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Trump fires hundreds of FAA air traffic control staff just weeks after deadly plane crash

Dismissals raise concerns over air traffic safety, staff shortages after recent fatal collision at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport

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The air traffic control tower after the American Airlines crash at the Reagan National Airport on February 03, 2025 in Arlington, Virginia. Photo: AFP

The Trump administration began firing several hundred Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) employees, upending staff on a busy air travel weekend and just weeks after a January fatal mid-air collision at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.

Probationary workers were targeted in late night emails on Friday notifying them they had been fired, David Spero, president of the Professional Aviation Safety Specialists union, said in a statement.

The affected workers include personnel hired for FAA radar, landing and navigational aid maintenance, one air traffic controller said. The air traffic controller was not authorised to talk to the media and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Spero said messages began arriving after 7pm on Friday and continued late into the night. More might be notified over the long weekend or barred from entering FAA buildings on Tuesday, he said.

Recovery teams lift the mangled remains of a military helicopter that crashed mid-air with an American Airlines commercial aeroplane from the Potomac River as an American Airlines plane passes by on February 6. Photo: AFP
Recovery teams lift the mangled remains of a military helicopter that crashed mid-air with an American Airlines commercial aeroplane from the Potomac River as an American Airlines plane passes by on February 6. Photo: AFP

The employees were fired “without cause nor based on performance or conduct”, Spero said, and the emails were “from an ‘exec order’ Microsoft email address” – not a government email address.

The firings hit the FAA when it faces a shortfall in controllers. Federal officials had been raising concerns about an overtaxed and understaffed air traffic control system for years, especially after a series of close calls between planes at US airports.

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