FAA Upgrades Israel’s Aviation Safety Rating
The Federal Aviation Administration says Israel is now complying with international aviation standards and its U.S. safety rating has been upgraded.
The FAA said Thursday the decision to return Israel to the list of nations the U.S. says meet international safety standards was based on an FAA review in October of the country’s civil aviation authority.
The upgrade means Israeli airlines can expand their service to the United States and form partnerships with U.S. carriers.
Israel was downgraded by the FAA in 2008 a category 2 rating, which means a country either lacks laws or regulations necessary to oversee airline safety or its civil aviation authority – equivalent to the FAA for safety matters – lacks technical expertise or trained personnel, or is deficient in its record keeping or inspection procedures.
- Senate Says Climate Is Driving Insurance Non-renewals; Industry Strikes Back
- Colorado Adds Record Insurance Coverage for Sanders and Hunter With Both Playing in Alamo Bowl
- Car Sales to Grow Modestly in 2025 as Global Output Falters
- CCC Intelligent Solutions Acquires EvolutionIQ for $730M