FAA reductions in air traffic enter third day
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With the FAA cutting 10% of flights starting Friday, air traffic controllers are currently unpaid in some of the most stressful jobs in the country.
Did U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy say in a Fox News interview in November 2025 that "Pilots need to stop depending on air traffic controllers. They need to suck it up and go with their gut feelings"?
The government shutdown has hit air traffic controllers hard, Republicans fret as the government shutdown threatens Thanksgiving travel and more big stories.
Some experts say there is a solution that could change the dynamic in relatively short order — either privatize air traffic control, or set up a separate government corporation that can run the system.
Five weeks into the government shutdown, controllers across the country, forced to work without pay, are taking second jobs to stay afloat.
Colorado lawmakers are pushing for the Federal Aviation Administration to approve Denver International Airport's emergency waiver that would allow air traffic controllers to be paid during the shutdown.
The Department of Transportation may close some parts of the airspace if enough air traffic controllers don’t show up to work, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said Tuesday.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced flight reductions to help “alleviate the pressure” being put on air traffic controllers as the government shutdown prevents them from getting paid. President of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association Nick Daniels joins Chris Jansing to share more on how his employees are doing amid the uncertainty.
With the system issues continuing, air traffic controllers are preparing the flight plans manually with available data, which is a time-consuming process, and as a result, many flights are getting del