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The American Plan for Air Traffic Control: A Description of SC31

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

Extract

In May 1948 the Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics, a cooperative association of United States government and industrial air telecommunication agencies, issued a report outlining a comprehensive scheme for the development of air traffic control facilities in U.S.A. for the next fifteen years. This report was prepared by a committee set up by the R.T.C.A., Special Committee 31, and it is generally known as the SC31 Report. It was the result of a study undertaken at the request of the Technical Division of the Air Coordinating Committee, an inter-departmental committee established by the Secretaries of State, War, Navy and Commerce, and directed by the President to examine aviation problems of mutual concern and to develop and recommend integrated policies and actions to be taken for their solution.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1951

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References

REFERENCES

1R.T.C.A. Special Committee 31 (1948). Air Traffic Control Paper 27–48/Do–12, Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
2President's Air Policy Commission (1948). Survival in the Air Age, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
3Congressional Aviation Policy Board (1948). National Aviation Policy, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
4Department of Commerce, Aeronautics Branch (1933). Report of the Committee on Airport Traffic Control, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
5Air Coordinating Committee Air Traffic Control and Navigation Panel, Operational Policy Group (1950). Air Traffic Control and the National Security, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar