The Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) has urged Congress to end the government shutdown and ensure reliable funding for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to prevent staffing shortages and safety risks in the U.S. aviation system. The association made this announcement on X, emphasizing the critical need for continuous FAA funding.
A lapse in federal funding can significantly impact aviation operations, where continuity, certification, and staffing pipelines rely on timely appropriations. Reports concerning the impending 2025 shutdown indicated that the FAA might furlough over 11,000 employees—approximately a quarter of its workforce—while air traffic controllers and Transportation Security Administration (TSA) staff would work without pay. This situation could exacerbate existing controller shortages. For travelers and shippers, operational resilience depends on predictable funding that maintains safety inspectors, technical operations, and modernization programs—a stance supported by stakeholders who prioritize stable service over brinkmanship.
According to ALPA's post, the U.S. aviation network handles 2.9 million passengers and 59,000 tons of cargo daily. Interruptions in staffing, training, or inspection schedules could lead to backlogs that persist beyond a funding lapse, increasing the risk of schedule disruptions and deferred improvements. The union's call for "reliable FAA funding to prevent staffing shortages" frames the issue as one of continuity and safety stewardship. This aligns with industry preferences for steady budgets that protect throughput and consumer confidence.