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FAA lifts all remaining flight cuts imposed during shutdown

Allyson Versprille / Bloomberg
Allyson Versprille / Bloomberg • 2 min read
FAA lifts all remaining flight cuts imposed during shutdown
The US Transportation Department and Federal Aviation Administration announced late Sunday they would lift cuts across 40 major US airports
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(Nov 17): US airlines will be able to resume normal operations starting Monday (Nov 14) after more than a week of government-mandated flight reductions.

The US Transportation Department and Federal Aviation Administration announced late Sunday they would lift cuts across 40 major US airports that were imposed during the government shutdown, starting from 6am Monday New York time. On Friday, officials earlier eased up on flight reductions, capping them at 3% from 6%.

“Today’s decision to rescind the order reflects the steady decline in staffing concerns across the national airspace system and allows us to return to normal operations,” FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said in the statement.

The cuts first went into effect on Nov 7 at a rate of 4% and were supposed to slowly increase to 10% by Nov 14. However, the government froze the rate at 6% Wednesday, shortly before President Donald Trump signed legislation to end the longest federal closure in US history.

Bedford and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy have said reducing flight capacity was necessary to ease strain on air traffic controllers, who were working without pay during the shutdown.

Staffing levels have continued to “snap back” into place since the shutdown ended, they said in the statement. The positive trend continued over the weekend, with six staffing triggers on Friday, eight on Saturday and only one staffing trigger on Sunday. That’s in contrast to a record high of 81 staffing triggers on Nov 8, according to the statement.

See also: Foreign holdings of US Treasuries near record high in September

Even before the order was lifted, data from aviation analytics company Cirium seems to indicate airlines weren’t cutting all of the flights mandated by the government over the weekend.

According to Cirium, just 0.25% of flights were cancelled Sunday at the 40 airports that were included in the FAA’s order.

The termination of the emergency order also lifts restrictions on general aviation operators at some airports and frees up commercial space launches and re-entries.

Uploaded by Arion Yeow

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