âYou want the brightest protecting yourself and your family. Thatâs what weâre going to do with the department,â Sean Duffy said.
Days after the deadliest U.S. aviation accident in more than two decades, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said on Feb. 2 that many Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) systems are outdated and need to be updated amid a lingering shortage of air traffic controllers.
Speaking with Shannon Bream of âFox News Sunday,â Duffy said that while Americaâs skies are still the worldâs safest, the FAAâs systems are in need of major improvements.
âWe have the safest skies in the whole world. Traveling by air is the safest mode of transportation,â Duffy said. âItâs not just air traffic controllers, but we do have technologies on airplanes to keep them separated. … This is the safest system.â
Duffy said his goal is to train a new generation of recruits in air traffic control.
âYou canât focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion when you try to hire air traffic controllers, you focus on the best and brightest,â the Transportation Secretary said.
âSome people may like to have this conversation around equity, but if itâs your pilots or if itâs your air traffic controllers, you want the best. You want the brightest protecting yourself and your family. Thatâs what weâre going to do with the department.â
On Jan. 30, Duffy wrote a post on the social platform X vowing to reform the FAA, one day after an Army Black Hawk helicopter collided with an American Airlines flight heading into Ronald Reagan National Airport. All 67 people aboard both aircraft died in the disaster, which happened on his first day on the job.
âI am in the process of developing an initial plan to fix the [FAA]. I hope to put it out very shortly,â Duffy said. âTomorrow, I am going to the FAA command center and recovery hangar. I will continue to keep the families and the public up to date with what we are doing in this situation and every other situation that falls under [the Transportation Department].â
Todd Inman, a member of the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates aviation incidents, said during a Saturday briefing that evening training flights typically include night vision goggles.
âWe do not know at this time if the night-vision goggles were actually being worn, nor what the setting may be,â he said. âFurther investigation should be able to let us know if that occurred and what factor it may play in the overall accident.â
According to data, an air traffic controller warned the helicopter of the commercial jet, a CRJ700, two minutes before the crash.
Officials said the planeâs cockpit recorder captured the pilotsâ âverbal reactionâ one second before impact.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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