Air traffic control ‘wish list’ tops $30B

Lawmakers are talking about an estimated billion wish list circulating on Capitol Hill to overhaul the nation s aging air traffic control system as the ink still dries on the reconciliation law s billion down payment sources familiar with discussions noted That billion figure is higher than Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy s June estimate of at least billion The wish list the phrase used by one source estimate is likely unattainable unless the Federal Aviation Administration convinces lawmakers it can manage that much funding the sources announced The sources including one former staffer with long experience of transportation on the Hill added that appropriating more on top of the reconciliation law s billion to reach even billion could be challenging unless Congress passes another reconciliation or supplemental bill President Donald Trump and Duffy have promised sweeping air traffic control overhauls since the January mid-air collision between an American Airlines flight and Army Blackhawk helicopter at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport claiming lives as well as other aviation mishaps and outages of air traffic control systems The National Transportation Safety Board is still scrutinizing but the crash raised questions about whether the airport s outdated air traffic control systems common among airports across the country had a role The Administration Accountability Office broadcasted in September that the FAA had uncovered that of its systems were unsustainable or potentially unsustainable Trump and Duffy called on Congress last week at a Cabinet meeting to provide more funding for the air traffic control project Duffy announced that he intends to find one company to manage the overhaul as the FAA is not qualified to manage this kind of a project What the money is going to allow us to do is move from copper to fiber lines all over the country We think we can do that in a year and a half to two years Duffy stated We have a radar that dates back to the s particular of it from the s and s We get brand new radar across the country as well Duffy in May published a framework for the overhauls that includes initiatives to transition to updated telecommunications networks upgrade radio equipment replace radar systems and address the air traffic control facilities backlog The overview also calls on Congress to provide an immediate infusion of funding for the plan Valerie Yurk CQ-Roll Call