
Major airports across the U.S. canceled hundreds of flights Thursday in preparation for massive cuts to air traffic made by the Federal Aviation Administration amid the ongoing and historic government shutdown.
By Thursday afternoon there had already been over 500 cancellations domestically, and 150 in and out of the U.S., according to flight-tracking site FlightAware.com. Over 600 flights had already been canceled Friday, the day that the cuts are due to begin.
It comes after Transport Secretary Sean Duffy and the FAA announced that 40 of the countryâs busiest airports across two dozen states, including New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, would be phasing in a 10 percent reduction in their flight schedules.
The disruptions will affect service at many smaller airports, too, and by Thursday some travelers had already begun changing or canceling their itineraries.
In a social media post Thursday afternoon, United Airlines reiterated that it was doing âeverything we can to minimize disruptions to your travel plansâ and was avoiding cancellations for long-haul international flights. The airline will eliminate 4 percent of its flights at the designated airports Friday, before working up to the FAAâs proposed 10 percent, sources told The Associated Press.
âHub-to-hub flightsâ operating between seven airports, Chicago O’Hare, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Newark, San Francisco and Washington Dulles, would also not be affected, United said.
American Airlines said that while flights scheduled for Thursday would go ahead as planned it was still awaiting further information from the FAA as to how its flights would be affected from Friday.
Delta said it expected the majority of its flights to operate as planned. âWe are providing additional flexibility to all of our customers during the impacted travel period to change, cancel or refund their flights, including our basic economy fares, without penalty,â the airline added.
In its own social media post, Alaska Air apologized to customers for the âunexpectedâ delays but said that international travelers would not be affected and that cancellations would only occur on routes with a high volume of flights.
âWe remain grateful to every air traffic controller and TSA or CBP officer who is working without pay to keep air travel functioning safely. We continue to strongly urge our federal leaders to reach an immediate resolution and end the shutdown,â the airline said.
At a press conference Wednesday, Duffy said the decision to slash schedules was paramount for safe air travel amid pressure on air traffic controllers, who âare under immense stress and fatigue.â
Per the Transportation Secretary, the countryâs âCore 30â airports are set to be affected, which include Atlantaâs Hartsfield-Jackson International, the busiest airport in the country, Boston Logan International, Chicago OâHare International, Ronald Reagan Washington National, Newark Liberty International, New York John F Kennedy, Los Angeles International and Seattle Tacoma International.
Duffy said the decision âhad not been taken lightlyâ ahead of the busy Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday travel season.
Travel experts predict hundreds, if not thousands, of flights could be canceled. The cuts could represent as many as 1,800 flights and upwards of 268,000 seats combined, according to an estimate by aviation analytics firm Cirium.
Duffy said the agency was confronting staffing shortages caused by air traffic controllers, who are working unpaid, with some calling out of work during the shutdown, resulting in delays across the country. The air traffic controllers are also not being paid while the government remains shut down.
The shutdown, now in its 36th day and the longest in U.S. history, has forced 13,000 air traffic controllers and 50,000 TSA officers to work without pay and affected tens of thousands of flights so far, according to Reuters.
Duffy also hit back at accusations that flights were being cut for âleverageâ as the pressure is mounting on Republicans and Democrats to hammer out a deal to end the shutdown. âLet me be clear: this isnât about âleverageâ â itâs about the safety of the flying public,â Duffy said Thursday in a post on X.
Other Republicans however, including Vice President JD Vance, continued to lay the blame for the shutdown and subsequent âaviation emergencyâsquarely at the feet of the Democrats.
30 âcore airportsâ affected by flight reductions
- Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Intl (ATL)
- Boston Logan Intl (BOS)
- Baltimore/Washington Intl (BWI)
- Charlotte Douglas Intl (CLT)
- Ronald Reagan Washington National (DCA)
- Denver Intl (DEN)
- Dallas/Fort Worth Intl (DFW)
- Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County (DTW)
- Newark Liberty Intl (EWR)
- Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood Intl (FLL)
- Honolulu Intl (HNL)
- Washington Dulles Intl (IAD)
- George Bush Houston Intercontinental (IAH)
- New York John F. Kennedy Intl (JFK)
- Las Vegas McCarran Intl (LAS)
- Los Angeles Intl (LAX)
- New York LaGuardia (LGA)
- Orlando Intl (MCO)
- Chicago Midway (MDW)
- Memphis Intl (MEM)
- Miami Intl (MIA)
- Minneapolis/St. Paul Intl (MSP)
- Chicago O`Hare Intl (ORD)
- Philadelphia Intl (PHL)
- Phoenix Sky Harbor Intl (PHX)
- San Diego Intl (SAN)
- Seattle/Tacoma Intl (SEA)
- San Francisco Intl (SFO)
- Salt Lake City Intl (SLC)
- Tampa Intl (TPA)
Additional reporting from agencies
