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Plan to privatize air traffic control hits turbulence

FAA air traffic controllers work in the Dulles International Airport tower in Sterling, Va., last year. A plan to privatize air traffic control operations faces long odds in the House and the Senate.
Supporters remain upbeat

WASHINGTON — A plan to privatize the nation’s air traffic control operations has hit turbulence in the House.

The concept of splitting off air traffic control from the Federal Aviation Administration faces even longer odds in the Senate, but supporters were counting on backing from the president and House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., to move the legislation forward and keep prospects for privatization alive.

The bill to extend federal aviation programs was expected to come to a vote in the House as early as this week. But leadership has not yet scheduled a vote.

“I think it’s on life-support personally,” said Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla.

The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Bill Shuster, R-Pa., disagrees. He said lawmakers are just now beginning to focus on the legislation and need some time to wade through the bill’s many provisions that would affect airports and the traveling public in their home districts.

“So now they’re sitting down and talking to us, trying to understand what they’re hearing, what they’re seeing, what’s true and what’s not true,” Shuster said. “It’s a process and the process always happens this way.”

Trump has endorsed privatization of air traffic control operations and the president’s budget calls Shuster’s bill “an excellent starting point.”

The vast majority of Democratic lawmakers oppose efforts to split off air traffic control operations from the FAA, a move that would affect some 14,000 controllers and thousands more technicians and engineers. The agency would remain responsible for regulating aviation safety.

Republicans can afford only about two dozen defections. Cole said the bill won’t get many votes from the Oklahoma delegation. He said the training center for air traffic control workers is in Oklahoma City and the center employees he has spoken with oppose privatization.

The union representing air traffic control workers has endorsed Shuster’s bill. But aviation groups that often rely on smaller airports for business travel, recreation, pilot training and crop spraying oppose it, fearing that the new company running air traffic control operations would favor the commercial airlines over other interests.

To secure support, Shuster exempted general aviation flights from the user fees established to fund the new, non-profit company that would oversee air tariff control operations. He also expanded the board to make it harder for any one interest group to dominate.

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