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Congress Votes on Aviation Safety Reforms
9 Apr
Summary
- Aviation safety reform bill faces House vote next week.
- Bill addresses recommendations after a fatal 2025 jet-helicopter collision.
- Legislation requires collision prevention tech on military and civilian aircraft.

A crucial aviation safety reform bill is slated for a U.S. House of Representatives vote next week. This comprehensive legislation stems from recommendations made after a devastating collision in January 2025. The incident involved an American Airlines regional jet and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter, tragically claiming 67 lives.
Earlier this month, two House committees unanimously advanced the bill. It mandates the installation of collision prevention technologies on nearly all military aircraft by 2031, with exceptions for fighters, bombers, and drones. Furthermore, the legislation sets forth requirements for equipping civilian airplanes and helicopters with similar collision mitigation technologies.