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FAA administrator calls for independent review of last month’s ATC glitch

By Janice Wood · December 9, 2009 ·

WASHINGTON, D.C. — FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt has formed an independent review panel that will examine the Nov. 19 outage of the FAA Telecommunications Infrastructure (FTI). The group of experts will survey the FTI’s architecture and recommend any immediate or future changes to improve its reliability, FAA officials said. They will also review the management of the system to ensure the most stringent protocols and safeguards are in place.

“Last month’s outage was unacceptable and we need to understand what happened and make certain it doesn’t happen again,” said Babbitt. “This panel is going to take a hard look at every part of the FTI operation. We have an extremely reliable system but we need to have the confidence that problems can be solved quickly and efficiently so our air traffic controllers and aircraft operators have the tools they need and travelers aren’t inconvenienced.”

The panel will deliver two reports to Babbitt early next year. The first will focus on the November outage and contain suggestions for any immediate changes that need to be made to the FTI system, management procedures, or oversight. The second will examine FTI’s present and future architecture as it relates to emerging technology and future FAA systems.

The FTI system operates 24 hours a day seven days a week and provides communication support for the National Airspace System.

Last month’s four-hour outage did not affect critical safety systems or public safety, according to FAA officials. Air traffic controllers’ radar remained in operation and controllers were able to communicate with aircraft. The National Airspace Data Interchange Network (NADIN), which processes flight planning data, was affected because it relied on the FTI services. During the outage, air traffic controllers managed flight plan data manually according to FAA contingency plans.

Panel members include: Amr ElSawy, president and CEO of Noblis, a nonprofit science, technology and strategy organization; Federal Chief Technology Officer Aneesh Chopra; Department of Transportation Chief Information Officer (CIO) Nitin Pradhan; FAA CIO Dave Bowen; and the FAA’s Air Traffic Control Organization CIO Steve Cooper.

For more information: FAA.gov.

About Janice Wood

Janice Wood is editor of General Aviation News.

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