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Flight delays persist as government shutdown leads to air traffic controller shortages

  • On Sunday, flight delays continued at U.S. airports as the government shutdown entered its second month, with Newark airport, New Jersey experiencing two- to three-hour delays.
  • The FAA says nearly 13,000 air traffic controllers have been working without pay for weeks during the shutdown, compounding a long-standing shortage of about 3,000 air traffic controllers.
  • Operational figures therefore paint a mixed picture of isolated problems amid broader stability, as FlightAware reported 4,295 delays and 557 cancellations Sunday evening while Cirium found strong on-time performance for the month of October.
  • U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warned that disruptions will increase the longer air traffic controllers go unpaid, and he does not plan to fire those who miss shifts, emphasizing safety on CBS's Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan.
  • FlightAware data show dozens of delays and one or two cancellations at George Bush Intercontinental Airport, Houston, Dallas Fort Worth International Airport, and Chicago O'Hare, while staffing gaps can occur in regional control centers and individual airport towers.
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Flight delays continued at airports in the United States due to a shortage of air traffic controllers, a result of the government shutdown that has entered its second month.

·Belgrade, Serbia
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U.S. Airlines estimated that 3.2 million passengers were affected by the closure of the government. This due to delays or cancellations due to personnel problems of air traffic controllers since the partial closure began on October 1, a group of airlines reported Monday. Airlines for America, representing American Airlines, United Airlines, Southwest Airlines, Delta Air Lines, JetBlue Airways and other major airlines, said that 16 percent of the…

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WAGA broke the news in Atlanta, United States on Sunday, November 2, 2025.
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