06/23/2026 | Press release | Archived content
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Capt. Jason Ambrosi, president of the Air Line Pilots Association, Int'l (ALPA), testified today before the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation's Subcommittee on Aviation Safety, Operations, and Innovation at a hearing titled "Close Calls: Improving Safety Across the National Airspace System." During his testimony, Ambrosi urged Congress to treat the recent rise in close calls and two fatal accidents in the past 16 months as an urgent call to action rather than waiting for the next tragedy.
"The unfortunate truth in aviation is that we make the most progress on safety only after lives have already been lost. ALPA is calling for urgent action with the full knowledge that the technologies that could have prevented these accidents exist and are readily available right now. Two fatal accidents in 16 months tell us: good enough is no longer good enough," said Ambrosi.
ALPA's testimony pointed to two recent fatal accidents, the January 2025 midair collision near Washington National Airport and the March 2026 ground collision at LaGuardia Airport, as evidence that pilots are too often left to rely on last-second warning systems like TCAS, which offer limited alerting time, minimal traffic detail, and reduced performance near the ground. ALPA argues that real situational awareness requires integrated, always-on traffic information in the flightdeck, not just an alert in the final seconds before a collision. To close those gaps, ALPA outlined several recommendations for the Committee:
Ambrosi noted that simulations conducted by the National Transportation Safety Board found that had PSA Flight 5342 been equipped with the ROTOR Act's expanded ADS-B In capabilities, the flight crew would have received visual and aural alerts considerably earlier than with currently available alternatives.
"The Potomac midair collision exposed a specific safety gap: the lack of an integrated ADS-B In mandate. Without it, pilots are forced to rely on last-second warning systems. Pilots are safest when we are aware of and can avoid threats. This is the time for action, not the time to give in to special interests fighting progress," Ambrosi said. "We cannot stall. We cannot water down the safety advancements in the ROTOR Act. We must keep moving forward."
Founded in 1931, ALPA is the largest airline pilot union in the world and represents more than 80,000 pilots at 42 U.S. and Canadian airlines. Visit ALPA.org or follow us on X @ALPAPilots.
CONTACT: ALPA Media, 703-481-4440 or [email protected]