The FAA said in a statement that the Denver Air Route Traffic Control Center lost communications for approximately 90 seconds. McIntosh said both the primary and main backup frequencies went down, so the controllers had to turn to an emergency frequency to communicate.
âControllers used another frequency to relay instructions to pilots. Aircraft remained safely separated and there were no impacts to operations,â the FAA said.
Rep. Robert Garcia of California told McIntosh during the hearing that these outages are happening more regularly and itâs concerning every time.
âWe know that there are staffing and equipment problems at air traffic control,â Garcia said. âWe know that the problems have gone back decades in some cases, but itâs still an absolutely shocking system failure and we need immediate solutions.â
Last week, the Trump administration announced a multibillion-dollar plan to overhaul an air traffic control system that relies on antiquated equipment. Air travel is safe even if the air traffic control system is old, but the problems in Newark were unacceptable and could have been prevented if the system had been upgraded sooner, said Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy in a Thursday op-ed in Newsweek.
The Newark airport has generally led the nation in flight cancellations and delays ever since both radar and communications went out on April 28 and again on May 9. A third similar problem happened Sunday, but that time the backup system worked and kept radar online.
âThe safety of the traveling public cannot continue being put at risk,â Democrat and ranking member Rep. Rick Larsen said after the hearing. âProblems with our system have crossed administrations, but safety improvements cannot span generations. We need action now.â
The FAA and airlines that fly out of Newark met again Thursday to discuss cutting flights because there arenât enough controllers to handle them all. Those conversations will continue for a third day on Friday, but the FAA isn't likely to issue a decision immediately. More than 140 flights have been canceled at Newark Thursday.
Officials developed the plan to upgrade the air traffic control system after a deadly midair collision in January between a passenger jet and an Army helicopter killed 67 people in the skies over Washington, D.C. Several other crashes this year also put pressure on officials to act.
Credit: AP
Credit: AP