A federal agency said on Aug. 8 that it will open an investigation into the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) oversight of the airspace around Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in connection to a deadly midair collision between an Army helicopter and a commercial jet that killed 67 people earlier this year.
The announcement from the Department of Transportation’s (DOT) Office of Inspector General (OIG) comes one week after the National Transportation Safety Board’s (NTSB) three-day “fact-finding” hearing into the crash, which probed the FAA’s management of Washington’s airspace, its staffing at the airport’s control tower on Jan. 29 when the accident occurred, and exemptions given to the Army to allow its helicopters at the time to operate without a key location transmitting technology—ADS-B Out….
Inspector General to Probe FAA Oversight of Washington Airspace After Deadly Midair Collision
