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US lawmakers and NTSB claim military helicopter proposals would make skies unsafe

Bipartisan senators, including the National Transportation Safety Board's chairperson, criticized the provisions in the annual defense bill released this week that dealt with military helicopter safety. Jennifer Homendy, Chair of the NTSB, said that the proposal would "make" the skies less safe. She called it an "unacceptable risk" to the flying public as well as to crews on commercial and military aircraft and residents in the area. This is a major, significant safety setback." The Washington aviation safety has been questioned after the collision on January 29, between an American Airlines regional plane and an Army Black Hawk helicopter, which killed 67 people. The Army Black Hawk helicopter crashed because it was above the maximum altitude and not broadcasting ADSB, an advanced aircraft tracking technology. The Federal Aviation Administration banned the Army's helicopter flights near the Pentagon after a close call last May. Homendy called it a "whitewash on safety" and said that she couldn't guarantee the?safety in Washington airspace should the proposal become law. "I couldn't assure anyone." She said, "I would not say that this guarantees safety."

Senate Commerce Committee chair Ted Cruz, a Republican along with Maria Cantwell and the top senators of an aviation subcommittee – Jerry Moran, and Tammy Duckworth – said in a statement that the proposal “protects the status quo” by allowing military aircraft flying in DC to continue to do so under outdated transmission rules. The bill does not specify what type of alerts should be broadcasted to commercial aviation aircraft nearby. Defense Department can waive this requirement, if they have completed a risk analysis and addressed the risks to commercial aircraft.

After the collision, senators announced bipartisan legislation. The bill would require aircraft owners to equip their fleets by the end of 2031 with ADS-B and other safety reforms.

The language of the defense bill is also opposed by the families of those who died in the collision on Jan. 29, 2009. The bill does not address the coordination and visibility failures that led to the tragedy. It also calls for "real and enforceable visibility standards" for all military aircraft flying near civilian traffic.

(source: Reuters)