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The slowdown ripples throughout the United States, though no one knows exactly how severe the effect is, the report said. One widely quoted estimate, that New York causes three-quarters of all delays in the United States, is probably an exaggeration, the report said. To reduce delays, the schedule limits in New York should be more flexible, the inspector general's office said. It cited the rules at London's Gatwick, Heathrow and Stansted airports, where regulators set lower limits during the winter months. London has 20 percent fewer delays than New York, it said. The global economic slowdown has eased the problem somewhat because fewer people are flying. But as the economy improves, delays are sure to worsen again, the report said. To prepare for more traffic, the FAA is working on redesigning New York's airspace, said Laura Brown, a spokeswoman for the agency. "There are so many airports in such a small geographic area there," Brown said. The overhaul, she said, "was designed to help smooth some of the arrival and departure routes in a way that would reduce conflicts between the airports."
The arrival of the FAA's NextGen air traffic control system should also help, she said. Under that system, aircraft use satellites to determine their own position, then beam that information to controllers and other planes. The system is more accurate than radar, the FAA says, allowing planes to fly closer together and on more direct routes. Planners have been working through bugs in the NextGen system, including computer software that misidentified planes traveling on high-altitude routes. Aircraft owners have also grumbled about the cost of installing transmitters in the U.S. fleet. The best solution to New York's crunch would be a new runway at one of the airports, said Jeffrey Zupan, a transportation expert at the Regional Plan Association, which advocates for development projects in the New Jersey-New York area. But there is little room to expand, he said. The group opposes the idea of lower scheduling caps, Zupan said. "That's not solving anything, that's hoping the problem will go away," Zupan said.
[Associated
Press;
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