(NEW YORK (AREA)) The United States is facing fresh waves of flight delays and cancellations as the ongoing government shutdown deepens an already severe air traffic controller shortage, with the strain most visible at major hubs and in the packed airspace over the New York region.
Since the shutdown began on October 1, 2025, federal officials and airport managers say thousands of flights have been disrupted, staffing at critical facilities has thinned, and security lines have swelled to hours, squeezing workers and travelers just as holiday traffic picks up. The Federal Aviation Administration has logged a surge in controller absences, and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said on a recent day 84% of delays were tied to staffing.

“They’re confronted with a decision: do I put food on my kids’ table, do I put gas in the car, do I pay my rent or do I go to work and not get paid? They’re making decisions,” Duffy said, describing how controllers are being told to report to duty while paychecks are frozen.
Scope of the disruption
Federal data as of November shows wide-ranging impacts:
- Half of the nation’s “Core 30” busiest airports are operating with fewer controllers than they need.
- 80% of airports in the New York area are short-staffed.
- The FAA has acknowledged spikes in callouts at multiple facilities over recent weekends, creating ripples that slow arrivals and departures far beyond the original choke points.
Each missed position can force traffic managers to reduce the number of planes in a given sector. That cascades into:
- Longer taxi times on the ground
- Airborne holding patterns
- Reroutes that add fuel burn for airlines and stress for passengers
Notable examples and regional hotspots
- On the West Coast at Hollywood Burbank Airport, the tower reportedly sat empty from 4:15 p.m. to 10 p.m. on one recent Monday, halting critical services.
- Newark Liberty, serving the New York region, reported major staffing gaps that feed into widespread delays across the Northeast.
- Other flagged hubs include Phoenix, Denver, and Los Angeles.
- Union representatives say some regional facilities have seen staffing cuts reach 50% since the shutdown started.
TSA impacts and passenger experience
The Transportation Security Administration is also affected: TSA screeners are working without pay and callouts are increasing.
- Some airports report security wait times up to three hours.
- Airport leaders urge travelers to arrive early and prepare for rolling gate changes.
- Jim Szczesniak, director of aviation for Houston Airports, said: “The federal government shutdown has impacted TSA staffing and operations nationwide… Passengers should arrive early and expect extended security wait times until the government reopens.”
Safety concerns
Safety is the most sensitive issue. Secretary Duffy warned the national airspace is “less safe” when controllers are distracted by unpaid bills or take side jobs.
“After 31 days without pay, air traffic controllers are under immense stress and fatigue. The shutdown must end so that these controllers receive the pay they’ve earned and travelers can avoid further disruptions and delays.”
Aviation safety experts note that fatigue and financial strain can erode alertness in jobs where split-second judgment matters — a risk that grows each day the standoff continues.
Structural shortages that predate the shutdown
The shutdown compounds longstanding staffing problems:
- The FAA estimated it was short about 3,000 air traffic controllers even before the shutdown.
- More than 90% of towers were understaffed.
- Training a new controller often takes two to three years.
- The FAA planned to hire at least 8,900 new controllers through 2028, including 2,000 in 2025, but hiring pipelines and training are stalled during a shutdown.
When training pauses, trainees cannot advance to certified status, and the staffing hole deepens over time.
Operational consequences and management responses
When veteran controllers call out or take unpaid leave, supervisors must:
- Redraw schedules
- Cancel training sessions
- Reassign duties to cover radar positions and tower slots
These steps keep planes moving but shrink the buffer that absorbs surges caused by weather or runway work. Even a routine thunderstorm can trigger widespread delays when fewer certified controllers are available.
Airlines are coordinating with the FAA to spread departure banks and reduce peak congestion, but there are limits:
- Crews time out under federal duty rules.
- Aircraft need maintenance windows.
- A ground stop in one region can trigger cancellations hours later elsewhere.
Carriers advise passengers to monitor apps and sign up for alerts, though most have not issued broad rebooking policies specifically tied to the shutdown.
Human and community impacts
For many travelers, delays have outsized consequences:
- Missed connections can mean missed visa appointments or court hearings that are hard to reschedule.
- Community groups assisting newcomers report increased calls from people worried about disrupted travel for important appointments.
- While airlines may waive change fees in weather events, most have not adopted blanket policies for shutdown-related disruptions.
Controllers and their families report difficult tradeoffs:
- Taking on short-term gigs (delivery, rideshare, odd jobs) between rotations
- Skipping after-school programs or deferring car repairs
- Borrowing from relatives to make ends meet
Labor advocates emphasize the math: rotating 24-hour coverage means losing a few staffers forces heavy overtime and extended duties for those remaining, compounding fatigue and morale problems.
Regional cascading effects — New York as a case study
The New York area shows how localized shortages cascade:
- With 80% of local airports short-staffed, small schedule shifts can jam the region’s flows.
- Ground stops at Newark increase pressure on JFK and LaGuardia.
- Holding patterns and intersection fixes fill as pilots await release times.
- Late arrivals become late departures as crews, passengers, and baggage teams fall behind.
Any single missed staffing position in a radar room can lead to aircraft queueing from Boston to Washington by evening.
Policy debates and potential fixes
There are growing calls in Washington to shield safety-critical work from budget showdowns. Aviation groups argue funding for controller hiring and training should continue during shutdowns, but past proposals have faced opposition over budget rules and political disputes.
For now, facilities must juggle daily staffing with paychecks paused. Many controllers say they cannot wait out a long conflict without risking their household finances, while trainees fear losing momentum if instruction halts.
Readers can review the FAA’s workforce approach here: FAA Controller Workforce Plan.
What recovery would look like
If the shutdown ends soon:
- Trainees must restart paused modules.
- Facilities need to reset stretched rosters.
- Airlines will re-time schedules and reposition crews.
If the shutdown continues:
- The system will bend further; some facilities already report staffing cuts up to 50%.
- There is no extra reservoir of certified controllers to call upon.
- Any winter storm, equipment outage, or runway work could produce additional days of cascading delays and cancellations.
Key takeaways
- The government shutdown, starting October 1, 2025, has intensified a preexisting controller shortage and is producing widespread flight disruptions.
- 84% of delays were tied to staffing on a recent day, and many major airports — especially in the New York area — are operating below needed staffing levels.
- Safety risks grow as controllers face prolonged unpaid work and increased fatigue.
- Even after a shutdown ends, rebuilding training pipelines and restoring rosters will take time.
For travelers: expect longer security lines, potential rolling gate changes, and continued delays until pay resumes and training/hiring can proceed. The FAA’s public warning about stress and fatigue underscores the operational tensions visible at gates and security lanes as the shutdown nears the record length of the 2018–2019 episode.
This Article in a Nutshell
The October 1, 2025 government shutdown has deepened an existing FAA controller shortage, disrupting thousands of flights. Federal data show half of the Core 30 airports and 80% of New York-area airports operate below needed staffing, prompting reduced sector capacity, longer taxi times, airborne holds, and reroutes. TSA callouts have increased, creating security waits up to three hours. Officials warn fatigue and unpaid work reduce safety. Recovery requires restarting training, rehiring, and restoring controller rosters, a process taking months to years.