The government shutdown is taking a growing toll on air traffic controllers who are working without pay. Staffing shortages ...
As the government shutdown continues, many federal employees, including TSA agents and air traffic controllers, are feeling the impact. But one local ministry is stepping in to help.
DIA officials on Wednesday were bracing as the Trump administration ordered a reduction in air traffic at major hubs later this week.
Denver International Airport has asked the FAA whether airport revenue could be used to pay air traffic controllers during ...
The FAA will reduce air traffic by 10% at 40 high-volume markets starting Friday, but operations at Oklahoma City's Will ...
The Department of Transportation may close some parts of US airspace if enough air traffic controllers don’t show up to work.
Duffy said the FAA will reduce flight capacity across the nation's airspace starting on Friday if air traffic controllers ...
The Denver International Airport (DIA) said it submitted a request to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on Wednesday, asking if the airport can use its own funds to pay air traffic controllers ...
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is expected to order scheduled air traffic cut by 10% at 40 major airports starting Friday without a deal to end the government shutdown, sources familiar with ...
Officials at DIA want to start paying federal air traffic controllers out of their own budget, while the federal government ...
Spin the system off from government, so flights won’t be hostage to D.C.
FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said the action is to alleviate pressure on air traffic controllers, who have been working without pay since the government shut down Oct. 1.