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Reuters
US House approves $58.9 billion aviation bill
Wednesday June 11, 6:17 pm ET
WASHINGTON, June 11 (Reuters) - The House of Representatives approved a $58.9 billion bill on Wednesday that would continue funding air traffic control operations and other federal aviation programs for the next four years.
The bipartisan initiative is $2 billion more than requested by the Bush administration and more than $15 billion above a three-year proposal making its way through the Senate.
The FAA reauthorization legislation was the first of three major transportation bills now before Congress to clear a full chamber. House lawmakers approved it 418-8 after debate that was limited mainly to technical issues.
The aviation proposal is the least contentious of the three bills with lawmakers bracing for tougher fights over long-term funding for highways and Amtrak, the national passenger railroad.
The aviation bill passed by the House would continue air traffic control operations run by the FAA as well as other agency programs through 2007.
It would also:
- Streamline the federal review process for new runways and other initiatives to increase airport capacity.
- Reimburse airlines and airports for certain security enhancements required by Congress in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijack attacks on New York and Washington.
- Increase the number of flights at Washington's Reagan National Airport where access is controlled by the government.
- Require the Transportation Department to include complaints about passenger and baggage screening in the consumer report it publishes monthly.
-Make airlines display information for passengers on where aircraft are manufactured. This is part of a "buy America" campaign pushed by lawmakers concerned with the success of overseas aircraft manufacturers, like Europe's Airbus , with U.S. carriers.
A procedural vote ahead of House consideration of the FAA bill was delayed after several lawmakers got stuck in a Capitol Hill elevator for nearly an hour.
US House approves $58.9 billion aviation bill
Wednesday June 11, 6:17 pm ET
WASHINGTON, June 11 (Reuters) - The House of Representatives approved a $58.9 billion bill on Wednesday that would continue funding air traffic control operations and other federal aviation programs for the next four years.
The bipartisan initiative is $2 billion more than requested by the Bush administration and more than $15 billion above a three-year proposal making its way through the Senate.
The FAA reauthorization legislation was the first of three major transportation bills now before Congress to clear a full chamber. House lawmakers approved it 418-8 after debate that was limited mainly to technical issues.
The aviation proposal is the least contentious of the three bills with lawmakers bracing for tougher fights over long-term funding for highways and Amtrak, the national passenger railroad.
The aviation bill passed by the House would continue air traffic control operations run by the FAA as well as other agency programs through 2007.
It would also:
- Streamline the federal review process for new runways and other initiatives to increase airport capacity.
- Reimburse airlines and airports for certain security enhancements required by Congress in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijack attacks on New York and Washington.
- Increase the number of flights at Washington's Reagan National Airport where access is controlled by the government.
- Require the Transportation Department to include complaints about passenger and baggage screening in the consumer report it publishes monthly.
-Make airlines display information for passengers on where aircraft are manufactured. This is part of a "buy America" campaign pushed by lawmakers concerned with the success of overseas aircraft manufacturers, like Europe's Airbus , with U.S. carriers.
A procedural vote ahead of House consideration of the FAA bill was delayed after several lawmakers got stuck in a Capitol Hill elevator for nearly an hour.