数千架航班取消或延误,恶劣天气与TSA人员短缺扰乱出行


更新于:2026年3月17日 / 美国东部时间上午11:41 / CBS/美联社

周二,受席卷中西部和东海岸的强风暴影响,航空旅客面临数百架航班取消和数千起延误。许多机场还因政府部分停摆已持续一个多月,导致本就拥挤的安检口人员配置减少,进一步加剧了混乱。

自2月14日开始的部分政府停摆,因国会在移民问题上陷入僵局,导致美国运输安全管理局(TSA)员工的工资发放受阻。据CBS新闻独家获取的数据显示,自停摆开始以来,已有300多名TSA职员辞职,而航班呼叫率增加了一倍多。

TSA数据显示,周一的呼叫率达到了目前为止的最高值,紧随其后的是周日和周六的缺勤人数。

与此同时,随着一年一度的美国大学体育协会(NCAA)男女篮球锦标赛进入高潮,机场挤满了春假旅客和前往观看”疯狂三月”比赛的球迷。

根据航班追踪网站FlightAware的数据,截至周二上午,美国已有超过900架航班被取消,超过2600架航班延误。

周一,包括纽约、芝加哥和亚特兰大在内的美国一些最大机场也出现了航班延误和取消的情况。美国国家气象局表示,这场风暴系统给中西部带来了大雪,正以每小时近50英里的强风向东部海岸推进。

凯利·普莱斯(Kelly Price)在佛罗里达州奥兰多结束家庭度假后,试图返回科罗拉多州的家中。她表示,她周日晚上的航班直到周一才被取消。

“到那时,我们唯一能睡觉的地方就是机场的地板。所以我们都又累又沮丧,”她补充道,称她和家人最早能预订到的另一班航班要到周二下午才能起飞。

FlightAware的数据显示,周一全国范围内的航班取消包括约600架进出芝加哥奥黑尔国际机场的航班、超过470架亚特兰大哈茨菲尔德-杰克逊国际机场的航班以及超过450架纽约拉瓜迪亚机场的航班。

鉴于恶劣天气,美国联邦航空管理局(FAA)下令在哈茨菲尔德-杰克逊和夏洛特道格拉斯国际机场实施地面停飞,并在肯尼迪机场和纽瓦克自由国际机场实施地面延误。

丹妮尔·卡什(Danielle Cash)周日在试图从拉斯维加斯的周末闺蜜旅行返回家乡佛罗里达州坦帕时,被困在圣路易斯。现在,她不得不在一个她没带冬装的雪城市多花几百美元预订酒店房间。

“我离开时坦帕是80度,然后到了拉斯维加斯,”她说,”沙漠里却有90度。”

卡什表示,她现在预订的航班将先飞往田纳西州,最终在周二下午返回坦帕。

政府部分停摆

当前的政府部分停摆仅影响美国国土安全部,其中包括运输安全管理局。

国会民主党人表示,在今年早些时候明尼阿波利斯发生的亚历克斯·普雷蒂(Alex Pretti)和蕾妮·古德(Renee Good)致命枪击事件后,除非对联邦移民行动实施新限制,否则他们不会投票批准国土安全部的资金。

这是不到一年来第三次导致TSA员工暂时无薪的停摆。一旦政府重新开放,员工将不得不等待补发工资。

一些机场报告称,由于人员短缺,安检队伍更长了。更多TSA工作人员开始从事第二份工作、因无力支付油费而无法上班或干脆转行。国土安全部表示,自停摆开始以来,已有300多名TSA特工辞职。

周二上午,亚特兰大哈茨菲尔德-杰克逊国际机场外,TSA工会领导人举行了新闻发布会,警告称随着停摆继续,航空旅客可能面临越来越长的等待时间。尽管如此,工会领导人表示,许多官员仍在财政压力下坚持工作。

“许多TSA工作人员正在应对驱逐通知、车辆被收回、冰箱空空如也和银行账户透支的情况,”美国联邦政府雇员联合会(AFGE)当地负责人亚伦·巴克(Aaron Barker)说。他身后的支持者举着写有”我们要工资,不要空头支票”的标语。

新奥尔良机场周日和周一发出通知,建议乘客至少提前三小时到达机场,”由于联邦政府部分停摆的影响”。德克萨斯州奥斯汀机场则在X平台上分享了一段当地时间早上5:30拍摄的视频,显示安检队伍已延伸到机场外的人行道上。

回到亚特兰大,梅尔·斯图尔特(Mel Stewart)和他的妻子比平时提前四个小时到达哈茨菲尔德-杰克逊机场,以应对更长的TSA安检队伍。

“我认为这被政治化得太过分了——太过分了,”斯图尔特周一谈到停摆时表示,”这些人都在工作。他们工作很努力,而TSA人员却得不到报酬,这太荒谬了。”

克里斯·范·克利夫(Kris Van Cleave)和马克·斯特拉斯曼(Mark Strassmann)对本报道有贡献。

Thousands of flights canceled or delayed as weather and TSA staffing upend travel

Updated on: March 17, 2026 / 11:41 AM EDT / CBS/AP

Air travelers faced hundreds of flight cancellations and thousands of delays on Tuesday in the wake ofpowerful storms that struck the Midwest and Eastern Seaboard. Many airports also continue to struggle with disruption from reduced staffing at often-jammed security checkpoints amid a partial government shutdown that has lasted more than a month.

The partial shutdown that started Feb. 14 has held up paychecks for employees of the Transportation Security Administration as Congress deadlocked over immigration issues. More than 300 TSA staffers have quit since the shutdown began, and call-out rates have more than doubled, according to data obtained exclusively by CBS News.

Monday saw the highest call out rates so far, TSA data show, followed closely by the number of absences on Sunday and Saturday.

At the same time, airports are crowded with spring break travelers and fans heading to March Madness games as the annual NCAA men’s and women’s college basketball tournaments ramp up.

More than 900 U.S. flights have been canceled as of Tuesday morning, and more than 2,600 were delayed, according to flight-tracking site FlightAware.

Flight delays and cancellations also piled up Monday at some of the nation’s largest airports, including those in New York, Chicago and Atlanta. The storm system that dumped heavy snow across the Midwest raced toward the East Coast with high winds reaching gusts near 50 mph in parts of New York, the National Weather Service said.

Kelly Price, who was trying to get home to Colorado after a family vacation in Orlando, Florida, said her Sunday night flight wasn’t canceled until early Monday.

“By that time the only place for us to sleep was the airport floor. So we’re all tired and frustrated,” she said, adding that the soonest she and her family could book another flight doesn’t leave until Tuesday afternoon.

The nationwide cancellations on Monday included about 600 flights in and out of Chicago O’Hare International, more than 470 at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International and over 450 at LaGuardia Airport in New York City, according to FlightAware.

Citing severe weather, the Federal Aviation Administration ordered ground stops at Hartsfield-Jackson and Charlotte Douglas International Airport and ground delays at JFK and Newark Liberty International Airport.

Danielle Cash found herself stranded in St. Louis on Sunday while trying to get home to Tampa, Florida, after a weekend girls’ trip to Las Vegas. Now she’s spending several hundred dollars more than planned on a hotel room in a snowy city she wasn’t dressed for.

“It was 80 degrees in Tampa when I left and then going to Vegas,” she said. “And it was 90 degrees in the desert.”

Cash said she’s now booked on a flight that will take her to Tennessee before finally returning to Tampa by Tuesday afternoon.

Partial government shutdown

The current partial government shutdown affects only the Department of Homeland Security, which includes the Transportation Security Administration.

Democrats in Congress have said they won’t vote for funding Homeland Security until new restrictions are placed on federal immigration operations following the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good in Minneapolis earlier this year.

It is the third shutdown in less than a year to leave TSA workers temporarily without pay. Once the government reopens, employees will have to wait for back pay.

Some airports have reported longer security lines because of staffing shortages as more TSA workers take on second jobs, can’t afford gas to get to work or leave the profession altogether. Homeland Security has said more than 300 TSA agents have quit since the start of the shutdown.

TSA union leaders in Atlanta held a news conference Monday outside Hartsfield-Jackson, warning that air travelers could face increasingly long wait times as the shutdown continues. Even so, union leaders said, many officers are still reporting to work despite mounting financial strain.

Many TSA workers “are coping with eviction notices, vehicle repossessions, empty refrigerators and overdrawn bank accounts,” said Aaron Barker, a local leader with the American Federation of Government Employees. Supporters behind him held signs reading, “We want a paycheck, not a rain check.”

Travelers flying out of New Orleans on Sunday and Monday were advised to arrive at least three hours early “due to impacts from the federal government’s partial shutdown,” Louis Armstrong International Airport said on X. And the airport in Austin, Texas, shared a video on X taken at 5:30 a.m. local time showing the security line spilling out onto the sidewalk outside.

Back in Atlanta, Mel Stewart and his wife arrived four hours earlier than usual for their flight out of Hartsfield-Jackson to make up for longer TSA lines.

“I think it’s being politicized way too much — way too much,” Stewart said Monday of the shutdown. “And these people are working. They work hard, and for TSA people not to get paid, that’s silly.”

Kris Van Cleave and Mark Strassmann contributed to this report.

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