Rogers Speaks in Opposition to Flawed Aviation Bill
Washington, DC,
February 23, 2026
House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mike Rogers (R-AL) spoke on the House Floor in opposition to S.2503, the ROTOR Act.
The ROTOR Act is flawed legislation intended to address the tragic 2025 midair collision between American Airlines Flight 5342 and a UH-60 Army Black Hawk helicopter at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA). The legislation creates significant national security concerns, and fails to address nearly 90% of the safety recommendations proposed by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) as a result of their investigation into the accident. Rogers, along with Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Sam Graves (R-MO), Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Ranking Member Rick Larsen (D-WA), and Armed Services Committee Ranking Member Adam Smith (D-WA), introduced the Airspace Location and Enhanced Risk Transparency (ALERT) Act last week. The ALERT Act's comprehensive legislation addresses all 50 safety related recommendations issued by the NTSB while preserving critical national security capabilities. The full text of Rogers' remarks, as prepared for delivery, follow: Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to the ROTOR Act. The bill before us today is a flawed response to last year’s tragic mid-air collision at Reagan National. First and foremost, this bill will undermine our national security. The Department of War just released the following statement regarding the bill: “As currently drafted, enactment of this bill would create significant unresolved budgetary burdens and operational security risks affecting national defense activities.” Let’s talk about those operational security risks. The ROTOR Act requires ADS-B In and Out to be transmitted on all aircraft in the National Air Space, including on Department of War aircraft performing sensitive missions. ADS-B systems transmit information on the location, speed, and direction of aircraft over unencrypted, open channels. Websites like FlightAware then post that information for all the world to see. Since 2018, certain military aircraft have been exempt from broadcasting that information pursuant to a memorandum of understanding between the FAA and the Pentagon. The ROTOR Act overwrites that MOU with an FAA rulemaking. That means that the FAA, not the Pentagon or our military commanders, will have final say on which military aircraft must be equipped with ADS-B and when it must be turned on. That’s unacceptable. Requiring our fighters, bombers, and highly classified assets to regularly broadcast their location puts our men and women in uniform at risk by exposing operational planning, aircraft details, and patterns of life to our adversaries. Now, we all agree that certain military aircraft should be equipped with and transmit ADS-B, especially in congested civilian airspace. Fortunately, the current MOU already provides for that. At this time, nearly all Army helicopters flying in congested airspace are equipped with ADS-B out and have been instructed to transmit. The problem is that the ROTOR Act goes much further than just covering these aircraft, undermining the operational security of our fighters, bombers, and aircraft on classified missions.For obvious reasons, we do not want our enemies to know where our bombers or fighters are or where we they are headed. Beyond the serious national security impacts of the ROTOR Act, the bill fails to address nearly 90 percent of the recommendations made by the NTSB.Over 40 critical air safety recommendations are left out of this bill. This includes important recommendations for the Department or War, such as - · increased coordination between the military and the FAA on aircraft safety matters; · better safety management systems and reporting for military aircraft; and · enhanced training for military pilots operating in congested airspace. All of these flaws can be easily fixed if the committees of jurisdiction in the House are afforded the opportunity to follow regular order and consider our alternative bill. I’ve joined Chairman Graves, and Ranking Members Larsen and Smith to introduce the bipartisan ALERT Act that will fix the flaws of the ROTOR Act. Our legislation goes much further to improve aviation safety by addressing all 50 of the NTSB recommendations. It will also ensure our military can continue to carry out sensitive operations that are crucial to the defense of our nation. The Department of War is requesting these changes be made before the ROTOR Act is signed into law. If we defeat this bill, we can have the ALERT Act on the floor immediately. We can reconcile our differences with the Senate and get a bill to the President next week. The House of Representatives should not send a bill to the President that has no input from the House, especially a bill with this much impact on our national security. I urge all members to oppose the bill. |