DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Airline Problems Will Linger Even if Government Shutdown Ends

November 11, 2025
in News
Airline Problems Will Linger Even if Government Shutdown Ends

The federal government shutdown could soon come to an end. But that will not immediately fix the problems afflicting air travel.

Even if the government ends the flight restrictions in place at 40 busy airports that contributed to widespread disruptions over the weekend, it will take days for airlines to recover. And longstanding challenges to the nation’s aviation system remain.

“Even before the shutdown, there was widespread recognition that we were dealing with an ailing air traffic control system,” a coalition of groups representing all facets of aviation, from pilots to airlines to airplane manufacturers, said in an open letter to Congress on Tuesday, urging lawmakers to reopen the government.

Congress approved $12.5 billion this year to modernize the air traffic control system, and the Transportation Department has prioritized hiring more air traffic controllers. But “the shutdown takes all of that in the wrong direction,” said the letter, which was published in a full-page advertisement in The Washington Post.

There is a shortfall of about 3,000 air traffic controllers, leaving the more than 14,000 working long, stressful schedules. The shutdown, the longest in U.S. history, has increased the pressure on those controllers, who are considered essential and required to work despite not being paid. Some of them have taken other jobs to make ends meet.

Citing the need to relieve the stress on those controllers and improve air safety, the Federal Aviation Administration ordered airlines to cut flights by 4 percent at 40 of the nation’s busiest airports starting last Friday. That, alongside controller staffing shortages, contributed to thousands of canceled flights over the weekend. The disruption peaked on Sunday, when about one in 10 scheduled flights did not take off, making it the fourth-worst day of the year for flight cancellations.

The disruptions have extended into this week, as the agency’s restrictions increased to 6 percent on Tuesday and will reach 10 percent on Friday, threatening to cause chaos for Thanksgiving travel.

But there is hope that the holiday will be spared. The Senate approved a deal on Monday to end the shutdown, and the House could act quickly to pass it, too.

It could still take days for airlines to recover. That is because carriers canceled flights days in advance to give customers notice about the disruptions and to ensure that pilots, flight attendants and planes were all in place for the flights that would operate as scheduled.

“Airlines’ reduced flight schedules cannot immediately bounce back to full capacity right after the government reopens,” Airlines for America, a trade group that represents the largest passenger and cargo airlines, said in a statement on Monday. “It will take time, and there will be residual effects for days.”

Niraj Chokshi is a Times reporter who writes about aviation, rail and other transportation industries.

The post Airline Problems Will Linger Even if Government Shutdown Ends appeared first on New York Times.

‘Midterms should be fun’: Trump buried in mockery after bizarre ‘affordability’ speech
News

‘Midterms should be fun’: Trump buried in mockery after bizarre ‘affordability’ speech

by Raw Story
December 10, 2025

President Donald Trump was roundly mocked by political analysts and observers on Tuesday night after giving a meandering speech that ...

Read more
News

Democrat wins Miami mayoral race for first time in nearly 30 years, marking major GOP loss

December 10, 2025
News

Ariana Grande attacker gets kicked out of Lady Gaga concert in Australia

December 10, 2025
News

Homeless services CEO steps down from government oversight board amid scandal

December 10, 2025
News

‘They’re like a machine gun!’ Trump fawns over staffer’s lips that go ‘pop-pop-pop’

December 10, 2025
AT&T CEO says he made a mistake in how he went about fixing company culture — but the viral memo wasn’t it

AT&T CEO says he made a mistake in how he went about fixing company culture — but the viral memo wasn’t it

December 10, 2025
New contract shows Palantir is working on a tech platform for another federal agency that works with ICE

New contract shows Palantir is working on a tech platform for another federal agency that works with ICE

December 10, 2025
Visa Appointments Canceled So Trump Goons Can Social Snoop

Visa Appointments Canceled So Trump Goons Can Social Snoop

December 10, 2025

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025