HR-346-118
Became Public Law No: 118-4.
Sponsored by Pete Stauber (R-MN)
What it does
This law directs the FAA to create a task force to review how flight safety notices — called NOTAMs (notices to air missions) — are written, organized, and delivered to pilots. The task force must report its findings and recommendations to Congress. The FAA must also complete a unified federal NOTAM system and a backup system by September 30, 2024, and brief Congress on plans to align that system with international standards.
Who benefits
Pilots (commercial, private, and cargo) who would receive clearer, better-organized flight safety information. Airlines and aviation companies that would benefit from a standardized, reliable NOTAM system reducing operational confusion. Air traffic controllers and flight dispatchers who rely on consistent information formats. Passengers and cargo shippers who would indirectly benefit from reduced risk of accidents caused by missed or misread NOTAMs. International aviation operators who would gain a more harmonized U.S. system compatible with global standards.
Who is hurt
FAA and federal contractors who would bear the cost and administrative burden of building and maintaining the new system and backup on a fixed deadline. Taxpayers who would fund the task force, system development, and ongoing operations. Existing NOTAM system vendors or service providers whose current contracts or products could be displaced by the new federal system.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the existing NOTAM system is dangerously outdated, producing cluttered, inconsistently formatted notices that overwhelm pilots with irrelevant information and bury critical safety alerts. High-profile incidents — including a January 2023 nationwide ground stop caused by a corrupted NOTAM file — demonstrate that the current system is fragile and poses real safety risks. A unified federal system with standardized formatting, prioritization, and a backup would directly reduce the chance that pilots miss safety-critical information. Aligning with international standards would also reduce errors for crews operating across borders. The task force structure ensures that improvements are evidence-based and informed by the pilots and operators who use the system daily.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the law imposes a rigid September 2024 deadline that may be unrealistic for building and deploying a complex federal aviation IT system, risking a rushed or incomplete product that could introduce new vulnerabilities rather than fix existing ones. Critics contend that the FAA has a long track record of cost overruns and delays on technology modernization projects, and that mandating a specific system architecture through legislation — rather than allowing the agency flexibility to adopt the best available solution — could lock in an inferior approach. Some argue the task force adds bureaucratic process without guaranteeing meaningful change, and that the underlying safety problems require deeper regulatory and cultural changes at the FAA that this bill does not address.