FAA closes probe into airline compliance with shutdown flight cuts

May 19, 2026 12:18 PM EDT

A pilot carries a suitcase and a coffee cup while walking past travelers near a Chicago Blackhawks logo as flight delays persist amid FAA measures more than a month into the ongoing U.S. government shutdown, at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago, I

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, May ‌19 (Reuters) - The Federal ​Aviation ​Administration told Congress late Monday it closed its investigation into airlines that did not comply with required flight cuts at ‌40 major airports during the 2025 government shutdown without seeking ⁠any fines.

FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said in written responses to questions from senators seen by ‌Reuters that after sending letters ‌of investigation to airlines on apparent noncompliance, the agency determined "all airlines except one were in substantial compliance with the restrictions." One unnamed ​airline not in compliance "received an administrative warning," Bedford added.

The FAA in November vowed to gradually require a 10% reduction in domestic flights at ⁠the 40 high-traffic U.S. airports during the 43-day government shutdown, citing safety concerns.

Airlines for America, which ​represents American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Southwest Airlines and others, did not immediately comment.

The FAA opted on ​November 12 to freeze cuts at 6% ‌as disruptions declined dramatically as the federal shutdown came to an end. The FAA then dropped the required cuts ⁠to 3% before lifting them entirely.

Data from Cirium, an aviation analytics firm, showed airlines repeatedly failed to comply with the flight cut requirements and on the final ⁠full day canceled just 0.25% of flights at those 40 airports — less than normal ​cancellations — and far less than the 3% required.

The order said the FAA could seek a fine of up to $75,000 for every flight operated above the mandated limits.

The ‌agency originally ordered flight cuts to minimize travel disruptions caused by shortages of air traffic controllers during the federal ‌shutdown, when many of them stopped coming to work because they were ⁠not being paid.

Absences of air ‌traffic controllers led to tens ​of thousands of flight cancellations and delays after October 1, when the shutdown began.

(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by ‌Aurora Ellis)



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