News

The air traffic control crisis is nationwide, but it's most acute at the New York area's second-busiest airport.
Newark Liberty International Airport suffered yet more travel chaos late Wednesday with a temporary ground stoppage due to a worrying lack of air traffic controllers.
A shortage of air traffic controllers, bungled IT management, outdated technology, and a brewing disaster in our airspace.
Moving air traffic controllers means retraining them on the quirks of a new facility, and the process can take years.
Ten days after air traffic controllers lost radar contact with a United Airlines plane approaching New Jersey’s Newark Liberty International Airport, the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA ...
“There was a telecommunications outage that impacted communications and radar display at Philadelphia TRACON Area C, which guides aircraft in and out of Newark Liberty International Airport ...
Runway 4L-22R at Newark airport reopens June 2 — 13 days early $121M rehab project included paving, lighting, drainage upgrades Around-the-clock construction helped accelerate the timeline A ...
Staff shortages and equipment failures at Newark Liberty International Airport have raised safety concerns in recent weeks.
Newark airport is experiencing disruptions because of outdated air traffic control equipment and staffing shortages. The FAA is working on long-term solutions, but travelers should expect ...
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced that flights in and out of Newark Liberty International Airport will be reduced for "the next several weeks" to address persistent radar outages and a ...
The ongoing crisis at Newark Liberty International Airport has put a spotlight on the prolonged nationwide shortage of air traffic controllers. As of May 7, only two of 313 facilities — one in ...