Trump Mega Bill to Fund New Air Traffic Control System
Congress passed a bill including $12.5 billion for air traffic control improvements, but it cut incentives for the EV market and reduced funding for Brand USA, while increasing some visa fees, drawing mixed reactions from travel, hospitality and transportation...

Congress on Thursday passed President Donald Trump's mega bill, sending it to the Oval Office for his signature. The legislation included more than $12.5 billion to improve the country's challenged air traffic control system, with funds to remain available through Sept. 30, 2029.
The money will fund the new air traffic control system plan introduced in early May by U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy. About a third ($4.75 billion) of the ATC system budget was earmarked for telecommunications infrastructure modernization and systems upgrades. Another $100 million was designated for air traffic controller advanced training technologies.
The aviation and travel industry for years has called for upgrades to the system as the number of near misses at airports and equipment outages seem to have increased in recent years. The issue came to a head beginning in late April and into May after multiple equipment outages at the facility responsible for flights at Newark Liberty International Airport.
The outages led to some air traffic controllers taking leave due to the stress of the initial event on April 28, United Airlines reducing its schedule at the airport by 35 flights per day and the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration temporarily reducing hourly flight movements at the airport through Oct. 25.
Our country needs and deserves an air traffic control system that builds upon our safety record, handles 21st century air traffic volumes efficiently and provides innovation for our increasingly complex system."
U.S. Travel Association's Geoff Freeman
"Throughout this entire reconciliation process, support for modernizing our nation's airspace has remained firm because it is a smart investment that benefits all Americans," Airlines for America said in a Thursday statement. "Our country needs and deserves an air traffic control system that builds upon our safety record, handles 21st century air traffic volumes efficiently and provides innovation for our increasingly complex system."
"This legislation is a giant step in the right direction when it comes to improving America's travel infrastructure and security," U.S. Travel Association president and CEO Geoff Freeman said in a Thursday statement. "Bold, necessary investments in air traffic control and Customs and Border Protection will make a meaningful difference in the traveler's experience."
Additional Travel-Related Elements
Freeman's reference to CBP was for the $4.1 billion in the budget to hire and train at least 5,000 new U.S. CBP officers and $2 billion in CBP retention bonuses to address ongoing staffing shortages, which will help lower wait times at airports, according to U.S. Travel.
The bill also included $673 million to expand the biometric entry-exit system at ports of entry in the U.S., which will "strengthen border security and unlock future Visa Waiver Program expansion," said U.S. Travel.
A tax credit on "clean fuels" production, which includes sustainable aviation fuel, was extended for two additional years, to Dec. 31, 2029. "Growing domestic SAF production is expected to drive substantial job creation and economic activity in heartland communities," Americans for Clean Aviation Fuels executive director Jeff Grappone said in a statement. "The entire SAF value chain—including the farming, aviation, manufacturing, oil and gas, and biofuels sectors—will continue to work together to ensure that clean aviation fuels strengthen American energy independence and security."
The American Hotel & Lodging Association applauded the inclusion of tax provisions "critical to the hospitality industry" in a statement after the bill passed the U.S. Senate earlier this week. Those provisions "prevent major tax increases on both hotel employees and businesses," AHLA president and CEO Rosanna Maietta said. They also "provide small business hotel owners with the level of certainty they need to effectively operate amidst tremendous uncertainty resulting from years of inflation, trade impacts, and a softening of demand within the broader travel sector."
Frustration Among the Praise
Not all travel-related elements of the bill will have a positive effect on travel. The bill also repealed incentives for the U.S. electric vehicle market, which could affect car rental companies with EVs in their fleets and corporations looking to include EVs in their programs.
Tax credits valid until 2032 will now expire by Sept. 30, 2025, which could end up pushing up the cost of EVs. The bill also eliminates Biden administration measures designed to give U.S. manufacturers a chance to survive Chinese auto competition, according to the New York Times, as demand for EVs and particularly hybrid cars increases.
These changes paired with the February suspension of the $5 billion National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure program could spell upcoming challenges for the EV industry.
... slashes services working-class Americans depend on to fund tax-cuts for bosses and the ultra-rich."
Unite Here's Nia Winston
Meanwhile, U.S. Travel called out the fact that federal funding for Brand USA, the U.S. destination marketing organization, has not been restored. Its federal match was reduced from up to $100 million annually to $20 million as part of broader federal spending cuts.
U.S. Travel's Freeman also expressed frustration with the bill's "steep increases" to non-immigrant visa fees, which include a new $250 Visa Integrity Fee for visitor visas, and it raises the Electronic System for Travel Authorization fee for Visa Waiver Program travelers to $40 from $21.
"Failing to fully fund Brand USA is a missed opportunity—especially as the administration seeks to maximize a historic slate of global events on American soil," Freeman said. "As Congress begins work on FY26 appropriations, it must fully fund Brand USA and ensure visitor fees are lowered, if not eliminated, wherever possible."
Unite Here, the union that represents many hotel workers, called the budget "a horror show that slashes services working-class Americans depend on to fund tax-cuts for bosses and the ultra-rich," Unite Here secretary-treasurer Nia Winston said in a Tuesday statement. "It would transfer billions of dollars to ICE to ramp up their mass-deportation machine while taking healthcare away from 16 million people.”