NTSB chair slams House aviation bill as 'watered-down' after 67 deaths near Washington
Source: AP
Updated 9:52 PM EST, February 26, 2026
The head of the National Transportation Safety Board said Thursday its misleading for members of the House to say their package of aviation safety reforms would address the recommendations that her agency made in January to prevent another midair collision like the one last year near Washington, D.C., that killed 67 people.
NTSB Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy said the House bills watered-down requirements wouldnt do enough to prevent a future tragedy, and wouldnt be nearly as effective as a Senate bill that came up just one vote short of passing in the House earlier this week. The full NTSB followed up Thursday afternoon with a formal letter to two key House committees, saying that they cant support the bill right now
We can have disagreements over policy all day. But when something is sold as these are the NTSB recommendations and that is not factually accurate, we have a problem with that. Because now youre using the NTSB and youre using people who lost loved ones in terrible tragedies, Homendy said. Youre using their pain to move your agenda forward.
The key concern of Homendy and the families of the people who died in the crash on Jan. 29, 2025, is that they believe all aircraft should be required to have key locator systems that the NTSB has been recommending since 2008, which would allow the pilots to know more precisely where the traffic around them is flying. The Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast Out systems that broadcast an aircrafts location are already required around busy airports. Its the ADS-B In systems that can receive data about the locations of other aircraft that isnt yet standard.
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