Once is an accident. Twice is a coincidence. And three times, they say, is a trend. So it checks out that there’s a big question on the minds of many U.S. travelers: Why are so many planes crashing?
President Donald Trump invoked Spongebob Squarepants to mock federal employees who are outraged by a Department of Government ...
But after Musk pushed out the head of the FAA and Donald Trump gutted the agency’s safety board, and Musk attempted to push air traffic controllers ... it was named for a meme coin, after ...
And his team is swooping in to upgrade the Federal Aviation Administration’s air-traffic control system after the airplane crash ... Late Thursday, he shared on X a meme of the White House with a sign ...
Emails to air-traffic controllers, according to a second air-safety union president, came “from an ‘exec order’ Microsoft ...
Air traffic controller staffing concerns have intensified in the aftermath of the deadliest American aviation disaster in more than two decades. Sixty-seven people are believed to have died when a ...
More than 130 of the eliminated workers held jobs that directly or indirectly support the air traffic controllers, facilities and technologies that the FAA uses to keep planes and their passengers ...
The National Air Traffic Controllers Association (NATCA) is reviewing the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and its workforce reductions amid concerns about air safety following the deadliest ...
The air traffic controllers union had asked for clarification on whether members were eligible for the federal buyout–and received confirmation days later from a report on CNN. The tower at ...
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has begun firing several hundred Federal Aviation Administration employees, upending staff on a busy air travel weekend and just weeks after a January fatal ...
Steve Forbes lays out key reforms to Air Traffic Control that could prevent horrific accidents like the one that occurred last week at Reagan National Airport. BySteve Forbes, Forbes Staff.
Billy Nolen, a former acting Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) administrator, said Monday that now is the time for air traffic control upgrades. “[One of the things] I’ve testified both ...