US FAA tightens helicopter safety rules near major airports

US FAA tightens helicopter safety rules near major airports

WASHINGTON, March 18 (Reuters) - The Federal Aviation Administration said Wednesday it is tightening ‌helicopter safety rules and will suspend use ‌of visual separation between airplanes and helicopters near major ​airports.

Reuters

The announcement follows the January 2025 mid-air collision between an American Airlines regional jet and Army helicopter that killed 67 people. The FAA ‌cited two ⁠recent incidents in issuing the new rules including a near miss involving ⁠an American Airlines flight and police helicopter near the San Antonio airport.

The requirement suspends visual ​separation in ​key airspace near ​airports.

"Where helicopters cross airport ‌arrival or departure paths, air traffic controllers will use radar to keep the aircraft specific lateral or vertical distances apart," the FAA said.

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FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said a year-long ‌review showed issues.

"We identified an ​overreliance on pilot 'see and ​avoid' operations that ​contribute to safety events involving helicopters ‌and airplanes," Bedford said.

After ​the 2025 ​collision, the FAA restricted helicopter traffic around Reagan Washington National Airport and has imposed ​other restrictions ‌at other airports including Baltimore, Las Vegas ​and Washington Dulles.

(Reporting by David Shepardson; ​Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

 

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