
Trump Transportation Secretary Duffy blames Newark airport chaos on Biden admin — and has chilling warning for how long it might take to fix
Duffy said his predecessor, Pete Buttigieg, failed to oversee a smooth transition of Newark's airspace to the troubled Philadelphia Terminal Radar Approach Control (Tracon), in July 2024, creating problems that caused chaos on Friday and Sunday when air traffic control equipment experienced outages.
Duffy said his team installed a software update that allows will allow a backup data feed to prevent terrifying full outages of radar and communications — which have happened twice in recent weeks.
3 United Airline planes are seen at the gate at Newark Liberty International Airport in Newark, New Jersey on May 7, 2025.
AFP via Getty Images
3 Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announces a new air traffic control infrastructure plan, Thursday, May 8, 2025, in Washington.
AP
He said he is working with Verizon and L3Harris to speed up the installation of additional fiber optic data feeds between New York and the Philly Tracon, which would also buttress the system.
That, fix, however, will not happen until the end of May at the earliest.
Additionally, Duffy faulted the 'Biden-Buttegieg administration' for failing to upgrade the Philly Tracon with the modern Standard Terminal Automation Replacement System (STARS) — which is used at major air traffic control centers around the US, including in New York.
3 Duffy blamed the Biden administration for the mishaps at Newark Airport.
REUTERS
A STARS system will be added to Philly, but Duffy did not say how long that will take.
The transportation secretary added that he will be meeting with all major airlines on Wednesday to schedule reduced traffic at the New Jersey airport, with officials saying arrivals would be reduced to 56 per hour, down from up to 80.
'Families shouldn't have to wait four or fire hours for flights that never take off,' Duffy said.
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Chicago Tribune
2 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Russian and US space chiefs meet to discuss continued cooperation
MOSCOW — Russia's space chief has visited the United States to discuss plans for continued cooperation between Moscow and Washington on the International Space Station and lunar research with NASA's acting chief, the first such face-to-face meeting in more than seven years. Dmitry Bakanov, the director of the state space corporation Roscosmos, met Thursday with NASA's new acting administrator, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, on a visit to attend the planned launch of a U.S.-Japanese-Russian crew to the space station. The launch was delayed by weather until Friday, when it blasted off successfully. Roscosmos said Bakanov and Duffy discussed 'further work on the International Space Station, cooperation on lunar programs, joint exploration of deep space and continued cooperation on other space projects.' Once bitter rivals in the space race during the Cold War, Roscosmos and NASA cooperated on the space station and other projects. That relationship was beset with tensions after Moscow sent troops into Ukraine in 2022, but Washington and Moscow have continued to work together, with U.S. and Russian crews continuing to fly to the orbiting outpost on each country's spacecraft. Plans for broader cooperation, including possible Russian involvement in NASA's Artemis program of lunar research, have fallen apart. As Russia has become increasingly reliant on China for its energy exports and imports of key technology amid Western sanctions, Roscosmos has started cooperation with China on its prospective lunar mission. Speaking to Russian reporters after the talks with Duffy, Bakanov said that they agreed to keep working on keeping the space station in operation to the end of the decade. 'Our experts will now start working on those issues in details,' Bakanov said, praising Duffy for giving a green light for those contacts 'despite geopolitical tensions.' The Russian space chief added that he and Duffy will report the results of the meeting to Russian President Vladimir Putin and President Donald Trump to secure their blessing for potential space cooperation. 'In view of the difficult geopolitical situation, we will need to receive the necessary clearance from the leaders of our countries,' Bakanov said. He added he invited Duffy to visit Moscow and the Russia-leased Baikonur launch facility in Kazakhstan for the launch of another Russia-U.S. crew to the space station scheduled for November. 'I will put my efforts into keeping the channel of cooperation between Russia and the U.S. open, and I expect NASA to do the same,' Bakanov said.


UPI
5 hours ago
- UPI
Federal agency revokes $26M for D.C.-Baltimore maglev train
A maglev (magnetically levitating) train approaches its terminus in Shanghai, China, in 2008. U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced Friday he will revoke a $26 million grant to Maryland for a maglev train from D.C. to Baltimore. File Photo by Qilai Shen/EPA Aug. 1 (UPI) -- U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced Friday that the Federal Railroad Administration will cancel two grants totaling more than $26 million for the Baltimore-Washington maglev project. The department's press release about the Superconducting Magnetic Levitation Project said it has seen "nearly a decade of poor planning, significant community opposition, tremendous cost overruns, and nothing to show for it." The release called the project a "boondoggle." As part of its analysis, the FRA also determined the project would result in "significant, unresolvable impacts to federal agencies and federal property, including national security agencies," the release said. "We want big, beautiful projects worthy of taxpayer dollars -- including high-speed rail. This project lacked everything needed to be a success from planning to execution. This project did not have the means to go the distance, and I can't in good conscience keep taxpayers on the hook for it," Duffy said in a statement. "We'll continue to look for exciting opportunities to fund the future of transportation and encourage innovation." The Northeast Maglev would eventually connect Washington, D.C., and New York City. The train would be able travel at speeds of more than 300 mph to make the trip one hour long. Maglev is a system of rail transport whose rolling stock is levitated by electromagnets rather than rolled on wheels, eliminating rolling resistance. Compared with conventional railways, maglev trains have higher top speeds, superior acceleration and deceleration, lower maintenance costs, improved gradient handling, and lower noise. But they are more expensive to build, cannot use existing infrastructure, and use more energy at high speeds. Indirect effects of this project also would impair critical infrastructure and ongoing agency missions, the release said. Government agencies harmed by this project would have included: the National Security Agency, U.S. Department of Defense and Fort George G. Meade, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, U.S Department of Agriculture, U.S. Secret Service, U.S. Department of Interior -- Fish and Wildlife Service and National Park Service, and the U.S. Department of Labor. In 2015, the federal government gave Maryland a grant of $27.8 million to study a high-speed maglev train line that could connect Baltimore and Washington, D.C., in 15 minutes. Duffy is now canceling that grant. The funding for such a grant was authorized in 2005, when Congress set aside $90 million for maglev projects. In 2021, China unveiled a maglev train that it said can travel 373 mph. In July 2020, the government said it planned to build a network with as many as nine maglev lines that include 620 miles of track.


New York Post
8 hours ago
- New York Post
Biden slams Trump as ‘existential' threat to Black Americans in speech at Chicago lawyers gala
Former President Joe Biden took a number of potshots at President Donald Trump addressing the National Bar Association's100th annual gala at the Hyatt in Chicago on Thursday evening, saying his successor's administration is engaged in an 'existential' fight with minority communities. 'Not since those tumultuous days in 1960s has this fight been so existential to who we are as a nation, with marginalized groups so dramatically under attack,' said Biden, who spoke before being presented with the organization's C. Francis Stradford Award, named for a co-founder of the historically Black legal association. Advertisement 'My friends, we need to face the hard truth of this administration, and that it has been to ease all the gains we've made in my administration,' Biden continued. 'To erase history rather than making it. To erase fairness, equality, to erase justice itself. And that's not hyperbole. That's a fact.' 'Get ready folks, this is just starting,' he added. Raising his voice, Biden said, 'Folks, in all our lives, the life of our nation, there are moments so stark that they divide all that came before from everything that followed, moments that forced us to confront hard truths about ourselves, our institutions, and democracy itself.' Advertisement 8 Former President Biden took a number of potshots at President Donald Trump addressing the National Bar Association's100th annual gala. AFP via Getty Images 'We are, in my view, at such a moment in American history, reflected in every cruel executive outreach, every rollback of basic freedoms, every erosion of long-standing, established precedent,' he said. Biden also cast himself as a long-time ally of the civil rights movement, touting how his administration appointed more Black women to U.S. courts of appeals 'than every other president in American history combined.' He called for resistance against the Trump administration, especially emphasizing the role of the courts. Advertisement 8 Former President Biden and his son Hunter Biden. AFP via Getty Images 'Judges matter, courts matter, the law matters and the Constitution matters. I think a lot of Americans are starting to realize that under the pressure under now with this guy we have as president,' he said. He also took jabs at Congress and the Supreme Court, saying, 'they're doing it all too often with the help of a Congress that is just sitting on the sidelines and enabled by the highest court in the nation. The rulings they've made, my god.' 'He seems to be doing his best to dismantle the Constitution,' he went on. 'These are dark days, but you're all here for the same reason I left that prestigious law firm to go to the defender's office years ago. It's because our future is literally on the line and we must be unapologetic of fighting for the future.' Advertisement 8 Raising his voice, Biden said, 'Folks, in all our lives, the life of our nation, there are moments so stark that they divide all that came before from everything that followed.' REUTERS The former president's speech was free of major gaffes, though he slurred and stumbled over his words at several points. At one point in the speech he joked, 'When I was elected, I had the dubious distinction to be elected the youngest senator in American history and the oldest president in American history. It's hell turning 40 twice.' Among the featured speakers were a host of high-profile Black lawyers, including far-left Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford, Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, MSNBC pundit Joy-Ann Reid and New York Attorney General Letitia James. 8 President Trump speaking at an executive order signing ceremony in the White House. Getty Images 'President Biden's life and leadership reflect an unwavering commitment to the rule of law and the promise of justice for all,' National Bar Association President Wiley Adams said in a statement. '[I]t is not only historic but also deeply meaningful to have the 46th President of the United States join us in honoring the transformative power of the law—and the enduring fight to protect our democracy,' he said. The former president's address comes two months after his son Hunter agreed to a voluntary disbarment stemming from drug use and alleged gun law violations. Advertisement 8 Blacks For Trump protest in Miami. Michele Eve Sandberg / Shutterstock The president took the stage the same month his son made waves in the public eye. Earlier in July, Hunter Biden sat for a marathon interview from the Delaware Valley, in which he attacked President Donald Trump and many top Democratic figures, including David Axelrod, and spoke about his former addiction to crack cocaine. In a case that occurred in the same area where the interview took place, a gun registered to Hunter Biden had been found in a dumpster a short distance from the A.I. duPont school in Greenville, Delaware. Advertisement Hallie Biden, widow of former Delaware Attorney General Joseph Beau Biden III and then-girlfriend of Hunter Biden, discovered the gun in her boyfriend's possession and disposed of it there. Edward Banner of Newport, Delaware, had been rummaging through the dumpster for bottle deposits to cash-in and discovered the gun. He was later called to testify in the case. 8 The former president's address comes two months after his son Hunter agreed to a voluntary disbarment stemming from drug use and alleged gun law violations. REUTERS During the registration of that weapon, Hunter Biden swore on a federal form that he was not actively using controlled substances – a declaration that led to a criminal case in Wilmington that eventually led to his disbarment. Advertisement In June 2024, District of Columbia Judge Anna Blackburne-Rigsby signed an order automatically suspending his license to practice law in Washington. Hunter Biden filed a sealed affidavit in April consenting to his disbarment, which avoided a court hearing on the matter. The speech also came just hours after longtime Biden aide Michael Donilon testified to House Oversight Committee investigators that he could have been paid a total of $8 million if the former president won his 2024 re-election bid, a source familiar with the conversation told Fox News Digital. Amidst allegations that close Biden allies covered up his mental decline while president, Donilon told the committee that 'every President ages over the four years of a presidency and President Biden did as well, but he also continued to grow stronger and wiser as a leader as a result of being tested by some of the most difficult challenges any President has ever faced.' Advertisement 8 Mike Donilon, senior advisor to President Biden. Getty Images 8 Hunter Biden filed a sealed affidavit in April consenting to his disbarment, which avoided a court hearing on the matter. Getty Images The National Bar Association, now based in Washington, D.C., was formed in Iowa at a time when the predominant American Bar Association barred Black attorneys from joining its ranks. Its approximately 66,000 members advocate for civil rights and diversity in the legal profession as well as equitable access to the law. The National Bar Association said Biden's appearance 'underscores his ongoing efforts to strengthen the rule of law, defend voting rights, and support historically marginalized communities.'