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The Federal Aviation Administration will pause hundreds of passenger flights from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport to accommodate President Donald Trump’s extravagant military parade on June ...
In response to the collision of a commercial jet and a U.S. Army helicopter in January that killed 67 people, a group of ...
noting that divers are still working to recover any remaining wreckage in the Potomac River. The NTSB will interview the FAA cartographers about the mapping of the route around Reagan; Homendy ...
In the weeks since the fatal plane crash over the Potomac River near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, DOT Secretary Sean Duffy said the FAA is hoping to deploy a "brand-new air traffic ...
Operations at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport will be “significantly impacted” by President Trump’s June 14 ...
Rescue teams were still pulling bodies from the Potomac River. That same day, FAA employees including air-traffic controllers, safety inspectors, and mechanical engineers received an email ...
A piece of wreckage is lifted from the water onto a salvage vessel near the site in the Potomac River of ... Va.Ben Curtis—AP The head of the Federal Aviation Administration told Congress ...
The Federal Aviation Administration’s acting head Chris ... a commercial jet and an Army Blackhawk helicopter over the Potomac River in Washington, D.C. The admission from Rocheleau came during ...
Two planes had to perform "go-arounds" to avoid a military helicopter on Thursday at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, the site of a harrowing midair plane crash in January.