(UNITED STATES) The U.S. Senate Commerce Committee unanimously advanced sweeping aviation safety legislation on October 21, 2025, after a deadly January mid-air collision between an American Airlines regional jet and an Army helicopter that killed 67 people. The bill, called the Safe Operations of Shared Airspace Act of 2025 (S.1985), would require all aircraft—civilian and military—to equip with ADS-B (Automatic Dependent Surveillance–Broadcast) no later than December 31, 2031, closing a long-standing gap that allowed some military flights to operate without real-time position reporting.
What the bill would do

- Require ADS-B equipment on all aircraft operating in shared airspace by December 31, 2031.
- Tighten oversight of operations where helicopters and jets mix, particularly near commercial service airports.
- Order expert reviews of the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) Safety Management System to verify that current risk controls are suitable for mixed operations.
Background and rationale
The January crash involved an Army Black Hawk helicopter that, according to committee materials, did not carry ADS-B. Lawmakers and safety experts argue that mandating ADS-B across fleets is central to preventing similar tragedies by ensuring controllers and pilots can see reliable, broadcast location data from every aircraft in mixed traffic.
ADS-B is a satellite-based surveillance technology that broadcasts an aircraft’s position to air traffic control and other equipped aircraft. Civilian operators in the United States already widely use ADS-B in controlled airspace, but some military aircraft have operated without it. By requiring ADS-B for all aircraft in shared airspace, the bill removes exceptions that investigators and experts say can create blind spots.
“Shared airspace needs shared rules, and location reporting via ADS-B is the common language that lets pilots and controllers ‘see’ each other in time to avoid harm.”
— Summary of lawmakers’ rationale
For more technical context and operational information, see the FAA’s ADS-B program page: https://www.faa.gov/nextgen/programs/adsb
Timeline and implementation
- Deadline: December 31, 2031 — provides time for budgeting, installation, testing, and crew training.
- Supporters emphasize the deadline gives agencies, airlines, helicopter operators, and military units time to plan upgrades without disrupting essential missions or public service flights.
Implementation activities operators should expect:
- Assess current fleet avionics and ADS-B compatibility.
- Schedule installations and testing during routine maintenance windows.
- Train crews and update operational procedures.
- Coordinate procurement and mission planning for military units to maintain readiness.
Support and legislative progress
- Sponsored by Sen. Maria Cantwell and others, the package has bipartisan support and is backed by Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and aviation safety advocates.
- The committee’s unanimous vote advances the bill to the full Senate; supporters expect broad agreement given the bipartisan tone and urgent safety context.
- Next steps: Senate floor consideration, potential amendments, then House consideration.
Safety management and oversight reviews
The bill directs independent, expert reviews of the FAA’s Safety Management System to examine whether the agency’s tools and oversight effectively address hazards unique to mixed operations, including:
- Helicopter flight patterns (lower altitudes, different speeds)
- Interactions between rotorcraft and fixed-wing aircraft near busy airports
- Whether current risk models and safety audits reflect real-world operations
These reviews aim to ensure risk controls keep pace with increasingly complex airspace.
Expected benefits
Supporters argue the move will:
- Improve real-time awareness for controllers and pilots in mixed traffic
- Reduce blind spots caused by non-broadcasting aircraft
- Create a uniform expectation for all operators in shared airspace
- Provide better data for safety investigations and risk analysis
VisaVerge.com’s analysis notes that a uniform ADS-B standard is the heart of the legislation and is designed to reduce collision risk where military and civilian flight paths intersect.
Practical considerations for operators
- Fleet planning, avionics assessments, and installation scheduling will be necessary to meet the 2031 deadline.
- Stakeholders typically work with manufacturers and maintenance providers to sequence upgrades during regular checks to minimize downtime.
- Military commands will need to align procurement and mission planning to meet the standard while maintaining operational readiness.
Why this legislation matters
The committee framed the bill as a focused response to a clear problem: too many aircraft in shared airspace operate without the same visibility rules. By centering on ADS-B and targeted oversight near commercial airports, the bill seeks to prevent another event like the January collision and to make accountability uniform across airlines, charter operators, helicopter services, and the military.
The committee’s unanimous vote suggests momentum. With the memory of the January crash still fresh, lawmakers appear ready to move toward one rule for all who fly in shared skies. The next step is a Senate floor debate, which supporters hope will turn this aviation safety legislation into law and give operators a firm compliance horizon.
This Article in a Nutshell
The Senate Commerce Committee advanced the Safe Operations of Shared Airspace Act (S.1985) on October 21, 2025, following a January mid-air collision that killed 67 people. The bill would require all aircraft operating in shared airspace—civilian and military—to carry ADS-B equipment by December 31, 2031, closing a gap that allowed some military flights to operate without real-time position reporting. It also calls for expert reviews of the FAA’s Safety Management System and tighter oversight of mixed helicopter and jet operations, particularly near commercial airports. Supporters argue these changes will improve situational awareness, reduce blind spots, and provide better data for safety investigations. The measure enjoys bipartisan backing and now moves to the full Senate for debate and potential amendments.