According to written testimony set to be presented before a U.S. Senate panel on Thursday, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) plans to hire 2,000 air traffic controller trainees this year while reinforcing its heightened oversight of Boeing. The agency's goal is to address ongoing staffing shortages, which have arguably contributed to a rash of recent aviation safety incidents.
The FAA currently faces a significant shortfall of air traffic controllers, with numbers falling approximately 3,500 below its staffing goals. The agency now has about 10 percent fewer controllers than it did in 2012, a gap that has contributed to widespread flight delays and forced many controllers to work six-day weeks and mandatory overtime.
In written remarks obtained by Reuters, Acting FAA Administrator Chris Rocheleau also announced the formation of a specialized panel designed to "identify additional hazard areas involving helicopter and fixed-wing interactions." The panel’s creation follows a tragic January 29 accident in which an Army helicopter collided with an American Airlines regional jet near Washington, D.C.’s Reagan Washington National Airport, resulting in 67 fatalities.
In response, the FAA has implemented permanent restrictions on passenger flights operating in close proximity to helicopters at the airport. Additionally, the agency is evaluating air traffic procedures at other major airports after the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) issued urgent safety recommendations earlier this month.
Rocheleau emphasized the FAA's commitment to enhancing safety measures, stating, "We have to identify trends, we have to get smarter about how we use data, and when we put corrective actions in place, we must execute them."
Meanwhile, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is preparing to request tens of billions of dollars from Congress to modernize outdated FAA infrastructure, improve facilities and bolster air traffic controller hiring efforts.
Nick Calio, CEO and President of aviation industry group Airlines for America (A4A), told local radio station WMAL-AM in a recent interview, “We're so pleased about Secretary Duffy and President Trump and what they're doing because we're going to try to do a few things very quickly—increase our air traffic control hiring pipeline to mitigate the shortage, modernizing the aging systems and technologies that we have, and ensuring the full funding of the FAA facilities and equipment budget.”
Beyond addressing air traffic controller staffing shortages, the FAA is intensifying its regulatory oversight of major aircraft manufacturer Boeing. Rocheleau stated that the agency’s scrutiny "extends to ongoing monitoring of Boeing's manufacturing practices, maintenance procedures, and software updates."
The extension of FAA’s increased supervision comes as Boeing faces intense public scrutiny following a string of accidents and safety concerns that have occurred in recent years. Earlier this month, Duffy remarked that the aerospace company had "lost the public's trust."
In response to a mid-air emergency involving an Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 in January 2024, former FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker implemented a cap limiting Boeing's monthly aircraft production to 38 planes. That restriction remains in effect.
Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg is scheduled to testify before the Senate Commerce Committee next week. The company has yet to comment on Rocheleau's testimony.
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