Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy Warns Of Nationwide Flight Delays Amid Government Shutdown
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy Warns Of Nationwide Flight Delays Amid Government Shutdown
Flight delays throughout the country could increase as more and more controllers call in sick over their first full missed paycheck due to the ongoing government shutdown, officials warned on Tuesday.
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National Air Traffic Controllers Association (NATCA) President Nick Daniels also said that many air traffic controllershttps://www.theepochtimes.com/us/no-danger-of-strike-by-air-traffic-controllers-facing-no-pay-due-to-shutdown-union-president-5936059
, citing living expenses such as housing, child care, food, and gas as their primary concerns. That number will increase the longer the shutdown continues, he said.
âThis job is stressful enough,â Daniels said Tuesday at La Guardia International Airport in New York.
âWe go to work day in and day out and make thousands of decisions. We do it five days a week. Most of us actually do it six and five is hard enough, and we do it in 10 hours a day. Now, you add in the fact that we had a partial paycheck already and we missed a full paycheck.â
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)âalready https://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/afn/offices/finance/offices/office-financial-labor-analysis/plans/controller-workforce.pdf
approximately 3,000 controllers who routinely work six-day, 10-hour shiftsâhas reported delays as a result of staffing gaps.
The FAA limits landings and takeoffs amid shortages, causing disruptions that last from 30 minutes to more than two hours long. Staffing shortages can even result in temporary ground stops.
Aviation data shows no sharp spike in overall delays, despite the government shutdown beginning Oct. 1.
Analytics firm Cirium determined that about 80 percent of flights at 14 major U.S. airports were on time this month, in line with historical patterns where approximately 20 percent of flights face delays longer than 15 minutes for various reasons.
Although a two-hour staffing-related ground stop at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) on Sunday caused numerous delays, Cirium data shows 72 percent of LAX flights departed on schedule that day.
Though Duffy and Daniels shared concerns over the overburdened workforce of about 30,000 air traffic controllers, they https://www.theepochtimes.com/us/no-danger-of-strike-by-air-traffic-controllers-facing-no-pay-due-to-shutdown-union-president-5936059
the risk of a strike.
âAir traffic controllers have to have 100 percent of focus 100 percent of the time,â Daniels https://www.youtube.com/live/hyRNeAvBPqM?si=JesCiUSDT_BkmV5N
.
âAnd Iâm watching air traffic controllers going to work. Iâm getting the stories. Theyâre worried about paying for medicine for their daughter. I got a message from a controller that said, âIâm running out of money. And if she doesnât get the medicine she needs, she dies. Thatâs the end.ââ
Controllers held demonstrations at 20 airports nationwide, distributing leaflets calling for an end to the shutdown.
âWeâre talking to our coworkers about how to get zero-interest loans,â Mike Christine, National Air Traffic Controllers Associationâs (NATCA) eastern regional vice president, https://www.reuters.com/business/world-at-work/hundreds-air-traffic-controllers-take-second-jobs-shutdown-continues-2025-10-28/
Reuters.
New York-area controller Joe Segretto said the situation makes an already tough situation more difficult for trainees in a high-pressure line of work. The shutdown has disrupted hiring and training, contributing to the ongoing staffing shortage. The systems used by air traffic controllers are also dated, as the Government Accountability Office (GAO) underscores https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-24-107001
from aging ATC systems and sluggish modernization efforts in the sector.
âThe pressure is real,â Segretto said. âWe have people trying to keep these airplanes safe. We have traineesâthat are trying to learn a new job that is very fast-paced, very stressful, very complexânow having to worry about how theyâre going to pay bills.â
Daniels echoed this in a https://www.natca.org/2025/10/24/shutdown-update-on-day-24-a-message-from-natca-president-nick-daniels/
posted to the NATCA website on Oct. 24.
âThe shutdown is adding stress to air traffic controllers and their families,â he wrote.
Duffy also said that the shutdown, now in its 28th day, has led to students dropping out of the air traffic controller academy in Oklahoma City, adding that it will therefore be harder to close the staffing gap at airports. He said younger controllers might choose a different career path because they canât go without pay.
âThis shutdown is making it harder for me to accomplish those goals,â Duffy said.
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Wed, 10/29/2025 - 12:20