The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) will be replaced by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) early next year. According to highly placed sources in the Ministry of Civil Aviation, the government is still debating on who will preside over the body. "We are working out the details of the body and then we'll send it for Cabinet clearance. The ministry will announce the launch of the CAA early next year," said a senior official in the ministry requesting anonymity.
He further added that the ministry is still deciding whether the body will be headed by a chairperson or a CEO or both. According to the draft, "the chairperson will be a person who is or has held the post of secretary to the government or an equivalent post in the central government." The ministry came up with the plan after it realized the need for a body which would be more autonomous than the DGCA.
"It is proposed to create a CAA to replace the DGCA. The proposed CAA would be able to overcome the constraints presently faced by the DGCA in terms of recruitment and retention of technical manpower and inability to quickly address operational issues due to lack of adequate administrative and financial authority," Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh has said.
The new regulatory body will be focused on making the aviation regulator independent by giving it more financial and recruitment powers. For instance, The Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) will not be involved in the recruitment process of CAA unlike in DGCA.
"The new regulator will also have the power to demand financial documents, balance sheets and other such confidential documents from the carriers," said another official from the ministry. He also added that the ministry is working out ways to give more powers to the CAA as far as air safety and monitoring airfares is concerned.