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FAA reports Denver air traffic lost communication briefly on Monday

The Federal Aviation Administration reported on Thursday that Denver's air traffic control had lost communication for two minutes on Sunday but managed to keep in touch through an emergency frequency.

Franklin McIntosh said that the FAA's deputy chief of air traffic control told a U.S. House of Representatives Hearing that the Denver Air Route Traffic Control Center had both main and backup frequency failures for two minutes, but then a controller could transmit to an aircraft to move to another secondary frequency.

He stated that there was no separation of aircraft during the outage.

"These outages are becoming more frequent, and that is a cause for concern," said California Democrat Representative Robert Garcia at an FAA hearing.

In a written announcement, the FAA stated that it is conducting an investigation after a part of its center in Denver experienced a communication loss around 1:50 pm when both transmitters covering a segment airspace failed.

The controllers were using another frequency to transmit instructions to the pilots. The FAA stated that the aircraft remained safely apart and had no impact on operations.

FAA communications failures are receiving urgent attention after a series of outages in the facility that oversees Newark's air traffic. Three incidents have shaken the public's confidence.

Last year, the FAA moved control of Newark airspace from New York City to Philadelphia to deal with staffing issues and congestion in the New York City area. The FAA has about 3,500 air-traffic controllers less than the targeted level.

The incidents are a reminder of the aging air traffic control system. They come just a week after Sean Duffy, the U.S. Transportation secretary, proposed spending billions to fix the network over the next 3 to 4 years. (Reporting and Editing by Bill Berkrot.)

(source: Reuters)