Congressman Higgins Warns Congress Must Uphold & Enhance Flight Safety Measures

Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-26) released a statement after Rep. Sam Graves, the new Chair of the House of Representatives Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, expressed opposition to the 1,500-hour rule training requirement for pilots. 

Higgins said, “Providing the American public with a safe airspace is the mission of the Federal Aviation Administration and should be the imperative of this Congress in considering a new bill on the FAA this year. The legislative response to the tragedy of Flight 3407, which implemented some consensus driven recommendations and those made by the National Transportation Safety Board in response to the causation of the crash, have worked. That is a success that Congressional leaders need to affirm and build on, not minimize. Americans should have assurance that Congress will continue to uphold one level of safety so that the tragedy that the Western New York community experienced never happens again.”

Rep. Higgins represents Western New York including the Buffalo Niagara International Airport, the destination for Flight 3407 which crashed in Clarence, NY on February 12, 2009, killing all on board and one on the ground.

Following the tragedy, Congressman Higgins fought alongside the families of Flight 3407 to implement flight safety improvements included in the Federal Aviation Administration Act of 2010. These included measures related to pilot fatigue, consumer transparency, the implementation of the Pilot Records Database, and expanded pilot training including a policy often referred to as the 1,500-Hour Rule.  Under previous law, some pilots were only required to log 250 flight hours before working for a commercial airline.

Chair Graves announced the committee will hold its first hearing on FAA reauthorization on February 7, 2023. 

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Judge fact-checks Trump to his face after rant over gag order



MANHATTAN CRIMINAL COURT — Donald Trump's judge launched into Friday's hearing by fact-checking the former president's claim that a gag order was stopping him from taking the stand in his own defense.

Trump had made the complaints in front of TV cameras as he left the courtroom after proceedings closed in his hush money trial Thursday.

"I'm not allowed to testify because of the unconstitutional gag order," he said. "We're appealing the gag order and let's see what happens."

Trump was fined $9,000 earlier this week for violating the order, which forbids him from talking about potential witnesses, jurors, court staff or their families in the case, which has hit him with 34 charges of falsifying business records involving payments to adult movie actress Stormy Daniels to cover up a sexual relationship she allegedly had with him before the 2106 election.

Judge Juan Merchan started Friday's hearing by talking directly to Trump — and putting him right.

"There may be a misunderstanding how it impacts Trump's right to testify," the judge said. "I want to say the Mr. Trump, you have an absolute right to testify. The order restricting extrajudicial statements does not restrict you from testifying in any way. As the name of the order indicates, it only applies to extrajudicial statements."

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Trump has said he intends to take the stand in his own defense in the trial, though several experts have suggested that may not be wise.

The former president began the day in court smiling as he whispered to his lawyers, but he turned on a scowl when the cameras showed up before proceedings started.