FAA reducing air traffic by 10% across 40 ‘high-volume’ markets during government shutdown
- On Wednesday, the Federal Aviation Administration announced it will reduce air traffic by 10% across 40 high-volume markets, with phased cuts starting Friday.
- Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said cuts are necessary to reduce stress on air traffic controllers who have worked unpaid since the government shutdown began last month, with many logging mandatory overtime.
- Airports in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago are among the 40 affected, with cuts possibly removing 268,000 seats; Miami International Airport had 95 delays Wednesday and 28 cancellations scheduled for Friday.
- Airlines are scrambling to revise schedules after the FAA said it will throttle capacity by 10%, operating under expectations to cut at least 4% Friday and 5% Saturday.
- The shutdown, now the longest in U.S. history, continues as bipartisan Senate negotiators hope for a deal soon amid President Trump pressing Republicans to end the stalemate.
572 Articles
572 Articles
5 California airports to see flight reductions due to government shutdown
Just ahead of the holiday travel season, the Federal Aviation Administration has announced that it will reduce air traffic by 10% across 40 major U.S. airports due to the lingering federal government shutdown, which is impacting air traffic controllers. “I’m not aware in my 35-year history in the aviation market where we’ve had a situation where we’re taking these kinds of measures,” said FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford at a news conference on W…
The Government Shutdown Is Spreading to the Skies
The shutdown is spreading to the skies. The FAA has ordered a 10 percent reduction in flights at major airports like JFK, La Guardia, and LAX due to staffing shortages caused by the never-ending government shutdown.
Portland jetport warns of flight cancellations after FAA cuts air traffic at 40 airports
The Federal Aviation Administration is reducing air traffic by 10% at 40 'high-volume' airports across the country, including Boston's Logan, potentially impacting thousands of flights.
Logan among airports hit by FAA’s 10% air traffic cut
Boston’s Logan Airport has been named as one of the nation's top airports subject to an FAA-imposed 10% cut in air traffic coming in response to the federal government shutdown and increasing pressures on air traffic controllers who are being forced to work without pay.
The Federal Aviation Administration announced on Wednesday that it will reduce air traffic by 10% in 40 “high volume” markets starting on Friday morning to maintain travel safety, as air traffic controllers show signs of stress during the current government’s closure. The cut will affect thousands of flights across the country, as the FAA manages more than 44,000 flights per day, including commercial passenger flights, cargo aircraft and private…
Due to the so-called shutdown, flights in the US are expected to be cancelled from Friday. Minister of Transport Duffy announced that the connections at the 40 busiest airports in the country will be cut by ten percent, which will relieve the air drawers, who are particularly affected by the budget barrier.
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