
Sean Duffy details $31.5B air-traffic improvements to 'Pod Force One'
Duffy and other top officials have pressed for the pricey upgrade in the wake of the deadly midair disaster near Ronald Reagan National Airport earlier this year — the first major passenger crash in the US since 2009.
'There were 85 near-misses in this airspace in the three years before this crash,' Duffy recently told podcast hose Miranda Devine. 'So someone should have seen it in the last administration. They didn't. Tragedy struck.'
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4 Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy tells 'Pod Force One' that he is optimistic the Trump administration will be able to upgrade the air traffic control system within the next four years.
Ron Sachs – CNP for NY Post
Every week, Post columnist Miranda Devine sits down for exclusive and candid conversations with the most influential disruptors in Washington. Subscribe here!
Last month, Congress approved $12.5 billion of the estimated $31.5 billion price tag needed to complete the ambitious overhaul of the country's dated air-traffic-control system.
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Officials have been reviewing other major airports across the country in New York, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Alaska and elsewhere to make improvements based on lessons learned from the DC fiasco, Duffy said.
4 Duffy notes to host Miranda Devine that modernizing air traffic control in the US is a complicated undertaking.
Ron Sachs – CNP for NY Post
Sixty-seven people died when one of the government's Black Hawk helicopters collided with an American Airlines passenger jet over the Potomac River in DC in January.
No official cause for the disaster has been released, but experts have suggested issues ranging from poor air-control staffing to the fact that the chopper pilots' night-vision goggles would have hampered their vision.
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'What we've seen is there is a need to upgrade our system. It is way too old, and that doesn't mean it's not safe, but what we see is, you're starting to see the cracks in the system,' he said. 'You're starting to see blips in communication.
'I would tell you it's not easy, it's really complicated,' he said. 'I think we can get it done in three, four years, if all goes well.'
4 A total of 67 people were killed at Reagan National Airport during the tragic midair collision in January.
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A key aspect of the upgrades will be to switch from copper to fiber optic cables for communications systems within air traffic control.
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This emerged as a major problem at New Jersey's troubled Newark Liberty International Airport, which was dogged by outages earlier this year that led to massive delays and prompted the Federal Aviation Administration to scale down flights at the major travel hub.
Earlier this year, Newark faced about 90 seconds of radar and communications blackouts, which officials later attributed to a fried piece of copper wire that caused a blizzard of flight delays and cancellations.
Before that fiasco, the team of former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg moved the Newark airspace control system from New York to the Philadelphia Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON). That move was intended to alleviate staffing issues.
4 January's collision led to a push to modernize air-traffic-control systems across the country.
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'The problem was, though, that they didn't test the lines,' Duffy said. 'They didn't make sure it was hardened before they made the move, which led us to these several 30-second outages.'
While the outage at TRACON was 30 seconds, the full blackout was closer to 90 seconds because scopes showing the airplanes had to reboot, costing another minute.
'We have policies in place if that happens on what redundancies kick in, and we did that,' Duffy said, noting that Newark's communications lines have since been upgraded. 'We partnered with Verizon. In a month, they laid a brand new fiber line for us. We tested it the next month, and that has stood up.'
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Now the Transportation Department is looking to make some of those same upgrades to airports across the country and beef up outdated radar systems as well.
But perhaps the more critical upgrade in the works at air traffic control is a new software system, which Duffy says will make it more 'efficient, make it safer, to control airspace.'
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He teased that the 'brand-new' software system will likely be 'leaps and bounds' better than the current, dated process and can help with new challenges with emergency technology such as drones that are making airspace more crowded.
'The operating system that we use to control air traffic one dates back to '95,' Duffy stressed. 'So it's really, really old.'
Duffy described his plans for the new software system as 'a common automation platform that's going to help us have new technology, make it more efficient, make it safer, to control airspace.'

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New York Post
12 minutes ago
- New York Post
Trump knows the dangers of addiction — he must reject Big Weed's push to reclassify marijuana
You know it's a bad idea if Joe Biden was for it. That's the case with the mad push for marijuana reform, which Biden promised in a cynical grab for young voters in his State of the Union address last year. But now President Trump is reported to be open to fulfilling Biden's promise to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous Schedule III drug, which would benefit the $33 billion industry by giving them tax deductions and expanding their market. According to The Wall Street Journal, Trump told donors he was considering the 'de-scheduling' of marijuana at a $1 million-a-plate fundraiser at his Bedminster golf club in New Jersey this month that was attended by Kim Rivers, the chief executive of one of the largest marijuana companies, Trulieve. Advertisement Trulieve and its ilk pretend that marijuana reforms are for altruistic medical reasons rather than about growing their profits. Medical marijuana was the bait-and-switch trap when states started legalizing pot more than a decade ago. Now recreational use has exploded to the point where it has overtaken alcohol, and there's still no sound science on the benefits of medical marijuana. 'Complicated subject' Advertisement The president confirmed last week to reporters at the White House that his administration is 'looking at reclassification' and intends to make a decision soon. 'Some people like it. Some people hate it,' he said. 'Some people hate the whole concept of marijuana because if it does bad for the children, it does bad for people that are older than children. 'It's a very complicated subject base,' he said. 'I've heard great things having to do with medical and bad things having to do with just about everything else.' Advertisement Trump is a teetotaler. He credits his late older brother Fred Trump Jr., with his decision not to drink or take drugs. Fred struggled with alcoholism, and died in 1981, aged 42, as a consequence of his disease. 'He was a very handsome guy,' Trump told me on 'Pod Force One.' 'He had an unbelievable personality, but the booze got to him . . . He'd always say, 'Don't drink, don't smoke.' Now in those days, there were no drugs, or I guess there were, but you didn't know about it. But he would have added drugs in there. He said, 'Don't ever smoke and don't ever drink.' 'He was a great guy, you know, he was terrific. Could have done anything. He could fly airplanes unbelievably well,' Trump added. 'He had a great talent for that, but alcohol was a killer for him.' Advertisement Trump learned from his brother's mistakes: 'I never had a drink of alcohol. I don't smoke, and I'm a hard worker. Well, he worked, but he just had the curse, you know, and it was tough.' Marijuana is a disaster. It's infinitely worse than alcohol on every metric, especially mental health. The scientific evidence is incontrovertible that marijuana triggers psychosis in susceptible people. For example, a large-scale Danish study published in the American Journal of Psychiatry in 2017 found that up to 30% of young men's schizophrenia could have been prevented if they had not used pot. Get Miranda's latest take Sign up for Devine Online, the newsletter from Miranda Devine Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Want even more news? Check out more newsletters Even one psychotic episode triggered by marijuana use was associated with a 47% chance of a person developing schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, with the highest risk for those aged 16-to-25, according to the study of 6.9 million Danes between 1972 and 2021. Another longitudinal study of 50,000 Swedes that began in 1987 found that marijuana users were twice as likely as non-users to develop psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia. Heavy users had a six times greater risk. A more potent problem And it was a far less potent drug than it is now. Marijuana of 40 years ago had about a 5% concentration of THC, the intoxicating component of cannabis, but today's industrial products such as gummies, vapes and pre-rolled joints can be as high as 99% THC. Advertisement The stench of pot wafting through blue cities like New York is a hallmark of chaos and disorder. It's the opposite of President Trump's law and order image. So it is hard to believe he would bow to Big Weed and normalize this insidious drug further. Unlike his predecessor, Trump understands on a personal level the perils of addiction. Advertisement You'd think with the drug problems that have afflicted the lives of both his adult children, Hunter and Ashley, Biden might have had more sense, but pandering to Big Weed was a running theme of his presidency, with executive orders and performative pardons for federal marijuana possession (not one person was in jail for possession alone). Thankfully, wise heads inside the Drug Enforcement Administration dragged the chain long enough to stop Biden's plan to reclassify marijuana. The drug lobby has redoubled efforts under Trump, but the signs don't look good for them with the confirmation last month of the new DEA administrator, Terrance Cole. Much to the disappointment of pot advocates, marijuana was nowhere to be seen on his list of 'strategic priorities' announced after he took office, which included combating drug trafficking, Mexican cartels, fentanyl and drug-fueled violence. Advertisement Even better, in a post on LinkedIn last year, he wrote: 'Everybody knows my stance on marijuana after 30 plus years in law enforcement, so don't even ask!' He added anti-drug hashtags #justsayno, #disorders, #notlegal4distribution, #healthissues, #thinblueline and #backtheblue. Every week, Post columnist Miranda Devine sits down for exclusive and candid conversations with the most influential disruptors in Washington. Subscribe here! Cole, who worked at the DEA for 21 years, has made no secret of his concerns about marijuana. sharing a link last year to an article titled 'NOT 'Just Weed': Four Times More Dangerous in Three Decades' that found that higher THC levels are 'linked to increased problems with memory and learning, distorted perception, difficulty in thinking and problem-solving, and loss of coordination.' Cole's attitude is a good sign. 3 states 'just say no' Advertisement So is the fact that three states — Florida, North Dakota and South Dakota — last November rejected marijuana legalization measures on the ballot: reversing the trend of the past decade in which 24 states have now approved the drug for recreational use and 40 for medical use, which of course is just the Trojan horse. In Florida, Big Weed, mainly Trulieve, spent a reported $153 million lobbying for legalization and still lost, despite outspending opponents almost five to one. It was the third time in four years that poor old North and South Dakotans rejected the ballot measure. But Big Weed just won't take no for an answer, believing that it will eventually wear voters down. Another good sign is that even The New York Times is starting to tell the truth about marijuana, reporting that 18 million people — nearly a third of adult users — reporting symptoms of 'cannabis use disorder.' The Times points out that only two states cap the levels of THC, with lobbyists busy preventing any new state health restrictions. Let's hope that the Trump administration puts the brakes on the headlong rush to legalize this dangerous drug.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Ex-Washington Post fact checker hits ‘absentee owner' Bezos, tells him to commit to saving paper or sell it
The Washington Post is a sinking ship with a captain missing in action. And according to its now-former fact-checker, that missing captain is its billionaire owner, Jeff Bezos. "He has to be committed to it. If he's not committed to it, he should find someone else to own it," Glenn Kessler told Fox News Digital. "I feel like he was kind of committed to it. And then he's kind of an absentee owner, and he shouldn't be because it's, you know, one of the prime assets of American journalism." Kessler left the Post in July after more than 27 years at the paper — and his final years there were not the best. "What's so saddening is that five years ago, I would not have imagined The Washington Post would be in this state," Kessler said. Washington Post's Efforts To Court Conservatives Could Drive Away Its Liberal Readers, Ex-fact Checker Warns Kessler never considered leaving the Post until he was presented with the buyout offer, which he accepted. The Post has been financially bleeding, so much so that it reportedly was on pace to lose at least $77 million in 2024. The buyouts had targeted the most veteran staffers, aiming to cut costs and ward off layoffs for the time being. Read On The Fox News App The famed fact-checker was among several high-profile journalists and columnists who have left the paper in recent months, many of whom took issue with decisions and editorial changes Bezos himself had ordered. Kessler compared the Post to "being on the Titanic after it struck an iceberg — drifting aimlessly as it sank, with not enough lifeboats for everyone" in a piece he wrote on his newly-launched Substack account. "They have to have a vision of where they want to go. And I've not seen that vision yet. Or if there is a vision, it's not been clearly articulated," Kessler said. "It's gonna be a really rocky period in the news business in the next five to ten years. And the Post needs to be prepared for that. And I kind of feel like they've lost a lot of, you know, important sailors and captains to keep the ship going. So they're gonna have to make do with less." Bezos has been the target of intense blowback by liberals, who've accused him of bending the knee to President Donald Trump based on actions that have rocked the paper. First was his decision in October to halt the planned endorsement of then-Vice President Kamala Harris just days before the presidential election. Then, in February, he launched a new mission for the editorial pages to promote "personal liberties and free markets," vowing to not publish any pieces that go against those principles. Both instances sparked rebellion among the paper's liberal readers, leading to the cancellation of hundreds of thousands of subscriptions. Several staffers also resigned in protest. But Kessler wasn't always a Bezos critic. He credited the Amazon founder for saving the Post when he bought it in 2013. "Before Bezos bought the newspaper, it was in really bad shape," he told Fox News Digital. "People forget how, you know, because the Graham family didn't really have the resources to keep it going in the new era. And there had been a bunch of buyouts and people were asked to leave. So it had been a pretty grim period then." Washington Post Bombarded With 'Cake' Parties For Departing Staffers Things at the Post were souring so much so that Kessler himself had been interviewing for a different job outside the paper. That was until he was offered The Fact Checker stint in 2011, which he accepted, thinking that if the ship went down, he himself could stay afloat with his own "brand." "But then Bezos bought the paper, and he invested a lot of money in the paper," Kessler said. "So the size of the staff doubled. The number of foreign bureaus probably went up [by] at least a third. The resources devoted to engineering support surged, so the web pages started loading faster, and we could do fantastic graphics. There was investment in video… And you really felt like the Post was going places, and it was actually producing better journalism at any point in the time I had worked at the Post." "And now it is just… it's like it hit an iceberg, and it's kind of drifting there, and I don't think there's a plan to rescue it. Or at least a plan to, you know, turn the ship around and get it moving in the direction it was." Kessler blamed management for being "a little dazzled" by the traffic spike that came during the first Trump administration, reaching levels "almost equal" to the Post's top rival, The New York Times. But then, unlike the Times, the Post failed to capitalize on its new readers by not expanding its portfolio. "I've sat in many meetings and had many discussions and heard lots of speeches. I still have no idea what they're trying to do," Kessler said of his former bosses. "It vaguely seems to say we're gonna appeal [to] the people… who don't really care about the news. And we're gonna provide products that would allow them to read The Washington Post and find out information they need to know," he said. "And the problem, as I wrote in my piece, is that that's what The New York Times has been doing for ten years. They have 10 million subscribers, but a large chunk of that are people that don't get the core news product," Kessler continued. "They get the recipes, they get The Athletic — the sports section, they get product recommendations, they get the games, they play Wordle." Washington Post Reeling From Buyout Exodus As Bosses Hope To Turn The Page At Embattled Paper He said the Post is stuck with "the Avis problem," citing the car rental company's old ads that claimed "We try harder," alluding to the reality it was always in the shadow of Hertz, a dynamic similar to the Gray Lady. "The Washington Post has always been No. 2. It's never had the same size circulation as the Times. I would argue news coverage was better, but maybe I was biased about that," Kessler conceded to Fox News Digital. "But now in this fragmented marketplace, people have to make a choice. What Substacks am I going to subscribe to? What newsletters am I gonna get? What networks am I going to watch? 'Oh, I need one newspaper. I'll be willing to spend money on one newspaper,' and the default is always going to be, unfortunately, The New York Times." He continued, "It's a broader product. It has better arts coverage, theater coverage. I've never gotten an understanding of how the Post was going to combat that problem. And it sounded like the solution was, 'Oh, we're going to be like a mini-me New York Times with things to appeal to people that don't follow news.' Well, they already get that in The New York Times." The Post has scrapped an initiative launched last year dubbed "WP Ventures," meant to attract social media users. However, the paper appears to already be pivoting with Tuesday's announcement of former Axios executive editor and former Post reporter, Sara Kehaulani Goo, returning as its president of Creator Network — a new position Goo says will be "creating personality-driven content" and help provide advertisers "access" to a new audience driven by creators. The Times and the rise of new media weren't the only obstacles facing the Post. "Midway through my journalism career, I started saying, 'I'm working for a dinosaur.' And AI is quite possibly the meteorite that will kill off the last of the dinosaurs," Kessler said to Fox News Digital. "I'm greatly concerned about what AI is gonna do, because AI is gonna kill search. And search was how people often found our news articles." "The statistics I had seen was that four or five years ago, every 100 searches on Google yielded six clicks on a news site. Now it's about every 100 searches yields two clicks on the news site. When people use AI, a thousand searches result in one click," he continued. "So it's a dramatic difference. And if I were running a news organization, at this point, I don't know quite what I would do about that. So it's a bad time to be running a new organization. I do have sympathy for the situation that [Washington Post publisher and CEO] Will Lewis and [Washington Post executive editor] Matt Murray find themselves in right now. I just question whether or not they really have figured out what to do." Goo said in her announcement that "we're going to be infusing AI with everything that we do to help us maximize efficiency and scale." But the buck ultimately stops with Bezos, according to Kessler. "The Post was really at its high point [after Bezos' purchase]— the amount of stories we're producing, the quality of the stories was really significant. And then, traffic surged when Trump got elected and there was so much hunger and interest in the news we were producing. We kind of lost our way after that," Kessler said. "And not only lost our way, we started losing oodles of money. A hundred million dollars one year, I think the last number I saw [in] 2023 was $77 million… I think even for a person as rich as Jeff Bezos, that counts as real money." "And I have gotten the sense that he's a bit of an absentee owner. He's had other distractions, and he's committed more to some of his other enterprises, such as a space company, than he is to The Washington Post, which is really just a tiny part of his business investments. And maybe, I don't know, I hate to speculate, maybe you thought he gave us his best shot, and we blew it, and now we've got it muddled through," he added. A spokesperson for The Washington Post told Fox News Digital, "The Washington Post is reinventing itself to be a trusted news source for all Americans. That means working hard each day to publish the most accurate news, alongside opinions that resonate across the nation."Original article source: Ex-Washington Post fact checker hits 'absentee owner' Bezos, tells him to commit to saving paper or sell it Solve the daily Crossword


New York Post
6 hours ago
- New York Post
Mayor Adams slams Mamdani for wanting to decriminalize prostitution: ‘Don't know where in his Quran it states that it's OK'
Mayor Eric Adams rebuked mayoral candidate Zohran's Mamdani in religious terms over the socialist candidate's longstanding push to decriminalize prostitution – saying the candidate was 'lost' on the grim reality of sex work. 'I can't be more clear. I'm a man of God, just as Mamdani says he's a Muslim. I don't know where in his Quran it states that it's ok for a woman to be on the streets selling their body,' Hizzoner told reporters Sunday. 3 Mayor Eric Adams speaks with reporters on Sunday. NY Post/Steven Vago Advertisement 'I don't know what Quran he is reading. It's not in my Bible.' He also said Mamdani's position ignores the victims of sex trafficking. 'You're not doing any service to a woman who is on the street who is forced to sell her body for whatever reason,' Adams told reporters Sunday. Advertisement 3 A woman suspected of being a prostitute on Roosevelt Avenue in Queens. NY Post 3 Frontrunner candidate Zohran Mamdani has been quiet on the issue of prostitution during his mayoral campaign. Michael Nigro 'We are trying to bring down crime and he is talking about legalizing sex work. Number one: As a man who said he is of faith, I don't quite understand what religion supports prostitution. I think he's lost on the fact that sex trafficking is very much part of prostitution,' he added. Adams' comments came after The Post cast the spotlight on Mamdani's past push to change the statue that makes it a crime for people to sell their bodies for sex in New York. It's an issue he has taken up multiple times since he ran for state assembly in 2020 and has continually supported since. Advertisement But the 33-year-old Democratic candidate has been largely mum on the issue since he started his run for mayor, leaving critics worried that he might make a sudden push for legal prostitution if he makes it into office in the fall. And Adams – who is running for reelection as an independent — thinks it would be reprehensible to green-light the practice. 'If that is his belief, it is a danger for our city. Our city needs to be a safe city. It should not be a city where women are standing on corners, or boys are standing on corners, or young men standing on corners selling their bodies,' he said.