House blocks sweeping air-safety push after Pentagon pushback

The House voted 264-133 to reject the ROTOR Act, narrowly failing to reach the two-thirds threshold, and signaling that the push for stronger aviation-safety rules may stall. The bill would have required ADS-B In location-tracking and FAA safety reviews at major airports, with a deadline for most aircraft to install the tech by 2031. Pentagon concerns over cost and national security, along with Republican resistance, helped kill the measure, while lawmakers consider a more limited, alternative ALERT Act that would mandate some ADS-B alerts but with carve-outs. The episode follows last year’s deadly midair collision over the Potomac and ongoing calls from the NTSB for stronger action.
- House Narrowly Rejects Air Safety Bill After Pentagon Opposition The New York Times
- House leaders tell concerned Republicans to let aviation safety bill fail Politico
- Opinion | The military caused the DCA crash. Now it’s trying to kill key fixes. The Washington Post
- Bill on NTSB-recommended aircraft locator systems fails in the House PBS
- House rejects quick passage of bill that some say would have prevented deadly DC midair collision CNN
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