[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 110 (Tuesday, June 27, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H5190]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FLIGHT SAFETY LEGISLATION
(Mr. HIGGINS of New York asked and was given permission to address
the House for 1 minute.)
Mr. HIGGINS of New York. Mr. Speaker, 8 years ago, Western New
Yorkers witnessed tragedy due to inadequate pilot training. A poorly
trained pilot crashed a commercial jet into a neighborhood in our
community, ending the lives of those on board and one on the ground.
Since then, the victims' families of Flight 3407, who suffered
unimaginable loss on that day, have turned their grief into a powerful
citizens' fight to strengthen pilot training and flight safety rules.
The families of Flight 3407, who are here today, led the charge
urging Congress to pass landmark flight safety legislation in 2010,
including rules that could have prevented the tragedy that they all
suffered. Since then, there have been 7 years of no fatal commercial
crashes on domestic U.S. airlines.
Now the Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization is nearing
and some want to beat back this tremendous progress. Let's be clear,
what is being proposed is a rule change that will allow less
experienced pilots to fly commercial jets again.
The safety of the flying public should never be compromised again. I
am prepared, along with the Western New York delegation and with the
3407 families, to protect these reforms once again, because we know the
painful lessons of accepting anything less.
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