Aviation Administration's failure to take action for years in response to close calls with military helicopters near Washington Reagan National Airport. (Reporting and Editing by Franklin Paul and William Maclean, with David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)