HR-3196-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Aviation.
Sponsored by Jerrold Nadler (D-NY)
What it does
This bill would prohibit civil helicopter operations within a 20-mile radius of the Statue of Liberty National Monument in New York, New York. Two categories of flights would be exempt: those serving public health and safety purposes (such as law enforcement or medical services) and heavy-lift operations supporting construction or infrastructure maintenance. The FAA would be required to issue or update regulations to implement the restriction.
Who benefits
Residents of the New York City metro area who live under or near helicopter flight paths and experience noise and air pollution. Visitors to the Statue of Liberty and surrounding areas who would experience a quieter environment. Competing ground-based and water-based tourism operators who would gain customers displaced from helicopter tours. Wildlife in and around New York Harbor. Workers in affected neighborhoods who report noise-related productivity and health impacts.
Who is hurt
Helicopter tour operators whose businesses depend on flights over or near the Statue of Liberty — one of the most popular tourist destinations in the U.S. Pilots and ground crew employed by those operators who may face job losses or reduced hours. Tourists who prefer aerial sightseeing experiences and would lose that option. Helicopter charter and air taxi companies operating in the New York metro area whose routes may fall within the 20-mile radius. Small businesses (e.g., booking agents, hospitality vendors) that depend on helicopter tourism traffic.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that helicopter tourism over New York Harbor generates persistent noise pollution that degrades quality of life for hundreds of thousands of residents and diminishes the experience of the millions of visitors who travel to the Statue of Liberty each year. They contend that the narrow exemptions for emergency and heavy-lift operations preserve all safety-critical and economically essential flights while eliminating a commercial activity whose benefits accrue to a small industry at broad public expense. Proponents also point to the FAA's existing authority over airspace as a natural vehicle for implementing and enforcing the restriction.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a blanket 20-mile prohibition is a disproportionate response that would effectively eliminate an entire legal industry — helicopter tourism — without evidence that narrower noise-abatement measures have been tried and failed. They contend that the radius, which encompasses much of the New York City metro area, would disrupt a wide range of legitimate commercial helicopter operations beyond tourism, causing economic harm to operators, employees, and related businesses that far outweighs the noise reduction benefit. Critics also argue that airspace management is a technical matter best handled through FAA rulemaking rather than a rigid statutory prohibition.