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US delays flights in 8 airports because of a shortage of air traffic controllers

U.S. Federal Aviation Administration announced on Friday that it is delaying flights in eight airports, including Atlanta, San Francisco and Houston. The agency cited widespread staffing problems as controllers were not paid during the shutdown. Staffing shortages are reported at 10 different locations in the United States, and could lead to delays at other airports. Separately, the agency required airlines to cancel more than 700 flights or 4% of their flights at 40 airports with high traffic to deal with air traffic control staffing.

According to FAA ground delays programs, flights at Reagan Washington National are delayed on average by 83 minutes, while those at San Francisco, Newark, Austin, and Houston Bush are delayed an average of 52 minutes. Flightwire, an online flight tracking service, reported that more than 2,300 flights were delayed by 12:45 pm EST. Some airlines are concerned that the flight reductions could encourage controllers who were not paid during the shutdown to not show up at work.

The 38-day US government shutdown is the longest ever. It has forced 13,000 airtraffic controllers and 50,000 Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents to work for free.

In an interview with the Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on Friday, he said that he asked the controllers' union to contact controllers and ask them to report to work.

Duffy stated, "I need them come to work." "This is not about you now having a 'get-out-of-jail-free' to not come to work."

The FAA reported this week that between 20% and 40% of controllers do not show up to work every day.

The FAA reported that on October 31, nearly half of America's 30 busiest airports were experiencing a shortage of air traffic control personnel. This led to 6,200 flight delays and 500 cancellations in one of the worst days since the shutdown began. In New York, 80% of the air traffic controllers weren't present. David Shepardson, David Gregorio (Editing and Reporting)

(source: Reuters)