US air travel is facing escalating disruption as the ongoing government shutdown strains aviation staffing and operations, triggering widespread delays and cancellations across major hubs heading into a peak travel period.
Staffing shortages among air traffic controllers forced temporary halts at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport and slowed traffic at LaGuardia, Newark Liberty, Washington Reagan National, Boston Logan, Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, Nashville, Austin, and Orlando.
The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) implemented multiple ground stops as it scrambled to manage reduced manpower, with some moments on Thursday and Friday seeing no available controllers for incoming flights at key airports.
The crunch follows two days of intensifying travel turbulence. According to data from Cirium, only about 60 percent of flights departed on time at major New York airports, well below the typical 80 percent benchmark, as cancellation rates climbed.
FlightAware data recorded more than 7,300 delays and 1,200 cancellations on Thursday alone, with weather compounding staffing issues.
With the shutdown nearing its second month, more than 13,000 air traffic controllers and 50,000 Transportation Security Administration officers are working without pay, prompting staff attrition and secondary employment.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and US Vice President JD Vance joined airline executives in urging Congress to restore government funding as fears grow over potential chaos during the busy Thanksgiving travel rush.
Officials warn that continued workforce constraints could push delay rates — normally around 5 percent — above 50 percent in the weeks ahead, further threatening the reliability of the nation’s aviation network.