Latest News

US Senate Committee to hear from NTSB Chair on fatal mid-air collision

The U.S. Senate Commerce Committee will hold a hearing on February 12 with the head of the National Transportation Safety Board. This is after the agency discovered that a series?of systemic failures by Federal Aviation Administration caused a devastating mid-air collision last year, which killed 67 people.

The collision of an American Airlines regional plane and an Army Black Hawk near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in January 2025 was the most deadly U.S. aviation accident since November 2001.

The panel will be hearing testimony from NTSB chair Jennifer Homendy, as lawmakers try to gain approval for a stalled air safety reform bill in the U.S. House.

Ted Cruz, the chair of the Senate Commerce Committee, said he believed the House would quickly adopt the bill that requires aircraft operators to equip their fleets by the year 2031 with the ADS-B system. This system also enhances the oversight of commercial helicopter and jet?traffic near airports and commercial flight routes.

Separately, on Tuesday the committee voted in favor of advancing?the nomination?of an American Airlines pilot and safety official for the NTSB. John DeLeeuw was appointed to replace Alvin Brown who was a Biden-appointed appointee and was fired by the White House last May.

The NTSB concluded that the FAA allowed helicopters to fly?close to airports without safeguards to separate aircraft from helicopters, and failed to act on data and recommendations to move helicopter traffic from the airport.

Homendy claimed that the air traffic control tower staff at the airport repeatedly tried to raise concerns, only to be "squashed" by management. Homendy said the airport's air traffic control tower personnel repeatedly sought to raise concerns only to be "squashed by management...

The board also pointed out that the Army's safety culture was lacking and the pilot failed to properly avoid the passenger plane. The Justice Department said in December that the federal government is responsible for the crash because of the actions taken by the Army helicopter pilot and FAA air traffic controller.

Last year, the National Transportation Safety Board reported that there have been more than 15,200 incidents between commercial aircraft and helicopters, with a lateral separation distance less than one nautical mile, and a vertical separation less than 400 feet. There were also 85 close calls during this period.

(source: Reuters)