(NEWARK, NJ) Airlines at Newark Liberty spent Sunday cutting schedules and holding planes at gates as flight reductions ordered by the Federal Aviation Administration collided with deep staffing shortages tied to the federal government shutdown.
By early evening, Newark Liberty logged about 237 cancellations (15%), and average delays stretched beyond 2 hours, with some reaching 4.5 hours. More than 224 departures left late — roughly over a third of scheduled flights. Weekend runway construction added another layer of strain. LaGuardia posted 58 cancellations (10%) and average departures were delayed by around 75 minutes, while JFK fared better at 25 cancellations (3%) but still felt the ripple effects.

FAA caps, national impact, and timeline
The FAA began a phased cap on takeoffs and landings at 40 major U.S. airports on November 1. The reductions started at 4% fewer flights and are scheduled to rise to 10% by November 14. The cuts apply daily from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. local time.
The move aims to manage thinner staffing in control towers and regional centers as the shutdown drags into a second month — the longest in U.S. history. Nationally on Sunday:
- Airlines scrubbed more than 2,700 flights
- Airlines reported close to 10,000 delays
These figures underscore how quickly schedules can unravel when the air traffic system loses both people and capacity.
Officials’ statements on safety and staffing
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy emphasized safety as the top priority, even if it means long waits and missed connections. “These reductions are necessary for safety,” Duffy said, noting air traffic controllers have been working unpaid and under “extreme stress” since the shutdown began on October 1.
FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford echoed that message, saying the agency will not “push the system past safe limits” while key positions remain unfilled during the budget impasse.
“We have to bring people back, assess fatigue, and phase in more capacity only when it’s safe to do so,” Bedford said.
What happened at Newark Liberty
At Newark Liberty, multiple choke points emerged:
- Airlines consolidated midday flights.
- Crews timed out after long ground holds.
- Baggage belts slowed as ground staff regrouped.
- Pilots repeatedly requested updated departure times with little movement.
- Weekend runway construction squeezed already tight departure windows.
A regional operations manager (speaking anonymously) summed it up: “There’s only so much you can do when you lose people in the tower and you lose runway capacity at the same time.” Several airlines waived change fees for same-day shifts, but later flights had limited seats.
Regional ripple effects: LaGuardia and JFK
LaGuardia’s tight layout magnified small delays into logjams. With short taxiways and limited gate space, agents redirected passengers to JFK when possible, but the region-wide traffic produced surprises at check-in and tense boarding scenes.
JFK, with longer runways and more space, absorbed some spillover. Even so, JFK’s 3% cancellation rate still generated packed standby lists and delays for inbound crews needed for evening departures.
Warnings about worsening conditions and Thanksgiving concerns
Officials warned the situation could deteriorate if the shutdown continues. Duffy cautioned cancellations might climb to 20% or more, and holiday travel could “slow to a trickle” during Thanksgiving week.
- Airport vendors and hospitality workers, who depend on November traffic, were alarmed.
- Families planning trips were urged to plan for extra time, check flight status often, and consider alternate airports.
Underlying staffing and training problems
The strain reflects more than a single bad weekend. Key points:
- Controller ranks were already tight before the shutdown.
- Training pipelines can’t expand during a shutdown.
- Many controllers reportedly stopped showing up for work, compounding staffing shortages.
- Remaining teams are covering longer shifts, increasing fatigue risks.
Bedford warned that even after a deal ends the shutdown, delays and cancellations will likely linger as operations “reset” and maintenance and training backlogs clear.
How the New York area magnifies disruptions
The New York region’s busy airspace and tight airport layouts amplify every hiccup:
- Newark Liberty is a key hub for domestic and international connections.
- With flight reductions in place most of the day, airlines must choose which routes to cut.
- Long-haul international flights are harder to reassign due to slot and crew qualifications.
- Cutting short-haul flights reduces options for missed connections and increases demand on remaining flights.
Industry analysts note the cascading effect: one canceled morning departure can eliminate dozens of later connections, and when this repeats at a hub like Newark Liberty, recovery can take hours or days. Analysis by VisaVerge.com highlights how delays spread faster where multiple airports share airspace.
Passenger experience and airline responses
By Sunday night, airlines were scrambling to reset crew pairings and reposition aircraft. Passengers experienced:
- Long lines to rebook
- Waiting on hold
- Social media advisories to arrive early and monitor airline apps
- Increased use of buses and rideshares between terminals as flights were moved to balance gate availability
Gate agents handed out water and snacks while trying to rebook families. As one Newark agent put it: “We want to get people moving, but we need clearance and a slot to do it.”
Practical advice for travelers
Experts and officials offered these suggestions:
- Check flight status frequently and use airline apps for updates.
- Consider alternate airports when possible.
- Prefer early-morning departures (they typically face fewer knock-on delays).
- Avoid tight connections if your itinerary is flexible.
- Consider trains or driving for short-haul trips if feasible.
Outlook even after a funding deal
If Congress passes a funding deal soon, recovery will not be immediate. Steps the FAA must take include:
- Bring staff back to full strength
- Reset schedules to reduce fatigue
- Unwind deferred training and maintenance backlogs
Until that happens, FAA leaders warned delays and cancellations could persist even after the shutdown ends. The agency has directed the public to official updates and staffing information via its air traffic pages, including the FAA Air Traffic site, and said caps would be adjusted only if staffing improves.
Bedford called the caps a “living plan,” but stressed they will not be loosened in the short term without confidence the workforce can handle the load.
Final takeaway
For now, the message from officials is consistent: the cuts at Newark Liberty, LaGuardia, and JFK will hold, and safety will set the pace. Travelers should prepare for ongoing disruption and plan accordingly.
This Article in a Nutshell
FAA-imposed flight reductions and shutdown-driven staffing shortages disrupted New York-area airports Sunday. Newark Liberty reported about 237 cancellations (15%), average delays over two hours, and more than 224 late departures. The FAA began caps Nov. 1 across 40 airports, rising from 4% to 10% by Nov. 14, applied daily from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Officials emphasized safety amid unpaid, fatigued controllers. Airlines scrambled to rebook passengers; officials warned cancellations could exceed 20% if the shutdown persists. Travelers should monitor flights and consider alternatives.
