Natca press release



Download 39 Kb.
Date11.02.2018
Size39 Kb.
#40767
NATCA DAILY PRESS CLIPPINGS
Monday-Tuesday, January 9-10, 2017

NATCA PRESS RELEASE

NATCA Statement On the Shooting at Fort Lauderdale Airport
NATCA PRESS RELEASE

NATCA Statement on Selection of Sen. Thune for Second Term as Commerce Committee Chairman
FAA PRESS RELEASE

FAA issues general aviation medical rule
AOPA

AOPA Statement On The Release Of The Final Third Class Medical Reform Rule And Effective Date
KKCO-TV COLORADO

Sheriff: Colorado Springs couple rescued in Garfield Co. plane crash
AVWEB

Citation CVR Recovered
9 NEWS DENVER

Hundreds of aircraft struck by lasers, few prosecutions
THE HILL

Norwegian Air case will define the president’s aviation legacy
SPEECH BY FAA ADMINISTRATOR MICHAEL HUERTA

"Drones: A Story of Revolution and Evolution"
NIAGARA ADVANCE.CA

Report gives details prior to plane crash
WTOP WASHINGTON

FAA drops plan to change flight patterns in Washington region
GOVEXEC.COM

Oversight Chairman Promises Sweeping Changes to Feds’ Retirement, Job Security
NATCA DAILY PRESS CLIPPINGS
Wednesday, January 11, 2017

POLITICO

Chao punts on FAA spinoff


POLITICO

Chao sees benefits, concerns on drones


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Chao Wants Private Investment to Boost Transportation


USA TODAY
Flying drones, self-driving cars will be debated by Congress this year


AVWEB

FAA Issues New GA Medical Rule

RICHFIELD PATCH (MINNESOTA)

FAA to Conduct Flight Checks Overnight at MSP Airport
FLYING MAGAZINE

FAA Adopts Third-Class Medical Reform Rule
KOMO NEWS.COM (SEATTLE)

Burien neighbors ready to sue FAA over flight pattern change at Sea-Tac Airport
AOPA.ORG

ADS-B: Early Adopters Praise ADS-B Traffic, Weather

POLITICO: Chao punts on FAA spinoff
Elaine Chao wouldn't say whether she supports spinning air traffic control away from the FAA and putting it in a new nonprofit entity, as proposed by House Transportation Chairman Bill Shuster last year.
Asked about the proposal by Sen. Bill Nelson, who opposes it, Chao replied, “I’d like to get confirmed first,” drawing laughter throughout the hearing room. Senators didn’t press her further.
“Obviously this is an issue of great importance,” she went on. “It’s a huge issue that needs to have a national consensus. For that national consensus to occur, there needs to be a dialogue. The administration has not made a decision on this point.”
In her opening remarks, she also noted that “air traffic operational efficiency, which is so important to America’s competitiveness, needs to be continually improved,” and said she “look[s] forward to working with this Committee on the FAA’s transition to 21st century air traffic control technologies known as NextGen.”
POLITICO: Chao sees benefits, concerns on drones
Transportation secretary-designate Elaine Chao expressed some reservations about drones at her confirmation hearing today.
“There are those who see the benefits of commercializing [drones] for various uses,” Chao said. “They are transforming the way we work and do commerce.” At the same time, Chao said, “there are others with concerns” about security.
Given the “vast implications” of DOT’s policy on drones, “there needs to be a national consensus,” she said.
She went on to say that a “state-by-state patchwork” of drone regulations was “a concern.”
Sen. Tammy Duckworth, new to the Senate and to the Commerce Committee, noted her own concerns about drones.
"I was flying not too far from here," said the former Army helicopter pilot, and a drone “missed my propeller by about two feet and scared the living heck out of me." Duckworth added pointedly that the drone "should not have been there.”

NATCA DAILY PRESS CLIPPINGS
Thursday, January 12, 2017

NATCA PRESS RELEASE


NATCA Statement On Re-Selection of Rep. DeFazio As Ranking Member
POPULAR MECHANICS

How Your World Works – Podcast episode focuses on ATC and features interview with JFK FacRep Steve Abraham
TRANSPORTATION TRADES DEPARTMENT (TTD)

Edward Wytkind Appointed to DOT's Advisory Committee on Automation in Transportation


AVIATION WEEK

Watch: Can Augmented Reality Help Helicopter Pilots Stay Safe?
AIR TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT.NET

Weather Eye
KTVA-TV ALASKA

Workforce Wednesday: Air Traffic Controllers
NATCA DAILY PRESS CLIPPINGS


Friday, January 13, 2017

 

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL



Space-Based Flight Tracking Comes Closer With Launch of Satellites

 

PRESS RELEASE



ALPA News: U.S. Aviation Workers Sue Obama Administration to Reverse DOT’s Norwegian Air International Decision

 

USA TODAY



Unions appeal DOT approval of Norwegian Air

 

TRANSPORTATION TRADES DEPARTMENT



Honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Life, Work and Legacy 

 

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS



Report: FAA not prepared for major air traffic outages

 

AVWEB



United To Retire Its 747 Fleet

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES



Democrats and Allies Wage Fight to Derail Labor Secretary Pick

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Space-Based Flight Tracking Comes Closer With Launch of Satellites

 

By SUSAN CAREY and ANDY PASZTOR



 

A cluster of satellites set to launch in the coming days could move the aviation industry closer to overhauling the way air-traffic controllers track planes around the world.

For decades, controllers have used ground-based radar to direct planes over land. More recently, they have been finding aircraft locations via global positioning satellites, or GPS, but they can do so only over land or near the shore. They have had no real-time ability to track planes in flight over oceans, which cover 71% of the planet, or over remote polar regions.

 

A new satellite-based joint-venture called Aireon LLC would give controllers full visibility by next year, if all goes according to plan, providing real-time flight information from planes over both water and land.



 

The first 10 satellites are due to launch into orbit on Saturday, barring any last-minute hurdles. The launch has been delayed since September, when a booster explosion during ground-testing temporarily halted flights. The launch contractor, Elon Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corp., or SpaceX, has the green light to lift off from a launch site near Lompoc, Calif.

 

Aireon dates back to 2011, when Iridium Communications, Inc., a McLean, Va., telecommunications-satellite operator, formed a consortium with foreign air-navigation agencies to find a way to track global air traffic from space. The idea was to piggyback the air-traffic control technology onto Iridium’s replacement constellation of telecom satellites.



 

Proponents say Aireon’s technology would give pilots greater flexibility to change routes, avoid turbulence and cut flight times. It would help airlines save fuel and reduce greenhouse-gas emissions. And it would allow planes routinely to fly within 15 miles of each other over water, compared with about 80 miles of separation under current rules—leading to more traffic in the air on any given route.

 

The U.S., with the busiest airspace, hasn’t signed on yet with Aireon as either an investor or customer. Budget constraints and reluctance by some airlines to invest in additional equipment have prompted an advisory committee of the Federal Aviation Administration to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of an Aireon contract compared with upgrades of existing ground-based services. Preliminary results are expected next month; a decision isn’t likely until later this year.



 

Until now, the FAA has been focused on rolling out advances of its new land-based satellite surveillance system, which cost $2.7 billion and isn’t expected to be fully operable until at least 2020. U.S. controllers, among others, have said they are concerned that the U.S. could cede its leadership role to countries that become early Aireon adopters. The FAA could wait until “10 years from now, after everyone has started using it,” worries Iridium CEO Matt Desch.

 

The Aireon technology has gained currency in the almost three years since the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. That mysterious event helped persuade global authorities to adopt international aircraft-tracking rules and look for better ways to pinpoint the location of downed planes.



 

Today, U.S. controllers in Oakland, Calif., are responsible for a swath of the Pacific Ocean from the West Coast to the Philippines. Controllers in Canada and Great Britain share responsibility for busy North Atlantic routes with counterparts in New York and on Portugal’s Azores Islands. Without full visibility, these and other “oceanic” controllers have to funnel planes onto designated aerial highways, keeping them well separated.

 

“I’m very excited about how this is going to change my job,” said Neil Collins, a 17-year Canadian controller in Gander, Newfoundland, who helps direct airplanes over the North Atlantic. “We will know exactly where [the planes] are.”



 

Currently, if a plane deviates from its flight plan, controllers must extrapolate where it is, he said. Most aircraft emit position reports only every 15 minutes and while moving at about 500 miles an hour.

 

The technology also could obviate the need for developing countries to build or maintain conventional land-based tracking systems. “This would be very similar to the transformative impact of wireless in developing nations,” says John Crichton, Aireon’s chairman.



 

A study last summer by the Flight Safety Foundation, an independent, nonprofit, international aviation-safety organization, found such satellite-based navigation “should be an overall substantial improvement to the global aviation safety net.”

 

The venture’s success depends on a number of factors. The planned total of 66 Iridium satellites—including the 10 set to launch Saturday plus nine orbiting spares to provide full coverage of the Earth—must be successfully launched and put in position by mid-2018. Once they all are orbiting 485 miles above the planet, the Aireon system needs to be tested and validated.



 

Airlines must install new equipment on their planes to take advantage of the technology. National air-traffic control agencies will need to sign up and pay for the service: The price will depend on the volume of air traffic crossing their airspace, whether the planes are over land or water, and whether controllers will use the system as a primary tool or backup. Normally the agencies defray their expenses by charging airlines and other airspace users.



 

Aireon, made up of Iridium and air-traffic organizations in Canada, Ireland, Denmark and Italy—all equity stakeholders—said it already has contracts with air-navigation providers in the U.K., Singapore, South Africa and Iceland, among others. Agencies in Australia, New Zealand, Russia and Germany are assessing the potential for their skies.

Download 39 Kb.

Share with your friends:




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page