HR-7526-119
Referred to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.
Sponsored by Salud Carbajal (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would direct the Department of Transportation (DOT) to modify its existing flight crew duty and rest requirements — currently applicable only to passenger airline crews — so that they also cover all-cargo flight crews. DOT would be required to amend its final rule to close this regulatory gap. The bill does not create new rest standards from scratch; it extends the existing passenger-carrier framework to cargo operations.
Who benefits
All-cargo flight crew members (pilots and other crew) who would gain the same federally mandated rest protections currently enjoyed by passenger airline crews. Air cargo passengers and ground workers who may benefit from reduced fatigue-related accident risk. Communities near cargo airports and flight paths who could see reduced risk from fatigue-related incidents. Cargo airline crew unions and labor organizations that have long advocated for parity. Passenger airline crews, whose competitive labor conditions would no longer be undercut by cargo carriers operating under looser rules.
Who is hurt
All-cargo carriers (e.g., FedEx, UPS, and other freight airlines) that would face increased operating costs to comply with stricter scheduling and rest requirements. Cargo airline shareholders and investors who may see reduced profit margins. Businesses and consumers who rely on overnight or time-sensitive freight delivery, which could face delays or higher shipping costs if carriers must restructure crew scheduling. Smaller cargo operators with thinner margins who may find compliance more burdensome than large carriers.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that fatigue is a well-documented cause of aviation accidents and that there is no safety justification for treating cargo crews differently from passenger crews — both operate the same aircraft in the same airspace. They point to the 2009 Colgan Air crash, which killed 50 people and directly prompted the passenger-side rest rules, and contend that cargo crews flying overnight routes are arguably at greater fatigue risk. They argue that parity is a matter of basic aviation safety and that the current exemption creates a two-tiered system with no scientific basis.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that cargo operations differ fundamentally from passenger service — flights are typically fewer, schedules are more predictable, and there are no passengers whose immediate safety depends on in-flight crew alertness in the same way. They contend that extending the passenger framework would impose significant compliance costs on cargo carriers, potentially disrupting time-sensitive supply chains and raising shipping costs for businesses and consumers. They argue that DOT should conduct a separate, cargo-specific rulemaking with its own data and cost-benefit analysis rather than applying passenger rules by legislative mandate.
Constitutional context
Congress has broad authority to regulate aviation under the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3), as air cargo operations are quintessentially interstate commercial activity under Wickard v. Filburn's aggregation principle. The bill directs DOT to modify an existing rule, which raises a modest post-Loper Bright question: courts will now independently assess whether DOT's amended rule stays within the statutory authority Congress has granted, rather than deferring to the agency's own interpretation.
Checks and balances
Congress gains authority by mandating a specific regulatory outcome; DOT retains rulemaking discretion over implementation details; courts may independently review the amended rule's scope under post-Loper Bright statutory interpretation standards.
Historical precedent
The FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012 codified the passenger-side flight crew rest rules following the 2009 Colgan Air crash, but explicitly excluded all-cargo operations — a gap this bill would close.