This article urges immediate, practical action to shore up U.S. aviation safety as summer travel ramps up, calls for full adoption of surface-and-air ADS-B In technology, demands sustained investment in air traffic control and staffing, and argues Congress should combine the best elements of recent bills rather than accept half-measures.
Millions will fly this summer expecting the system to protect them, and that expectation is not misplaced. Pilots, controllers and ground crews build a fortress of layered safety every day. But layers fray when traffic grows, systems age and the margin for error narrows.
Pilots see pressure points passengers never notice: crowded airspace, shifting weather, runway congestion and technology that doesn’t always help when it matters. We have the authority to delay or divert when safety demands it, and we use it. Still, recent incidents make it clear the overall system is feeling the strain.
‘WARNING SIGNS WERE ALL THERE’ BEFORE DEADLY DC MID-AIR CRASH, FORMER AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLER SAYS
The last 15 months brought a string of alarming events: a fatal midair collision near Washington, a deadly runway collision at LaGuardia and a parade of near misses. Those incidents are not isolated headlines; they’re symptoms of a system pushed toward its limits. Controller staffing shortfalls and aging equipment make it harder to get ahead of problems.
Fixing this isn’t about drama, it’s about discipline and funding. We need steady investment in modern air traffic control tech, not one-off patches. Congress took a first step on modernization, but one-time spending won’t solve a structural problem that gets worse every year the status quo stands.
Equipping pilots matters just as much as upgrading towers. Right now, commercial planes in busy corridors broadcast position data with ADS-B Out, but many cockpits lack comprehensive ADS-B In, the system that actually gives pilots a usable, real-time picture of nearby traffic. That patchwork leaves gaps where collisions can begin to form.
FOOTAGE SHOWS MOMENTS BEFORE FRONTIER AIRLINES JET STRUCK PERSON ON DENVER AIRPORT RUNWAY
Any final safety bill should require a full ADS-B In safety suite so crews get clear, timely visual and audible alerts both in the air and on the surface. Narrow fixes that only help at certain altitudes or ignore taxiways won’t cut it. Pilots need consistent, reliable tools across the busiest airspace and on active airport surfaces.
Another problem is exemptions. Military and some government aircraft frequently operate in civilian skies without broadcasting the same data as commercial flights. That inconsistency creates dangerous blind spots. A safer system requires fewer carve-outs and a firm timeline for compliance, not a patchwork of exceptions that leave holes in the safety net.
The House-passed ALERT Act moved the conversation forward, but it doesn’t deliver the comprehensive protection that the ROTOR Act envisions. Republicans should push for a commonsense standard: all aircraft in the busiest, most complex airspace must use compatible, real-time tracking and alerting. We should combine the strongest parts of both proposals into one effective law.
Practical pilots’ perspective matters here because we see the pressure every shift. Proven technology exists to reduce risk now, and waiting for perfection is not an acceptable answer when lives are on the line. Lawmakers must fund modernization, mandate integrated cockpit tools and tighten exemptions so the system can actually do what passengers expect.
Flying remains one of the safest modes of travel because layers of protection work together, but those layers need reinforcement. Congress has an opportunity this summer to strengthen the system by listening to pilots and putting durable fixes in place. Half-measures will only leave more warning lights on the dashboard.
