Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy says he plans to reduce the number of flights in and out of Newark's airport for the ''next several weeks'' as it struggles with radar outages and other issues, including another Sunday that again slowed air traffic.
Speaking on NBC's ''Meet the Press" that aired Sunday, Duffy said he will meet this week with all major carriers flying through Newark Liberty International, New Jersey's largest airport. He said the number of flight cutbacks would fluctuate by time of day with most targeting afternoon hours when international arrivals make the airport busier.
In addition to equipment outages, the airport has been been beset by flight delays and cancellations brought on by a shortage of air traffic controllers.
''We want to have a number of flights that if you book your flight, you know it's going to fly, right?'' he said. ''That is the priority. So you don't get to the airport, wait four hours, and then get delayed.''
The Federal Aviation Administration reported a ''telecommunications issue'' as the latest setback Sunday, impacting a facility in Philadelphia that directs planes in and out of Newark airport. An FAA statement said the agency briefly slowed air traffic to and from the airport while ensuring ''redundancies were working as designed'' before normal operations resumed.
Infrastructure issues are increasingly a key concern at airports around the country.
In an unrelated incident, hundreds of flights were delayed Sunday at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport — one of the world's busiest — because of a runway equipment issue. The FAA said in a statement that it temporarily slowed arrivals into Atlanta while technicians worked to address the problem.
In Newark, Sunday's disruptions came two days after radar at the Philadelphia facility went black for 90 seconds at 3:55 a.m. Friday, an episode that was similar to an incident on April 28.