TravelAbout Your Trip…What's going on: If you have a flight coming up, brace yourself — the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) says passengers can expect more delays this week (yes, more than usual). Thank the government shutdown. Staffing shortages are stretching already overworked air traffic controllers, many of whom are still expected to work without pay as “essential” employees. Some have started calling out sick — and honestly, who can blame them? The staffing shortages have already rocked at least six airports, including Chicago and Houston, the FAA reported. At Burbank Airport near Los Angeles, flights didn’t take off until 1 am Tuesday, with average delays hitting 2.5 hours. One reason? There were exactly zero workers to man the air traffic control tower, per Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA). What it means: Analysts say the delays will continue — and so will the sick calls. (Air traffic controllers are expected to miss their first paycheck on Oct 14.) One thing their union president wants to make clear? Blame Washington, not the workers. If things get worse, the FAA may implement a plan that slows air traffic even further for safety reasons — meaning more cancellations are likely ahead. And some airlines have warned they could scale back their operations if the shutdown continues. In the meantime, if you’re flying this week, maybe pack an extra book… or three. Related: The Real Winner in Clear and TSA’s Speed Rivalry? Travelers (WSJ Gift Link) |