
Sixty-seven people died before Congress decided their airspace was broken enough to fix.
Story Snapshot
- House passed the ALERT Act 396-10 on April 14, 2026, responding to a January 2025 collision between a Black Hawk helicopter and passenger jet that killed all 67 aboard both aircraft
- The Black Hawk’s location tracking system was turned off during the collision, preventing air traffic control from seeing the military helicopter on civilian radar
- NTSB initially rejected the bill as “watered down” before amendments addressed all 50 safety recommendations
- Victims’ families and Senate critics argue the legislation still lacks strict enforcement timelines and allows military aircraft too many exemptions
- The bill now faces Senate scrutiny where key lawmakers have already signaled opposition, setting up potential compromise battles
When Safety Recommendations Collect Dust Until Bodies Drop
The Potomac River became a graveyard in January 2025 when a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter sliced through the final approach path of an American Eagle CRJ700 preparing to land at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. Federal investigators later confirmed what aviation safety experts had warned about for years: the congested airspace around the nation’s capital was a catastrophe waiting to happen. The Black Hawk’s Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast system was switched off, rendering the military helicopter invisible to air traffic control and the civilian aircraft it was about to destroy. Sixty-seven people paid with their lives for systemic failures that both the FAA and U.S. Army finally acknowledged in December 2025.
The Legislative Journey From Tragedy to Compromise
The National Transportation Safety Board issued 50 safety recommendations following its investigation, but Congress’s first attempt at legislation drew withering criticism from the very agency tasked with preventing such disasters. The NTSB publicly labeled the original ALERT Act as “watered down” in February 2026, forcing House sponsors back to the drawing board. By March, revised amendments satisfied the safety board’s concerns, leading to unanimous committee advancement. The April 14 House passage with 396 votes demonstrates rare bipartisan agreement, yet ten lawmakers still voted no, suggesting lingering doubts about whether the bill goes far enough or perhaps too far in federal mandates.
Technology Requirements That May Arrive Too Late
The ALERT Act mandates that military aircraft install collision-prevention technology by 2031, with exceptions carved out for fighters, bombers, and drones. That’s a six-year timeline for equipment that could have prevented 67 deaths if installed years ago. The legislation requires all aircraft operating near busy airports to broadcast their locations through ADS-B In systems and next-generation collision avoidance technology. The Air Line Pilots Association raised practical concerns that demanding both systems simultaneously could paradoxically delay implementation, since the newer collision avoidance technology hasn’t received full certification yet. This tension between comprehensive safety and bureaucratic reality exemplifies why victims’ families remain skeptical about enforcement.
The Senate Gauntlet and Unanswered Questions
Senators Ted Cruz and Maria Cantwell represent bipartisan Senate skepticism that could reshape or derail the House bill entirely. Cruz expressed opposition hours before the House vote, while the Senate has crafted its own alternative called the ROTOR Act, setting up potential compromise negotiations that could water down provisions again. Victims’ families have voiced specific concerns that military aircraft can still avoid broadcasting locations on routine training flights, not just classified missions, leaving dangerous gaps in the very scenario that caused the collision. The families also note the absence of strict timelines guaranteeing reforms will actually be completed rather than endlessly studied.
House passes aviation safety bill in response to deadly midair collision near D.C. https://t.co/SFJrrWDdYN
— CBS News (@CBSNews) April 15, 2026
The FAA now faces mandates to evaluate and implement collision warning system improvements with earlier and clearer pilot alerts, while air traffic controllers will undergo enhanced training through expert working groups. The legislation establishes transparency requirements when safety recommendations are not adopted and improves real-time risk assessment tools. Whether these measures represent genuine reform or political theater depends entirely on implementation vigor and Senate willingness to strengthen rather than dilute House provisions. The 67 victims cannot speak for themselves, but their families and safety advocates continue demanding accountability that matches the magnitude of the failure that killed their loved ones.
Sources:
Aviation safety bill passes House after Washington midair collision – Aerospace Global News
House passes ALERT Act aviation safety bill – CBS News
House aviation bill follows Potomac midair collision – Washington Examiner
Aviation safety bill based on deadly midair collision near Washington faces a House vote – WTOP
Aviation safety bill based on deadly midair collision near Washington – ABC News
House vote on aviation safety bill after deadly DC midair crash – Fox News















