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  • How the 2025 passenger jet, chopper crash near Reagan National has changed DC’s airspace – WTOP News

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    Almost a year after the midair collision between an American Airlines passenger jet and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter, the congested airspace around Reagan National Airport continues to be the focus of attention.

    This story is part of WTOP’s series “Five stories that defined the DC-area in 2025.” You can hear it on air all this week and read it online.

    Almost a year after the midair collision between an American Airlines passenger jet and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter, the congested airspace around Reagan National Airport continues to be the focus of attention.

    “This was a wake-up call for not only the folks who go in and out of Reagan National all the time, but the whole country, finding out that this airspace was so conflicted between planes and choppers,” Tom Costello, senior correspondent with NBC News, said.

    A total of 67 people — all 64 passengers on the commercial flight and three soldiers in the helicopter — died in the Jan. 29 crash.

    In mid-December, the federal government admitted failures by the pilots of the Army Black Hawk helicopter and a controller in the Reagan National Airport tower contributed to the deadly crash.

    The admission, which was first reported Dec. 17, is part of court documents filed by the Department of Justice in U.S. District Court in D.C., in a lawsuit brought earlier this year by the family of a passenger killed on American Eagle flight 5342.

    “The United States admits pilots flying PAT25 failed to maintain proper and safe visual separation from AE5342,” according to the court filing, which also said air traffic controllers failed to alert the jet of the approaching chopper.

    While allegations of liability and damages regarding the January collision continue in the court system, safety provisions to prevent future tragedies are still evolving.

    Within days of the collision, the Federal Aviation Administration banned nearly all nonessential helicopter flights near Reagan National, requiring air traffic controllers and pilots to rely on radar to ensure separation.

    A plane takes off from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport as Roberto Marquez of Dallas places flowers at a memorial of crosses he erected for the 67 victims of a midair collision between an Army helicopter and an American Airlines jet, Feb. 1, 2025, in Arlington, Va. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)

     

     


    2025 in Review


    The airport’s main runway — 01/19 — is the single busiest runway in the country, averaging 820 arrivals and departures per day, according to the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority. The next busiest airport runways are at Los Angeles International Airport, with 781 flights, Newark Liberty International, with 607 flights, and Chicago O’Hare, with 599.

    The Airports Authority and local politicians have continually challenged proposals to add additional flights at Reagan.

    Takeoff and landing capacity at Reagan National and other busy airports is managed with a slot-controlled system. Airports have a limited number of slots per hour or day, set by the FAA to prevent overcrowding and maintain safety.

    In May 2024, five new round-trip slots were added, as part of the FAA Reauthorization Act.

    Virginia Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine issued a joint statement in September: “Unfortunately, Congress added more flights into DCA’s already chaotic airspace just months before this tragic crash over the objections of the region’s Senate delegation and the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, disregarding the concerns of numerous pilots, air traffic controllers, and FAA and DOT personnel.”

    The airspace over D.C. is the most restricted in the country. Since World War II, during the Cold War, and after Sept. 11, 2001, security measures have continued to increase.

    The 15-mile Flight Restricted Zone around D.C. allows only military and government flights, emergency flights and scheduled commercial flights.

    By March, the FAA imposed permanent rules, closing helicopter Route 4 between Hains Point and the Wilson Bridge and prohibiting the use of certain runways at Reagan National when helicopters are conducting urgent missions near the airport.

    “I think the question is going to be, ‘Can the FAA and the military come to an agreement where they are able to keep this airspace deconflicted in the future — between the military choppers and the planes that are in and out of Reagan Airport?’” Costello said.

    On Dec. 17, the Senate gave final passage to an annual military policy bill, the National Defense Authorization Act, which included provisions that critics — including National Transportation Safety Board Chair Jennifer Homendy — said would roll back safety restrictions imposed in 2025 and allow the military to operate as it did before the crash.

    Senate Commerce Committee Chair and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz denounced those provisions in the massive National Defense Authorization bill that would allow military aircraft to get a waiver to return to operating without broadcasting their precise location.

    Shortly after the NDAA’s passage, the Senate passed Cruz’s bill that would require military helicopters to signal their location in the D.C. area. The House has not yet voted on the bill.

     

    Aircraft Down
    FILE – A crane offloads a piece of wreckage from a salvage vessel onto a flatbed truck, near the wreckage site in the Potomac River of a mid-air collision between an American Airlines jet and a Black Hawk helicopter, at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Feb. 5, 2025, in Arlington, Va. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)

     

    The military, government and DC’s airspace

    WTOP anchor and reporter Dan Ronan, a 25-year commercially-rated pilot, said the give-and-take between safety regulators and lawmakers was inevitable.

    “It’s a job that is too big for 435 members of Congress to write rules about airspace in an area that’s 35 or 40 miles in circumference,” Ronan said.

    In addition to the congested air space, Ronan said the military has opposed the FAA’s requirement that all aircraft use ADS-B location tracking technology, which broadcasts an aircraft’s location.

    “The Pentagon doesn’t want to be tracked, because any hobbyist can go on a commercial website and track what an aircraft is, and go, ‘There’s a Blackhawk flying by Reagan National,’” Ronan said. “While we may not know who’s the cargo in the aircraft, if it’s flying over the river, one would naturally assume it’s high-value cargo.’”

    At the time of the collision, the Black Hawk helicopter was on a training mission, using night goggles, “practicing for the continuity of government in the event of a national security emergency, in the event of an attack in the capital, and they needed to practice going in and out, getting people in and out of the capital,” Costello said.

    Costello said the military “clearly wants to protect its interest” in D.C.’s airspace.

    “It wants to protect the flexibility that it feels it needs to go in and out of the Pentagon, and to train chopper crews appropriately, up and down the Potomac,” he said.

    Ronan can see the Pentagon’s point of view.

    “They don’t want their aircraft showing up on FlightAware. And for issues of national security, that makes sense.”

    However, the FAA and NTSB feel differently.

    “The FAA is saying, ‘Wait a minute, we’re talking about one of the busiest airports, and one of the single busiest runways in the country,’” Costello said. “‘On a typical day when we’re not in a national security emergency, the priority has to be the civilian traffic going in and out of Reagan Airport.’”

    According to Costello, while “nothing positive came from this terrible crash,” he believes it pointed out critical safety protocol improvements and investments were needed.

    “Congress needs to spend the money to upgrade air traffic control, not just at Reagan Airport, but nationwide. Already, Congress has allocated more than $12 billion to do that,” Costello said. “Our ATC system has been antiquated and in desperate need of an upgrade.”

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Neal Augenstein

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  • Five stories defined the defined the DC-area in 2025 – WTOP News

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    #1: Federal layoffs and job cuts

    Back in January, President Donald Trump tapped billionaire Elon Musk to lead what was called the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE. The stated goal was to cut fraud, waste and abuse by downsizing the federal workforce.

    DOGE’s efforts led hundreds of thousands of federal workers to leave their jobs through layoffs, firings or the “deferred resignation” program.

    “When we look January to June, there’s been a huge drop in federal employment in the region. It’s down 4.5%,” said Tracy Hadden Loh, a fellow with the Brookings Institution.

    Loh and Terry Clower, the director of the Schar School’s Center for Regional Analysis at George Mason University, said there are still a lot of unknowns since detailed local third quarter labor data likely won’t be released until next month.

    “The DOGE cuts and the actions of the Trump administration have hit the region very quickly,” Clower said.

    WTOP’s Kate Ryan reports on the impact DOGE has had on the local economy.

    Read the full story here.

    #2: Midair crash near DCA

    The midair collision near Reagan National Airport on Jan. 29 involving an American Airlines passenger jet and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter killed all 64 aboard the jet, and the three-person chopper crew.

    The National Transportation Safety Board concluded the crash was caused by a combination of altitude misreporting, the D.C. area’s congested airspace and communication failures. The chopper’s altimeter was underreporting the helicopter’s altitude, so the crew believed they were flying at the appropriate level, which put the chopper directly in the approach path of the jet.

    The FAA permanently banned nonessential helicopter flights in critical DCA airspace, with exceptions only for medevac, law enforcement, presidential or urgent missions.

    WTOP’s Neal Augenstein reports on how the crash changed D.C.’s airspace.

    Read the full story here on Tuesday.

    #3: Federal government shutdown

    There have been a growing number of government shutdowns in recent years, but none has lasted longer than the one that dragged on for 43 days in the fall of 2025.

    The shutdown had a major impact, causing more than a million federal employees to work without pay, millions of Americans to lose their food assistance when SNAP benefits ran out and widespread disruptions in air travel.

    The U.S. House was also out of session during the duration of the shutdown, bringing all legislative action to a halt.

    The government shutdown, while decried by Republicans and Democrats, was used by both parties to try to achieve their policy goals — a method that usually fails.

    Democrats pressed to get subsidies extended for the Affordable Care Act that would prevent insurance premiums from soaring for millions of Americans in January.

    Ultimately, Senate Majority Leader and South Dakota Sen. John Thune agreed to a vote on extending the subsidies, which failed in the Senate.

    The subsidies are set to expire on Dec. 31, and Congress potentially faces another shutdown showdown when federal funds run out on Jan. 30.

    WTOP’s Mitchell Miller reports on how the 2025 federal government shutdown opened the doors for potentially more in the future.

    Read the full story on Wednesday.

    #4: Washington Commanders stadium deal

    D.C. scored big this year. After months of tense negotiations, the D.C. Council voted to bring the Washington Commanders back home with a new stadium at the former RFK Stadium site.

    The first vote in August passed 9-3, and after some last-minute drama, the final vote in September sealed the deal.

    “Washington, D.C., residents are winning,” said Council member Kenyan McDuffie.

    Demolition of the old RFK Stadium is already underway, and the site will be cleared for construction by fall 2026. The new roofed stadium is expected to open in 2030, marking the largest private investment in city history.

    WTOP’s Mike Murillo reports on what to expect with the development of a new sports stadium in the nation’s capital.

    Read the full story here on Thursday.

    #5: Federal law enforcement surge in DC

    President Donald Trump activated hundreds of National Guard members and described a plan for federal oversight of D.C.’s police department on Aug. 11.

    While city leaders touted significant drops in violent crime before the effort, Trump said the plan would, in part, be “getting rid of the slums.” He also criticized the maintenance of city streets and parks, highlighting graffiti and potholes.

    The crime emergency ended after 30 days, after Congress declined to extend it. White House data described drops in violent crime categories.

    D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser signed an executive order outlining the city’s path for federal collaboration after the emergency declaration ended in the fall, but signs of the surge remain. As of early December, there were over 2,700 National Guard troops assigned to patrol the city, according to data from the Joint Task Force.

    During the week of Thanksgiving, West Virginia National Guard members Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe and Specialist Sarah Beckstrom were shot near Farragut Square. Beckstrom died in the shooting, and Wolfe was critically injured. In the days after, D.C. police teamed up with Guard members to patrol city streets.

    There’s an ongoing court battle over whether the military presence in D.C. is legal, and whether the deployment can continue. Guard members are reportedly expected to remain in D.C. through at least February.

    WTOP’s Scott Gelman reports on the August federal law enforcement surge and how the takeover of the District’s police force still echoes months later.

    Read the full story here on Friday.

    WTOP’s Ciara Wells, Kate Ryan, Neal Augenstein, Mitchell Miller, Mike Murillo and Scott Gelman contributed to this report.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Ciara Wells

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