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Flyers should expect unpaid air traffic controllers to call in sick more often as the government shutdown continues, a veteran air traffic controller told Forbes, as the stress of working without pay in a critically understaffed agency has become “untenable.”
An FAA air traffic control advisory issued just before 9:30 a.m. EDT noted likely ground stops or ground delays at six U.S. airports Wednesday—Miami, Boston, San Francisco, New York’s LaGuardia, Newark and Washington D.C.’s Reagan National—mainly due to weather.
Earlier advisories issued at 5 a.m. and 7:45 a.m. EDT Wednesday morning included a “staffing trigger”—indicating an inadequate personnel level threshold—for Philadelphia International Airport.
Six FAA facilities—Boston, Chicago, Houston, Las Vegas, Nashville and Philadelphia—saw staffing shortages Tuesday afternoon, according to a previous advisory.
The FAA issued a ground delay for Nashville International Airport Tuesday afternoon and evening due to a staffing shortage, which led to flight delays of more than two hours.
A dozen FAA facilities saw similar staffing triggers Monday evening.
The air traffic control tower at Hollywood Burbank Airport in Los Angeles was temporarily unmanned Monday and a number of flights were delayed or canceled due to staffing shortages, the Los Angeles Times reported.
The National Air Traffic Controllers Association has warned its 19,000 members that organized “sick outs” are illegal. But union officials and individual air traffic controllers have told Forbes that missed paychecks will add to the toll of working in an already strained system. “Not paying the understaffed controllers we already have, and then getting upset they find this added stress untenable, is idiotic,” a veteran air traffic controller working at a major East Coast airport told Forbes on Tuesday. “Missing even one [paycheck] is a cause of stress—stress they don’t need and you don’t want controlling your airplanes. This will only get worse and escalate the longer this shutdown continues.”
“The air traffic system, in general, is stressed to the max,” the veteran air traffic controller told Forbes, adding “sickouts will continue to happen because the [controllers] aren’t fit for duty.”
Air traffic controllers, like Transportation Security Administration officers at airport screening checkpoints, are “excepted” from furloughs and work without pay during the shutdown. By law, they will have their back-pay restored after the shutdown ends—although President Donald Trump suggested Tuesday that might not happen. Air traffic controllers are scheduled to receive a partial paycheck on Tuesday, Oct. 14, and a zero paycheck two weeks later, Nick Daniels, president of the 19,000-member National Air Traffic Controllers Association, told Forbes.
During the last shutdown, which stretched for 35 days from December 2018 to January 2019, the longtime shortage of air traffic controllers led to increased absenteeism, which in turn led to flight delays. For example, after a missed paycheck in January 2019, six air traffic controllers called in sick in New York, leading to more than 600 flights delayed at LaGuardia Airport that day, CBS News reported. Disruptions at multiple airports reportedly led Trump to agree to end the shutdown.