FAA Investigating Another Air Traffic Control Outage Mon.
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Controllers handling aircraft headed into Newark Liberty International Airport lost radio frequencies for approximately 2 seconds, said the FAA
Secretary Sean Duffy said the new air traffic control system plan should take three or four years to roll out and will not jeopardize safety.
"We are seizing a once-in-a-generation opportunity to build a brand new, state-of-the-art air traffic control system," Duffy said in a Federal Aviation Administration news release. "Decades of ...
The Department of Transportation will build a “brand new air traffic control system” by 2028, Secretary Sean Duffy announced Thursday. “The FAA is going to undertake an initiative that has ...
The Federal Aviation Administration and Department of Transportation unveiled a plan to modernize the nation's air traffic control system on May 8. The plan includes building new facilities to ...
Delta CEO Ed Bastian said air traffic control systems in the U.S. are so antiquated it actually takes longer to fly certain routes today than it did in the 1950s. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy even compared the old equipment to something you’d see on the set of Apollo 13.
A radio failure Monday at the Denver Air Traffic Control Center temporarily affected communications, according to the FAA.