Air travel in the United States plunged into severe disruption on Sunday as airlines canceled over 2,200 flights and delayed tens of thousands more. The turbulence comes amid mounting staff shortages and operational cut-backs at major airports, leaving travellers facing cancelled trips, long waits and uncertainty heading into the busy travel season.
Staffing strain forces widespread cancellations
On Sunday, flight tracker data shows more than 2,200 flights were grounded nationwide, while over 7,500 faced delays. The culprit: a sustained shortage of air-traffic controllers and other essential personnel. In many high-volume hubs, carriers were ordered to reduce operations to ease strain and maintain safety standards.
Major airports bear the brunt
The disruptions were concentrated at large airports with heavy traffic, where capacity reductions are now in place. Agencies have flagged dozens of “high-volume” centres for flight-cut measures to cope with the staff shortfall. Passengers reported long delays, missed connections and the scramble for alternative travel plans as the ripple-effects spread.
What travellers should do now
With cancellations mounting and delays likely to persist, flyers are urged to check their airline’s status in advance, confirm gate changes, arrive at the airport early and consider rebooking earlier flights if possible. Airlines are legally required to refund cancelled flights. The situation may worsen if staffing issues persist, especially ahead of the holiday travel surge.