Airlines warn flight reductions could cost U.S. economy
Flight delays and cancelations are frustrating Americans and could be costing the U.S. economy millions of dollars each day, according to a new report from U.S. airlines as the government shutdown continues.
Airlines for America, the trade group for U.S. airlines, said controller staffing issues contributed to 61% of National Airspace System delay minutes from Nov. 7-9. That’s up from 47% in the first six days of November, 16% in October and 5% in the first nine months of 2025, according to the trade group.
Staffing shortages disrupted 5.2 million airline passengers from Oct. 1 through Nov. 9, according to the group.
Republicans have blamed Democrats for the shutdown and Democrats have blamed Republicans. The shutdown started when Congress failed to pass spending bills to keep the government open by Sept. 30.
Airlines for America members canceled just 11 flights due to controller staffing issues from Oct. 1 to Oct. 29. However, from Oct. 30 to Nov. 9, controller staffing issues caused them to cancel 4,162 flights, including 3,756 from Nov. 7-9.
The group said 60% of the Nov. 7-9 staffing-related cancellations resulted from the FAA-mandated flight reductions at 40 major U.S. airports.
The costs for the airline industry are expected to continue as Congress looks to end the shutdown and reopen the federal government.
Airlines for America said that when the Federal Aviation Administration flight-reduction order reaches 10% on Nov. 14, the group estimates a daily average U.S. economic impact of between $285 million and $580 million.
“The estimate is tied solely to compliance with the flight-reduction directive; it does not include the ongoing staffing issues during the shutdown, the costs associated with value of passenger time, reduced bookings, passenger refunds, etc.,” the group noted. “It does, however, include indirect and induced impacts tied to reduced visitor spending, state and local tax revenue and spending across the broader economy as individuals within and outside the aviation supply chain curtail expenditures.”
Airlines for America said even passengers who make it where they want to go face long departure delays, extended tarmac times, and highly unpredictable arrival times.
“The staffing crisis has triggered broad secondary impacts – including late aircraft arrivals, crew legality issues, and equipment mispositioning – all of which prolong recovery, which will become worse as the directive phases up to 10% flight reductions,” the group asid. “Unlike weather-driven disruptions which carriers can prepare for, each controller shift change or facility staffing trigger adds hours of delay with no advance notice, undermining the airlines’ ability to plan, staff or protect customers.”
Latest News Stories
WATCH: Justice Kennedy talks about ‘Life, Law & Liberty’
WA congressman urges Senate to confirm Trump DOJ nominee ahead of Dec. 4 deadline
Judge who blocked Trump was major Democrat player as trial lawyer
Arizona recommends measles vaccine during outbreak
Govt. shutdown leads to over 800 flights cancelled, number growing
Illinois approves $1.5B transit package, funding for long-delayed projects
Supreme Court allows Trump to withhold partial SNAP payment
Illinois quick hits: State EPA looks to fund EV charging stations; Tax Foundation says mayor’s proposal would hinder employment;
Casey Council Approves Over $2.45 Million in Bills, Renews $1.6 Million in CDs
Congressional Perks: Committees, caucuses cost $50 million since 2019
FAA funding problems hit airports in California, elsewhere
Judge bars ICE from acting against ‘protestors,’ ‘rapid response’ activists