FAA's
NextGen Making Progress, Airline Pilots Union Asserts
- February 15, 2017, 9:05 AM
United
pilots explained the benefits of NextGen data communications at Washington
Dulles airport in September. (Photo: Bill Carey)
The multibillion-dollar program to modernize the U.S. air
traffic control system is making progress, the president of the largest airline
pilots union asserted on February 14, days after President Donald Trump in a meeting
with airline and airport executives described the ATC system
as obsolete and said the government is “using the wrong type of equipment” for
the modernization.
Asked about the Federal Aviation Administration’s NextGen program
during a meeting with reporters, Air Line Pilots Association (Alpa) president
Tim Canoll defended the effort. A Delta Air Lines captain and former Navy
pilot, Canoll serves on the NextGen Advisory Committee (NAC), an
industry-government group formed by advisory organization RTCA in
2010 to advise the FAA on the modernization.
“In today’s day and age we need to shift our thinking on NextGen as
instead of [being] an event, it’s more a description of an evolutionary process
for our air traffic system,” said Canoll. “I believe we have made progress in
the current NextGen efforts. If you look at the increase in capability at our
major airports due to NextGen initiatives, whether it be the metroplex redesign
at some of our major airports, the implementation at a few of our major
airports of recat [wake turbulence recategorization]—they’ve all increased
capacity at the airports.”
Canoll also commended the program initiative to implement
“performance-based” procedures, including precise required navigation
performance (RNP) flight paths, to and from airports. “NextGen has worked to
put a required navigation procedure or an RNP at the end of every
runway in the United States, and it has greatly enhanced the ability for my
members to fly a precision approach to a runway that previously didn’t have
it,” he said. “It’s a complex process; it’s not something you can turn on
overnight.”
Transcripts of the February 9 meeting of executives also quoted Trump
as remarking that the FAA might be better managed by a pilot. Asked
if he has confidence in the current administrator Michael Huerta, who is not a
pilot, Canoll affirmed that he does. “Yes, I am very confident. I think he’s
done a great job,” Canoll said. Huerta has demonstrated an ability to “navigate
some very tricky and difficult issues” while maintaining the agency’s focus on
safety. “They haven’t lost sight that safety is their first objective,” he
added.
Following the White House meeting, the FAA issued a statement
explaining that it has spent $7.5 billion in congressionally appropriated funds
on NextGen over the past seven years, an effort that thus far has produced $2.7
billion in savings for airlines and passengers and is expected to generate $160
billion in benefits through 2030. But Rep. Bill Schuster (R-Pa.), chairman of
the House Transportation Committee, has charged that despite the spending
“significant benefits have yet to materialize.” Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.) echoed
that sentiment on January 11 during the confirmation
hearing for Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao when he noted
concern that the “benefits of NextGen have not been realized.”
Schuster is expected to revive legislation he introduced last year to
create a new entity separate of the FAA to manage the ATC system.
Canoll said Alpa would be supportive of a new ATC organization
as long as it is a non-profit entity that includes system operators—controllers
and pilots—in its governance. The pilots’ union also contends that the
organization should derive its funding from the users of the airspace system
rather than federal appropriations, as is the case with the FAA.
“It needs to be constructed in a way that it will be able to provide
long-term stable funding. Along those lines, the funding has to be done in a
fair and equitable way, and our offer is that the most fair and equitable way
to do it is to base the fee structure on usage. No one gets a free pass;
everyone has to pay their part,” Canoll said.
The new entity must also maintain the current workplace rights and
conditions negotiated by the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, with
which Alpa works closely, and other FAA employee unions, Canoll said.
“Last and certainly not least, [with] any new non-governmental entity, we’re
not going to be able to tolerate it diminishing or removing any of the
currently enjoyed collective bargaining rights of the FAA employees
today,” he said. “We don’t think this should be used as a tool to circumvent
organized labor.”
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