US Army and FAA in the hot seat publicly for the first time since January’s fatal midair collision
Family members of some of the 67 people killed in January’s midair collision in Washington listened to the US Army and Federal Aviation Administration take ...
Loved ones of the people killed in January’s midair collision between an American Airlines flight and a Black Hawk helicopter ...
The head of the Federal Aviation Administration has told Congress that the agency must do more to ensure flying remains safe ...
A Senate hearing following the midair collision over the Potomac that killed 67 people exposed major oversight failures and ...
Thursday, the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation’s Subcommittee on Aviation, Space, and Innovation ...
The Army and FAA continued to allow flights to operate near Washington, D.C with communication turned off after a midair ...
Sitting administrator Chris Rocheleau acknowledges that the Federal Aviation Administration missed alarming data trends in ...
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Kansas Senator Jerry Moran led a subcommittee hearing Thursday to look at preliminary ...
The NTSB’s investigation into the incident is ongoing, but a preliminary report highlighted over 15,000 close calls between helicopters and commercial aircraft near Ronald Reagan National Airport in ...
The National Transportation Safety Board has released their investigation into the Rushville school bus crash that left five ...
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