As the Western New York community remembers the lives lost 14 years ago in the tragic crash of Flight 3407, Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-26) remains vigilant in the fight to protect flight safety as Congress debates measures included in Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) reauthorization this year.
Higgins said, “The flight safety standards in place today were borne out of the painful lessons learned when loved ones never made it home. Change didn’t come easy, but the relentless fight of the Flight 3407 families saved countless other families from facing the same unthinkable fate. As Congress debates FAA Reauthorization, we can’t go back. The flying public deserves the highest level of safety, and we remain prepared to defend it.”
The crash of Flight 3407 in Clarence, New York on February 12, 2009 killed all on board and one on the ground. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) accident report concluded the incident was avoidable and attributable to pilot error. Following the tragedy, the victims’ families helped to deliver major safety reforms in the Federal Aviation Administration Act of 2010. These included measures addressing pilot fatigue, consumer transparency, the pilot records database, and pilot training requirements, including the 1,500-hour rule.
The last FAA Reauthorization in 2018 extended FAA’s funding and authorities through Fiscal Year 2023. Congress will work this year on FAA Reauthorization. On February 7, 2023, the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee held its first hearing on the issue. Rep. Sam Graves, Chair of the Transportation & Infrastructure Committee, recently expressed opposition to the 1,500-hour rule training requirement for pilots.
Again this week Flight 3407 families were on Capitol Hill meeting with Members of Congress and attending the committee hearing to remind Members of the lives at stake.
In testimony before the House Aviation Subcommittee, Airline Pilot Association President Capt. Jason Ambrosi noted how changes made after the Flight 3407 tragedy improved flight safety: “Prior to the passage of the Aviation Safety and FAA Reauthorization Act of 2010, the passenger airline industry lost approximately 1,100 passengers in airline accidents over a 20-year period. Since the unanimous passage of that landmark safety legislation, the airline passenger fatality rate has reduced by 99.8 percent. The numerous congressional mandates in the bill created comprehensive changes to how airlines do business and significantly raised the safety bar.”
For information about the beautiful lives lost on February 12, 2009, and the tireless work of the families that followed, visit http://3407memorial.com/.
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