The
source cautioned that appointment wasn’t final and could change,
the sources said. The Wall Street Journal first reported the
news.
Acting FAA administrator Billy Nolen is expected to leave the
agency on Friday, officials told Reuters last week.
Trottenberg did not respond to a May 31 email from Reuters last
Wednesday asking about a rumor that she could be tapped to take
the interim job running the FAA.
The United States has faced serious questions about aviation
safety after a series of close-call runway incidents this year
and a computer outage in January that led to the first
nationwide grounding of departing passenger airliners since
September 2001.
The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating six
runway incursion events since January including some that could
have been catastrophic.
The U.S. has not had a major fatal U.S. passenger airline crash
since February 2009. In March, the FAA said it was taking steps
to improve air traffic control, convening a safety summit and
issuing a safety alert.
Reuters earlier reported that Nolen is expected to take a
position with electric air taxi firm Archer Aviation after he
leaves the FAA.
Nolen said in a May 26 email to FAA staff that his "time at the
FAA will come to an end in mid-June."
Trottenberg has a long public sector career and previously
served as New York City’s Transportation Commissioner, as senior
USDOT policy official under President Barack Obama and as an
aide in the U.S. Senate to Senator Charles Schumer.
In March, Denver International Airport CEO Phil Washington
withdrew his nomination to serve as FAA administrator after
Republican criticism. The White House has not yet named a new
nominee.
The FAA, White House and Transportation Department did not
respond to requests for comment.
(Reporting by David Shepardson in Washington and Kanjyik Ghosh
in Bengaluru; Editing by Diane Craft and Lincoln Feast.)
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