Hi -- I wanted to share this article from the "New York Post" about my bipartisan legislation which was just signed into law requiring secondary cockpit barriers on all commercial airplanes. It's the last of the 9/11 Commission's recommendations. Here is a [link]( to the article, and it is pasted below. I'm eager to hear your thoughts. Yours, Josh Critical flaw that allowed terrorists to storm the cockpits of four jetliners on 9/11 finally fixed after 23 years By Rich Calder and Susan Edelman Published May 18, 2024, 2:14 p.m. ET Nearly 23 years after 9/11, a critical flaw that helped terrorists storm the cockpits of four jetliners, kill the pilots and turn the planes into weapons of mass murder is finally being corrected. President Joe Biden on Thursday [signed into law]( [requiring secondary cockpit barriers on all commercial airplanes]( â the last of the 9/11 Commissionâs recommendations yet to be implemented. The lightweight, lockable metal gates â long opposed by the airline industry because of [their added cost of roughly $35,000]( a pop â barricade cockpit doors to protect pilots when they open them in flight to use the restroom or receive food. âI guess I wore down Congress enough that they were tired of me,â said Ellen Saracini, widow of Capt. Victor Saracini, a pilot on doomed United Flight 175, which was hijacked and smashed into the World Trade Centerâs south tower. âThe airlines have had great lobbying efforts against this over the years, and I think they thought the little widow was going home in two weeks, but I decided not to,â she told The Post. âItâs been a lot of work, a lot of years, but my commitment was to never let this happen again,â added Saracini. âVictor didnât die in vain.â The changes wonât happen overnight, however. It may take three to five years for the airlines to retrofit roughly 8,000 airplanes with the new barriers because of the slow federal bureaucracy, sources said. Biden ratified the provisions by signing off on a larger five-year, $105 billion civil aviation bill aimed at improving air travel. It was approved 387-26 by the House of Representatives Wednesday and [88-4 a week earlier by the U.S. Senate.]( âThis amendment is a critical step to help prevent 9/11 from ever happening again,â said Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), who along with Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), added the provision requiring secondary cockpit barriers. Both pols in 2018 helped sign into law the [âSaracini Aviation Safety Act,â]( named after the late pilot, which required secondary barriers on newly built planes â but not existing aircraft. The hijackers sent by Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden brought down four planes on Sept. 11, 2001, two crashing into the World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon and one onto a field in Shanksville, Pa., after brave passengers fought to wrest control before it could reach the White House or U.S. Capitol. Victor Saracini, 51, was the father of two young daughters when he perished. âIn view of the high number of recent unruly passenger incidents, and the increased threat posture due to the Israeli-Hamas war, this long overdue protection against cockpit intrusions is certainly welcome,â said former Federal Aviation Administration Special Agent Brian Sullivan. âNo longer will flight attendants be forced to block the cockpit with their little beverage cart â a method that provided about three seconds of additional protection and put the flight attendants at risk,â he said. Angelo Roefaro, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), said âthe tragedy of 9/11 showed improvements were needed in both airport security and planes themselves,â but the ânew [rule] will mark an additional and critical safety measure now complete.â Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-Staten Island/Brooklyn) said itâs still not enough. Josh Gottheimer For Congress
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