Feds Announce Massive, Haphazard Cuts in Air Service Starting Tomorrow, and We Should All Be Angry


When it comes to the functioning of the federal government, I expect a certain level of dumbassery. So when even that level gets exceeded, it makes me angry. And today, I’m VERY angry. In fact, I’m so angry that I am bringing out the long-lost and rarely-used fire-red-with-anger Cranky Jackass Award. And since I’m told hanging things upside down is a sign of distress, I’ve added that into the mix as well. Congratulations to the US federal government for earning this very special Cranky Jackass, and please note I award it with extreme prejudice.

We all know that the government has been shut down for over a month. It’s the longest shutdown in the history of the federal government, and at least publicly, there doesn’t seem to be much movement toward resolution. The fight is ostensibly about the looming expiration of tax credits that make our broken health insurance system more affordable for the poorest Americans. This would cost about $24 billion in the next year, rising from there. The Democrats want to extend them while the Republicans say they won’t have this conversation until the government reopens, which means they don’t want to extend them.

The real reason for the fight, however, is that with the Republicans having control of both houses of Congress as well as the presidency, the Democrats have almost no ability to influence anything. And with the Republicans having shown no interest in compromise this year, the Dems seem compelled to hold on to any shred of power they can find. Since the Republicans can’t pass their budget without 60 votes in the Senate, the Democrats see an opportunity to flex their atrophied muscles.

This kind of posturing happens a lot, but what isn’t normal is the lack of substantive negotiations. You can draw your own conclusions about who is at fault — please don’t spam the comments with your opinions on that, because frankly, nobody cares — but the point is that as this fight stretches on, the impact on the country grows. And now it has hit the US airline industry very, very hard.

According to the hastily pushed out press conference by DOT Secretary Sean Duffy and FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford, air traffic controllers are stressed. We didn’t need them to tell us that, of course. Every day at least one area of the ATC system sees delays due to so-called “staffing triggers.” As I started to write this, Newark is facing an average inbound delay of 68 minutes while Phoenix has a shocking 197 minute average inbound delay, both due to staffing shortages.

Of course, we’ve been talking about ATC staffing problems for years, so what does this have to do with the shutdown? Well, Secretary Duffy connected the dots for us in the press conference.

Controllers were last paid a partial paycheck in early October, but their last one was nothing. And there’s another stub coming out this week that will also be nothing. When the government is shut down, they can’t pay their employees, with some exceptions. Don’t worry, Congresspeople undeservingly still get paid, and they’ve found a way to pay the military so far. But air traffic controllers, no. It’s certainly not for lack of creative ideas. For example, Denver International Airport asked the FAA for a waiver yesterday so it could use airport revenues to pay controllers and then get reimbursed when the government is back open. Great idea! The FAA will probably find some reason to say it can’t be done.

So now, Duffy says, some controllers have resorted to second jobs. Others are overworked. And I would assume some are just rightfully not interested in pushing themselves harder than normal when they have no prospect of being paid in the near future. So, things are getting worse.

As Duffy explains it, the “data” is showing stress on the ATC system. Bedford went on…

But as we dig deeper into the data, what we find are issues of fatigue and that our flight controller or flight controllers are experiencing and we see that through voluntary safety disclosure reports coming in from commercial air transport pilots.

So pilots are reporting ATC issues, and the data is concerning enough that the FAA will reduce flying by 10 percent in forty of the biggest markets starting… tomorrow.

The absurdity of this should not be lost on anyone. Airlines first learned about this Wednesday, yesterday, mid-day. It was then publicly announced in the afternoon press conference. But the 40 airports were not released. And to be clear, I’m not just talking about being released to the public. The airlines were also not made aware of the impacted markets until last night, well after the initial briefing. In the press conference it was said that the markets would be released Thursday, but they did start to leak out late last night.

What we see is 33 of the top 40 markets in terms of Nov scheduled seats. The exemptions? Nashville, Austin, Raleigh/Durham, St Louis, Sacramento, New Orleans, and Kansas City. That’s strange since I know Nashville has had staffing triggers lately. Then the last seven consist of one huge general aviation airport – Teterboro outside New York City — and six big cargo airports in Anchorage, Cincinnati, Louisville, Memphis, Oakland, and Ontario.

Assuming this list is real, and the airlines are told to move forward, they will have about a day to try and completely rework their operations to cut 10 percent of flights, except now it’s leaking out that they’re going to ramp up to 10 percent, starting at 4 percent for tomorrow. Who knows what it’ll be by the time you read this? While the briefing noted that they will try to spread the pain around equally to the various airlines, I can’t say I know what that really means. I think my favorite quote was when a reporter asked if international flying was impacted.

I have to tell you, we haven’t we haven’t talked through the international component yet.

Later, United confirmed that apparently someone decided to have that conversation, and international flights aren’t impacted. What the heck are we doing here, people? I’m having trouble understanding any of this.

If this is such a clear safety issue being shown in the data, then why are we waiting a day to tell people which 40 airports are on the verge of possibly being unsafe and then ramping up to the full cut anyway? I don’t really even understand singling out airports anyway, especially since these airports that are listed touch more than 92 percent of all scheduled commercial flights. You’d think it would be easier to just blanket all airports. But then again, why are we putting a blanket reduction across any markets when the problems are different in different places… if they exist at all?

If this is an airport issue, as it appears to be, then this blunt instrument wouldn’t seem to be the right way to fix things. Maybe in certain markets that can result in needing one controller instead of two at certain times in certain sectors. Great. But we are talking about 10 percent across forty of the biggest markets. This doesn’t seem like a surgical cut, nor does it seem very well targeted to deal with the issue.

Whether this is a serious — though deeply flawed — effort to preserve safety or just a political move to ratchet up pressure to end the shutdown is unclear to me. But with this cut in place, that would seem to set a two week countdown clock to end the shutdown before the pain gets a lot worse. After all, when we hit the Thanksgiving travel week, you’re going to see increasingly pissed off travelers who just want to go see their families. That is coming very quickly.

President Trump and Congress… do your damn jobs.

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Brett Avatar

27 responses to “Feds Announce Massive, Haphazard Cuts in Air Service Starting Tomorrow, and We Should All Be Angry”

  1. Mike Avatar
    Mike

    160…

    Thats my bet on the number of comments this article is gonna get today… Will check back in later to see if Im right

    1. Gary Avatar
      Gary

      Was going to ORD from ATL next weekend. My hard cutoff for resolution is this Sunday. No deal, I’m not flying. I’m just one of many who won’t be spending tourist dollars.

      1. Mike Avatar
        Mike

        Alas we dont have tourist dollars to spend. We normally always take a nice trip for our anniversary but between the wife getting doged and my contracts all in jeopardy do to furlough we are just another family feeling the impact of an economy meant for cronies and billionaires

    2. SEAN Avatar
      SEAN

      I’ll take the over on that.

      Shawn Duffy was also asked “is flying safe” & with a slight condescending tone he responded, “if it wasn’t we would shut it down.” HMMM, a thinly vailed threat I would say as that appears to be the goal.

      As for reopening the government, forget it as this is all part of “Project 2025.”

    3. SEAN Avatar
      SEAN

      I’ll take the over on that.

      Shawn Duffy was also asked “is flying safe” & with a slight condescending tone he responded, “if it wasn’t we would shut it down.” HMMM, a thinly vailed threat I would say as that appears to be the goal.

      As for reopening the government, forget it as this is all part of “Project 2025.”

    4. Kevin Avatar
      Kevin

      We shoulda done an over/under on how long it would be before some scold chimed in with a pouty post about keeping politics out of it.

  2. Kevin Avatar
    Kevin

    I might -might- be able to see a reduction by ARTCC (ie 10% for ZAU, 5% for ZAB, etc), making sense as an emergency move, but this is what happens when you have deeply unserious people in charge.

    Man, if only Puck and Rachel had worked out!

  3. Bobber Avatar
    Bobber

    So the message from Kirby says (I think) hub-to-hub flying is also unaffected – but getting to a hub is going to be the fun part. Not sure I want to cycle from DTW to IAH.

  4. Brian W Avatar
    Brian W

    Dissapointed @Brett has decided to turn his aviation blog into a political rant with his political bias. He is free to run an op-ed and justify Dems keeping govt shut to preserve their leverage, but a lot of us come to this site to avoid politics. If it was 2021 with Dems in charge of Congress and the Presidency, I dont think Brett would be worrying about preserving minority Republican rights with a shutdown.

    1. See_Bee Avatar
      See_Bee

      No one take the bait! Remember, people like Brian want you to take the bait!

    2. CraigTPA Avatar
      CraigTPA

      True. But in a heavily regulated industry some political discussion is inevitable.

      Brett has always been clear that while there is open discusison in the comments, it is his blog and speaks in his editorial voice. And that sometimes has to include politics.

    3. abcdefg Avatar
      abcdefg

      FOOH already

  5. Brian W Avatar
    Brian W

    Dissapointed @Brett has decided to turn his aviation blog into a political rant with his political bias. He is free to run an op-ed and justify Dems keeping govt shut to preserve their leverage, but a lot of us come to this site to avoid politics. If it was 2021 with Dems in charge of Congress and the Presidency, I dont think Brett would be worrying about preserving minority Republican rights with a shutdown.

    I empathize with Mr. Duffy and ATC managers who have to have to foward predict who will be out and when the shutdown will end with zero room for accidents.

    1. Kevin Avatar
      Kevin

      If the Dems controlled all three branches, we wouldn’t be in this mess.

  6. GP Avatar
    GP

    Dismiss it and trash it all you want but if you’ve got thanksgiving plans, buy your Amtrak ticket now. This hasn’t hit them yet.

    1. Kevin Avatar
      Kevin

      Nothing to be dismissive about! Amtrak…drive (if possible)…have a Plan B… all good things to work on now.

      1. GP Avatar
        GP

        I can already see the press release now: “AMTRAK POSTS HIGHEST THANKSGIVING RIDERSHIP IN HISTORY”

  7. Johnny Jet Avatar

    Good for you. Tell it like it is. There’s no excuse for Trump or the Republicans — they control all facets of the government. It’s also no coincidence that the last time the government shut down for this long was during Trump’s first term.

  8. Angry Bob Crandall Avatar
    Angry Bob Crandall

    Both political parties continue to fail the people. But going back to the article, look at what’s at stake:
    1. NextGen Modernization: Congress has been talking about this since 2003. It’s supposed to replace 1950s radar with GPS-based navigation — but because of inconsistent funding, implementation is now years behind schedule. And yet we vote in incompetent people.
    2. Controller Shortages: Training pipelines at the FAA Academy in Oklahoma City can’t meet demand. Thousands of veterans are retiring faster than replacements are certified. And yet we vote in incompetent people.
    3. Safety Oversight: Without long-term certainty, the FAA struggles to retain technical experts, manage contractors, and oversee emerging tech like drone traffic systems and urban air mobility. And yet we vote in incompetent people.
    4. Economic Impact: Flight cancellations and delays cost the U.S. economy billions annually — all made worse by Congressional inaction. And yet we vote in incompetent people.

  9. Robert Avatar
    Robert

    Not sure how anyone can excuse poor administration from a political party who controls all the branches of government. Compromise with the minority party has been an essential part of governing these United States since the beginning. Suddenly in 2025, a party tried a hard line that ignored this tenant and then is surprised when it doesn’t work the way they wanted.

    They’re getting away with foisting consequences on the little guy (the American public at large) right now but history has shown that to be a losing position.

    1. Chuck Avatar
      Chuck

      I agree 100%! But I am also picky about words, lol…it’s tenet, not tenant.

    2. Claire Avatar
      Claire

      The shut down continues because both sides want ‘pork’ slid into the bill.
      It’s all posturing. Who cracks first?

  10. SYVJEFF Avatar
    SYVJEFF

    Guess who just arrived Wednesday/last night in Anchorage for a quick business trip and has planned flights back through SEA and SLC onwards to small home airport on Saturday? I guess I should find a laundromat.

    This is more than affecting cargo or family Thanksgiving plans, it’s stalling motion in this country. This is not acceptable.

    No matter what side of the aisle our current batch of elected leaders sit on, we as constituents should let them know they are terrible operators of what the taxpayers are paying for.

    The air traffic controllers are human beings. They need to be rested, fed, knowledgeable and not distracted to do the multi level chess game we ask them to do 24/7 every day.

  11. abcdefg Avatar
    abcdefg

    The short term impacts I think are clear (though of course don’t know how extensive they will be) and appreciate the post.
    I would like to understand the long term impacts here in terms of controller hiring and training. Surely (hopefully?) there were training classes ongoing which presumably stopped. And those trainees are not wedded to the career yet like actual controllers. So now the controller shortage for the future gets even worse.

    Hooray politicians!

  12. Daniel Paulling Avatar
    Daniel Paulling

    Which flights are more likely to be affected — something from JFK/LGA to a small airport with service just once a day or something from JFK/LGA to a large airport with plenty of service? I see the logic in cutting either (but, for my sake, hope it’s not JFK/LGA to the small airport).

  13. CraigTPA Avatar
    CraigTPA

    Setting aside the “how we got here”, how in the Hell, Norway is this “10% cut…tomorrow” supposed to work? It gives airlines no time to reschedule, no time to move planes/crews around to try to upgauge flights into affected airports to at least keep seats constant and minimize disruption, etc.

    And there’s no clarity around how airlines have to get to the 10%, especially if international flights aren’t affected. Let’s take Newark (actually, let’s burn it to the ground and start again…no, no, no time for that.) Does UA have to cut 10% of their domestic service and that’s it? Or do they have to cut 10% of their total flights but not touch international, so the domestic cuts are greater?

    And what about smaller airlines? There are a couple of airlines that have fewer than 10 domestic flights a day into EWR (Allegiant, Breeze, Sun Country). Are they just flat-out exempt, or do they have to take a one-flight cut anyway?

    So there’s an arbitrary 10% figure with no guidance on how to get to it, no time to plan for it, and that exempts international traffic. Oh, and no plan to cut GA at commercial airports, even though there’s no difference between a CRJ and a Challenger – literally.

    And then there’s freight…are they seriously proposing FedEx and UPS make major cuts right now, with several indicators suggesting that some sectors of the economy are already in recession? Yeah, let’s screw with supply chains some more…

    This is simply insane.

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