FAA Lifts All Flight Cuts at 40 Major US Airports
Which Airports Are Now Fully Operational?
All major hubs are now free of mandatory cuts, including:
- New York area (JFK, LGA, EWR)
- Chicago O’Hare (ORD) & Midway
- Los Angeles (LAX)
- Atlanta (ATL)
- Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW)
- Denver (DEN)
- San Francisco (SFO)
- and 33 additional high-traffic airports across the country
How the Crisis Unfolded – Timeline
| Date | Event | Flight Cut Level |
|---|---|---|
| Nov 7 | Emergency order issued | 4% |
| Nov 8–9 | Peak crisis | Rose to 6% → 2,900+ cancellations on Nov 9 |
| Nov 14 | Shutdown ends → controllers return | Reduced to 3% |
| Nov 16 | Weekend cancellations <1% | Far below required cuts |
| Nov 17 @ 6 AM | All restrictions LIFTED | 0% – Full schedules |
Why the FAA Took Drastic Action
Air traffic controllers – classified as essential workers – were forced to work without pay for over six weeks. Fatigue and stress led to:
- Increased near-miss incidents
- More runway incursions
- Pilot reports of slow or unclear controller responses
The FAA originally warned it might need 10% cuts if the shutdown continued.
Thanksgiving Travel Outlook: Clear Skies Ahead
Airline executives are celebrating the timing:
“With the FAA order fully lifted just one week before Thanksgiving, we expect a strong recovery and smooth operations for the busiest travel period of the year.”
Real-time data from Flight Aware and Cerium shows cancellations already dropped to pre-shutdown levels this weekend.
What Happens Next?
The FAA confirmed it is investigating several airlines for possible non-compliance with the emergency order and may issue fines.
Long-term, the agency plans to accelerate hiring – targeting 9,000 new controllers by 2028 – to prevent future shortages.