Upcoming mass flight cancellations worry U.S. air travelers

Spread the love

With dozens of major U.S. airports reducing their flight volumes starting Friday, travelers will see droves of flights cancelled nationwide for the duration of the ongoing government shutdown.

Forty U.S. airports – including major hubs like Atlanta, New York, Chicago and Los Angeles – will cut flights by 10% due to staffing shortages, the Federal Aviation Administration announced.

The Center Square on Thursday afternoon ran into people concerned about air travel at San Francisco International Airport. Among them was Della Shapen, who was catching a flight Thursday to Denmark with her husband, Kevin, and their dog, Jetta.

“We’re really worried about our friends traveling,” Shapen said. “We’re really fortunate that we’re getting ahead of it.”

Flyers have already experienced thousands of flight delays and dozens of cancellations daily. Air traffic controllers and other federal employees deemed “essential” have been forced to work without pay for over a month, and many are taking off work to find odd jobs.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has said flight cancellations will be “based on which controllers are coming to work.”

“We are assessing the risk in airspace,” Duffy posted Thursday on X. “Reducing 10% of flight volume will reduce the pressure on controllers, while prioritizing safety, and getting more flights out on time.”

The planned flight reductions come as controllers miss their second full paycheck Thursday.

Rich Davis, senior security advisor at risk mitigation company International SOS, told The Center Square that increased delays and cancellation will likely persist for some time even after the record-long shutdown ends.

“Even if the shutdown ends tomorrow, normal operations will likely fully resume once air traffic controller performance returns to normal levels, which could take some additional time,” Davis said.

He added that the flight reductions “will primarily impact domestic travel,” but that “it is not guaranteed that international travel will be unaffected.”

The recovery period could pose major problems – even “mass chaos,” as Duffy warned Wednesday – given that the Thanksgiving holiday rush is approaching without a shutdown off-ramp in sight.

Senate Democrats have voted 14 times against Republicans’ House-passed Continuing Resolution to keep the government funded, triggering the current shutdown and extending it for a record period of time.

Despite the nonpartisan nature of the CR – which would merely keep federal agencies funded as lawmakers finish up the regular appropriations process – Democrats oppose it because it does not address the pandemic-era expansion of the Obamacare Premium Tax Credit, expiring Dec. 31.

Republicans have refused to guarantee an extension of the costly enhanced subsidies, resulting in the current 37-day stalemate.

“What the Democrats are doing on the government shutdown is genuinely unprecedented,” Vice President J.D. Vance posted on X Thursday, referencing the upcoming aviation travel delays.

“The shutdown has now passed from farce into tragedy, and the consequences of this national emergency fall on every senator and congressman who refuses to open the government,” he warned.

Airports planning to reduce flights Friday include:

Anchorage InternationalHartsfield-Jackson Atlanta InternationalBoston Logan InternationalBaltimore/Washington InternationalCharlotte Douglas InternationalCincinnati/Northern Kentucky InternationalDallas LoveRonald Reagan Washington NationalDenver InternationalDallas/Fort Worth InternationalDetroit Metropolitan Wayne CountyNewark Liberty InternationalFort Lauderdale/Hollywood InternationalHonolulu InternationalHouston HobbyWashington Dulles InternationalGeorge Bush Houston IntercontinentalIndianapolis InternationalNew York John F Kennedy InternationalLas Vegas McCarran InternationalLos Angeles InternationalNew York LaGuardiaOrlando InternationalChicago MidwayMemphis InternationalMiami InternationalMinneapolis/St Paul InternationalOakland InternationalOntario InternationalChicago O’Hare InternationalPortland InternationalPhiladelphia InternationalPhoenix Sky Harbor InternationalSan Diego InternationalLouisville InternationalSeattle/Tacoma InternationalSan Francisco InternationalSalt Lake City InternationalTeterboroTampa International

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Trump Kennedy Center to close for two years; over $250M secured for renovations

Trump Kennedy Center to close for two years; over $250M secured for renovations

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Those hoping to catch a show at the Trump Kennedy Center will only have a few months before it closes for a two-year renovation, President...
House GOP leaders face pushback from own members on funding bill

House GOP leaders face pushback from own members on funding bill

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square As the federal government enters its third day of a partial shutdown, House Republicans are bickering over Senate changes to the $1.2 trillion funding package,...
Lawmakers discuss budget, spending, tax credits as Illinois Senate returns

Lawmakers discuss budget, spending, tax credits as Illinois Senate returns

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois Senate Appropriations Committee chair says greater federal scrutiny of state government spending will not change...
Nearly 2,200 Seattle-area jobs included in latest round of Amazon corporate layoffs

Nearly 2,200 Seattle-area jobs included in latest round of Amazon corporate layoffs

By Brett DavisThe Center Square Amazon is cutting approximately 2,200 corporate roles from the Seattle area as part of the company’s broader 16,000-person global layoff, according to a filing with...
Trump to slash tariffs on Indian imports after deal on Russian oil

Trump to slash tariffs on Indian imports after deal on Russian oil

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump said Monday he would immediately slash tariffs on imports, which could mean lower costs for consumers on goods from the U.S. ally...
IL lawmakers push discount drug legislation to prevent restricted access

IL lawmakers push discount drug legislation to prevent restricted access

By Jim TalamontiThe Center Square Illinois lawmakers are pushing an amendment to ban restrictions or interference with a federal discount drug program. Speaking at a rally in Chicago on Sunday,...
Trump says worldwide tariffs aren't taxes on U.S. consumers

Trump says worldwide tariffs aren’t taxes on U.S. consumers

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump continues to defend his use of tariffs worldwide as businesses await a U.S. Supreme Court ruling on the president’s tariff authority. Trump...
Chicago downtown office space vacancy rate ends year at record high levels

Chicago downtown office space vacancy rate ends year at record high levels

By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Wirepoints Executive Editor Mark Glennon warns Chicago’s dwindling business community could be riding into high-gear after...
Ex-Illinois candidate sides with Vance after Duckworth–Rubio clash

Ex-Illinois candidate sides with Vance after Duckworth–Rubio clash

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Illinois, is facing fresh criticism after Vice President J.D. Vance likened her...
Illinois Quick Hits: Judge rules Cook County misspent $243M

Illinois Quick Hits: Judge rules Cook County misspent $243M

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A circuit court judge has ruled that Cook County spent $243 million in violation of the Illinois...
U.S. power grid holds up in cold; warning issued

U.S. power grid holds up in cold; warning issued

By Alton WallaceThe Center Square The electric grid powering much of the U.S. through a harsh stretch of winter has largely held up, but there is an increasing risk of...
Everyday Economics: The economy expands, but massive transformation masks weakness

Everyday Economics: The economy expands, but massive transformation masks weakness

By Orphe DivounguyThe Center Square The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model is tracking 4.2% real GDP growth in Q4 2025 – a number that screams “strong economy,” powered in part by...
Nationwide redistricting efforts could impact control of Congress

Nationwide redistricting efforts could impact control of Congress

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square As the 2026 midterm elections approach, state legislatures have grappled with fierce mid-decade redistricting efforts in an attempt to give an advantage to their political...
Marijuana, abortion, noncitizen voting on ballots in 2026

Marijuana, abortion, noncitizen voting on ballots in 2026

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Alongside a battle for control of Congress, voters in states across the country will take up ballot initiatives to decide key issues. Citizenship requirements for...
Casey Westfield School Board.1

Casey-Westfield Board Accepts Clean Audit, Notes Dip in Financial Profile Score due to Bonds

Casey-Westfield Board of Education Meeting | Jan. 26, 2026 Article Summary: The Casey-Westfield School Board reviewed the fiscal year 2024 annual financial report, which showed a clean audit with no...