A parliamentary panel today said the bill to establish an authority to regulate aviation safety is nothing more than the existing DGCA and asked Civil Aviation Ministry to draft a comprehensive law to replace a 1934 Act governing aviation.
The panel's chief also expressed doubts whether the bill would be passed in the ongoing last session of Parliament.
"The legislation needs a serious relook... It seems to have been drafted in a hurry to ensure that India is not downgraded by the US (regulator) Federal Aviation Administration. But it is very unfortunate that we have been downgraded now," Sitaram Yechury, Chairman of the Standing Committee on Transport, Tourism and Culture, told reporters after tabling a report on the bill in Parliament.
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Asked whether he was optimistic that the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) Bill would be passed in this last session, he said "we doubt whether the Bill will see the light of the day in this session. The Ministry would have to keep a draft ready for the next Parliament."
Maintaining that the Ministry "came very unprepared", he said the Ministry would have to "at least study our recommendations" and prepare a comprehensive legislation to replace the "age-old" 1934 Aircraft Act which governs the entire civil aviation sector.
"The proposed CAA will be as good as the existing DGCA without much addition to powers and authority. It would have been better to come out with a comprehensive Bill after revisiting the Aircraft Act 1934 which has been too old to tackle the emerging problems in the aviation sector," the Standing Committee report said.