Senate hearing examines ADS-B In mandate and airport fee dispute in ROTOR Act
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Topics in This Edition
Summary
Forbes Breaking News clip shows Sen. Jerry Moran questioning witnesses including pilots' representatives, airport officials, and general aviation advocates during a hearing on the ROTOR Act. Discussion centers on mandating ADS-B In for collision avoidance, its role in preventing the January 2025 DCA midair collision, and a key difference between the Senate ROTOR Act and House ALERT Act. Witnesses affirm broad support for ADS-B In while highlighting a House provision (section 105) that bars airports from using ADS-B data to collect landing or other fees. Additional topics include safety enhancements at small non-towered airports and challenges of mandating equipment on diverse general aviation aircraft.
Editorial Assessment
The segment accurately captures live testimony and the core legislative dispute without distortion or unsubstantiated assertions. Viewers receive clear context on why ADS-B In remains a longstanding NTSB priority and how the bills diverge on privacy/fee issues. Missing elements include the current status of House-Senate negotiations and specific compliance timelines (e.g., 2031). No loaded language or one-sided sourcing appears; the format lets primary statements stand. Potential skew is minimal, though the clip's brevity leaves broader bill provisions and stakeholder positions on military exemptions unexplored.
Key Moments
ADSB In could have avoided the DC accident if equipped and operated properly
NTSB final report on the January 2025 DCA midair (Flight 5342/Black Hawk) concluded ADS-B In would have provided warnings 48-59 seconds prior; multiple witnesses and bill sponsors cite this.
House bill section 105 precludes airports from using ADS-B for fee collection; Senate version lacks this provision
Confirmed in House ALERT Act (H.R. 7613) text and reporting; airport groups (AAAE) explicitly oppose the PAPA-linked restriction while Senate ROTOR Act (S.2503) omits it.
NTSB has recommended ADS-B In for nearly 20 years
NTSB safety recommendations dating to at least 2000-2008 (e.g., A-00-66 and later) have repeatedly called for ADS-B In equipage in controlled airspace.
Many general aviation aircraft already voluntarily equipped with ADS-B In (roughly 90% in one forum)
Voluntary adoption is high in some segments per industry surveys, but overall fleet equipage varies widely by aircraft type and no comprehensive public statistic matches the exact figure cited.
Sources Consulted
- Text - S.2503 - 119th Congress (2025-2026): ROTOR Act
- The ROTOR Act and the ALERT Act: Top points for aviation ...
- Airports Object To ADS-B Landing Fee Limits In Safety Bill
- House Transportation Committee Advances ALERT Act ...
- Why ADS-B/In is essential for aviation safety
- FAA administrator opposes ADS-B-based billing
- Safety Recommendation A-00-66 - Accident Data - NTSB