Boeing has 90 days to develop a plan to address its quality control issues following a history of problems with its 737 Max line, Federal Aviation Administration chief Michael Whitaker said Wednesday.
09.02.2024 - 17:14 / travelweekly.com / Airlines
The Senate Commerce, Science & Transportation Committee has approved a five-year FAA reauthorization bill, ending a long delay.
The measure passed by unanimous consent and will next move to a vote by the full Senate.
The House passed its version of FAA reauthorization in June ahead of an initial deadline of Sept. 30 for the bill to be passed and signed by President Biden. But since October the FAA has been operating on short-term funding authorizations, the most recent of which lasts through March.
The Senate's wide-ranging reauthorization bill contains measures designed to increase aviation safety, address the shortage of air traffic controllers, introduce some consumer protections, increase air travel accessibility and modernize airports.
One safety measure would increase the required retention time for cockpit recordings to 25 hours, up from two hours. That change, which has also been proposed by the FAA, comes after the Jan. 5 Alaska Airlines flight in which the exit door plug blew out: The two-hour retention time wasn't sufficient for National Transportation Safety Board investigators to access the cockpit recording.
Also on the safety front, the bill would enable the FAA to hire more aircraft manufacturing safety inspectors annually.
On the consumer front, the bill would require airlines to make refunds available for domestic flights that are delayed more than three hours and international flights that are delayed more than six hours. It would forbid airlines from charging fees for families to sit together. It would mandate airlines to accept vouchers and flight credits for at least five years. And it would require airlines to display certain ancillary fees, such a bag fees, prior to booking.
Among the air travel accessibility measures in the bill is one that requires training for airline personnel on safely storing wheelchairs in hopes of reducing the number of damaged wheelchairs.
For airports, the bill would increase annual Airport Improvement Program funding over the next five year, from $3.35 billion to $4 billion.
And on the air traffic control front, the bill proposes the creation of an FAA training academy.
The Senate committee's long-delayed movement on FAA reauthorization Thursday drew praise from various lobbying organizations, along with calls for quick passage by the full Senate and quick action for a final bill by a joint conference committee.
"It's critical that the House and Senate move quickly to conference their bills and send a final package to the president's desk," said U.S. Travel Association executive vice president of public affairs and policy Tori Emerson Barnes.
ASTA called for the Senate to add a series of travel advisor-friendly
Boeing has 90 days to develop a plan to address its quality control issues following a history of problems with its 737 Max line, Federal Aviation Administration chief Michael Whitaker said Wednesday.
Editor's note: This post has been updated with additional information. It was originally published on Feb. 27, 2024.
The American Society of Travel Advisors (ASTA) is calling on travel agencies and advisors to contact their respective members of Congress to make their case as to why they shouldn't be on the hook for issuing airline refunds to clients."For the first time since 2018, Congress is reevaluating federal aviation policy through the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) reauthorization process. This is our opportunity to influence sound policy that recognizes the value of the travel advisor in the greater travel industry," the organization states. "Travel agencies sell 40 percent of all air tickets, and travel agencies are considered ticket agents under both federal statute and government regulations."ASTA points out that the House version of the FAA Reauthorization bill contains clear language that travel agencies are not responsible for providing airline refunds if they are no longer in possession of the client’s funds. However, the provision was left out of the bill passed by the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation earlier this month.ASTA is hoping to change that and is encouraging advisors to email their members of Congress—one House Representative and two Senators—through its grassroots portal.
Baggage fees alone were worth an estimated $33.3 billion to airlines last year.
Carol Scribner and her late husband Larry were among the first to pay $125,000 each for a seat on the upcoming flight into the edge of space offered by the company Space Perspective. For the couple, there was practically nowhere else to go as voracious travelers who had been to 170 countries. Now that flight seems closer to reality: with the completion of the test capsule just announced, the company is aiming to begin commercial flights in 2025.
Boeing’s efforts to improve its safety culture have been insufficient, a Federal Aviation Administration expert panel reported Monday.
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