Saturday, February 13, 2010

Is NextGen Dead?

Maybe Not
Those who know me well and those who follow this blog know that I have been a long-time advocate of moving the Air Traffic Control away from the operational control of the FAA and making it an independent self-sustaining organization.  Today our large complicated and antiquated ATC system is dependent on the whims of Congress and the Administration.  Four of more times Congress has failed to approve a budget for the FAA.  In the State of the Union address the President proposed a budget freeze, which I initially thought NextGen, the long overdue remaking of ATC, would be pushed even further into eternity.  However, just two weeks later the White House asked Congress for a $1.14 billion budget in Fiscal Year 2011 for NextGen, a 31-percent increase from the FY 2010 figure.  There will be a lot of debate on the budget so stay tuned.

My friend Bob Poole recently asked me to review and comment on an article he has written on NextGen that will be published in the March issue of Professional Pilot magazine.  Bob is the founder of the Reason Foundation, a public policy think tank, and has for many years advised Administration officials of both parties on transpiration issues, especially ATC and airport security

Bob makes the case for the many advantages of NextGen.  But he also lays out the complications of making it happen.  The technology is here today and in a perfect world every airplane could fly the best route and takeoff on and land on time.  Fuel burns and carbon emission would be reduced.  No one disagrees on these points, but on funding NextGen there is little agreement.  Understandably the airlines and business aviation is not willing to pay for the expensive new equipment that is necessary to fly in a NextGen system until they are assured that NextGen will be in place on a date certain.  Too often the aviation community has made the investment and seen some new FAA driven technology fail to be developed or pushed far into the future.

Over ten years ago Canada “depoliticized” their ATC system, which was a part of Transport Canada, the equivalent of our Department of Transportation. Unshackled from their government except for safety regulation, the independent and not-for-profit NavCanada jumped far ahead of the United States in ATC service and technology – not quite NextGen, but they are moving rapidly in that direction.

Is it possible that the debate over the budget freeze could finally push the unshackling of the U.S. ATC system forward and create for our country what every other non-third world nation has?  An ATC system that pays for itself and operates as any high tech business should.

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