HR-8597-119
Referred to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.
Sponsored by Nicholas Begich (R-AK)
What it does
This bill would require the FAA Administrator to acquire and install certified Airborne Position Reference Tools (APRTs) at FAA contract air traffic control towers that currently lack Standard Terminal Automation Replacement Systems (STARS) or equivalent situational awareness technology, within one year of enactment. It would also amend federal law to require the FAA to purchase, install, and maintain STARS or equivalent systems at those same towers, establish a training program for contract tower air traffic controllers, and authorize federal spending for these purposes. Additionally, the bill would provide retroactive reimbursement or grant funding to airport sponsors and towers that independently purchased and installed qualifying situational awareness systems before the FAA acts under this bill.
Who benefits
Passengers and crews on aircraft using airports served by FAA contract towers, who would have controllers with better real-time aircraft position data. Air traffic controllers at contract towers, who would gain improved situational awareness tools and structured training. Airport sponsors and operators who already independently purchased qualifying systems, who would receive retroactive reimbursement. Smaller and rural airports served by contract towers, which are disproportionately represented in the Contract Tower Program. Aviation safety broadly, including communities near these airports.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who would bear the cost of equipment acquisition, installation, maintenance, and retroactive reimbursements — though the bill does not specify a dollar amount. Competing technology vendors who are not original equipment manufacturers, since the bill directs the FAA to use OEM services or FAA services directly, potentially limiting the competitive bidding pool. Larger commercial airports already equipped with STARS would not receive equivalent upgrades, which may widen the technology gap in the other direction if resources are constrained.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that contract towers — which handle air traffic at hundreds of smaller airports across the country — have long operated without the same situational awareness technology available at larger FAA-staffed facilities, creating an uneven safety baseline. They contend that real-time aircraft position data is a foundational safety tool, and that the absence of STARS or equivalent systems at contract towers leaves controllers without critical information during high-workload or low-visibility conditions. The retroactive reimbursement provision, they argue, corrects an inequity for airports that proactively invested in safety upgrades without federal support.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill imposes a rigid one-year installation mandate on the FAA without specifying funding levels, raising concerns that the timeline is operationally unrealistic given procurement, certification, and installation lead times across potentially hundreds of facilities. They contend that the restriction on procurement to OEM or FAA services — bypassing competitive bidding — could increase costs to taxpayers and conflict with federal acquisition regulations designed to ensure value. Critics may also question whether the retroactive reimbursement provision, which covers systems already purchased without federal authorization, sets a problematic precedent for unilateral airport spending at federal expense.