Federal Aviation Administration Administrator Steve Dickson testified Thursday before the House Transportation Committee on his agency’s efforts to ensure that planes remain safe as wireless companies turn on 5G networks that could interfere with safety equipment.
Disruptions to aviation have been minimal since the networks were rolled out last month. The FAA has been clearing individual airplane models to land when visibility is poor at airports affected by 5G signals. The agency on Friday announced an agreement that will allow wireless carriers to activate more towers while also enabling more aircraft to operate at key airports.
“While we have avoided significant disruption to commercial aviation, we recognize that some communities and operations have been affected because we have not been able to fully mitigate interference risk for certain radio altimeters,” Dickson said.
Aviation safety concerns led to the rollout of the fast wireless networks, operated by Verizon and AT&T, twice being pushed back during a months-long battle that pitted airlines against the telecom giants. When the companies were ready to flip the switch last month, the White House stepped in to secure limits on the deployment after airlines warned of chaos.... Read More: Washington Post