- Gassing Up With Garbage
- UBS Target of Fraud Suit from NY Attorney General
- SEC Plans to Broaden Curbs on Short Sales: Cox
- 30-Year Bond Gains Full Point as Stocks Weaken
- FCC Agrees to Approve Sirius Pruchase of XM: Report
- Union Pacific Profit Rises, Beats Estimates
- Bristol Profit Beats Forecasts, Helped by Plavix
- Jobless Benefit Claims Rise above 400,000
- 3M Profit Up 3%, Tops Estimates
- Pisani: New ETF = Play on Mid-East Growth
- Existing Home Sales: A Look At Numbers That Weren't There
- Comicon: Not Just Funny Business
- See What People Are Saying About... Water Scarcity
- Microsoft's Ballmer Addresses Analysts
- Fast Money: Wall Street Got Drunk!
- Play the Coming Power-Grid Upgrade
- Microsoft's Johnson: What His Leaving Means For Company
- Essential Oils For Your Portfolio
- GATX 2Q earnings decline on higher costs
- AutoNation 2Q profit dives, 1,300 job cuts planned
- Sector Wrap: National banks drop on housing woes
- Dow Chemical reports decline in 2Q profit
- Bristol-Myers, Eli Lilly post strong 2Q results
- Oil gains ground but natural gas continues slide
- Stocks tumble after sales of existing homes fall
- Fatal military vehicle wrecks prompt warnings
- Lee Enterprises news co. 3Q profit falls 87 pct
- EPA dumps rules allowing potato pesticide in food
WASHINGTON - The government already may have underestimated by billions of dollars the cost to transition to a satellite-based air traffic control system in coming years, according to an independent industry analysis.
The Federal Aviation Administration in August awarded ITT Corp. a contract worth up to $1.8 billion to build the first portion of the system, dubbed NextGen, that will take nearly 20 years to complete. The agency has said that the new system will help improve operations and limit delays and is expected to cost between $15 billion and $22 billion.
But an independent industry analysis completed last year forecast that NextGen's software development alone could cost more than $50 billion, Transportation Department Inspector General Calvin L. Scovel III said Thursday during a House hearing on the FAA's proposed budget for 2009.
Scovel said costs "remain uncertain and FAA needs to establish reasonable expectations for NextGen investments and realistic timeframes for improvements to enhance capacity and reduce delays."
On Wednesday, the Transportation Department reported that more than 26 percent of commercial flights in the U.S. arrived late or were canceled last year, the airline industry's second-worst performance since comparable data began being collected in 1995.
Rep. Jerry Costello, D-Ill., chairman of the House aviation subcommittee, and other lawmakers expressed concern about the wide gap in cost estimates. FAA officials said they had not seen the industry estimate, and Costello asked them to review it and respond.
The Bush administration's $68 billion fiscal 2009 budget proposal for the FAA would more than double the investment in NextGen technology to $688 million. The FAA's current funding will expire on Feb. 29.


