A closed-door clash between the top U.S. aviation safety officials over a $50,000-per-plane cockpit technology has exposed a widening rift in Washington more than a year after a midair collision killed 67 people near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
National Transportation Safety Board Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy told Federal Aviation Administration Chief Bryan Bedford during a May 2026 meeting that the FAA's response to 33 safety recommendations sounded like a dismissive rebuke, according to people familiar with the exchange. Bedford had maintained the agency would not mandate Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast In technology — which lets pilots see nearby aircraft on cockpit screens — without congressional action.
"The NTSB has been pushing for this technology for about 20 years," Homendy said in a subsequent interview. "What I fear is that we're going to end up on the anniversary of this midair collision calling for action because there's been no movement."
The NTSB determined that ADS-B In could have helped an American Airlines regional jet and an Army helicopter avoid the collision that killed all 67 people aboard both aircraft in 2025. The technology works by allowing aircraft to receive signals from other planes broadcasting their GPS-based positions, displaying them on cockpit screens. The FAA already mandates ADS-B Out — which broadcasts a plane's position to air traffic controllers — but stopped short of requiring the receiving capability.
The cost of retrofitting aircraft with ADS-B In has become the central point of contention. Industry officials said the retrofit could run $50,000 or more per plane, and FAA Administrator Bedford noted the technology may not be compatible with hundreds of planes in the U.S. commercial fleet. He suggested a cheaper alternative: adding the capability to pilots' tablet computers mounted in cockpits, which could be implemented voluntarily.
Major carriers have already moved ahead. American Airlines added ADS-B In to its fleet of more than 300 Airbus A321 aircraft starting in 2019 and is rolling out the technology on about 400 Boeing 737s. All new United Airlines wide-body aircraft come with the system installed, and the carrier is examining how to expand it to other jets.
On Capitol Hill, lawmakers are wrangling over competing bills. The Senate version would impose a more prescriptive retrofit mandate, while the House bill allows greater flexibility in how airlines comply. The Air Line Pilots Association backs the Senate version, saying it would get safety technology into cockpits faster. The Association of Value Airlines favors the House bill, with discount carriers concerned about the cost and time required to retrofit their fleets.
The financial stakes are significant for the airline industry. For a carrier operating 200 aircraft, a $50,000-per-plane retrofit would represent a $10 million capital outlay — a meaningful expense for low-cost operators with thinner margins. The last major U.S. aviation safety mandate, requiring enhanced cockpit voice recorders, cost the industry an estimated $200 million over a multiyear compliance period.
The FAA and NTSB met the following week for what Homendy described as a productive discussion. But with no mandate in place and competing bills stalled in Congress, the path forward remains uncertain as the anniversary of the crash approaches.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.