Chemical Odour at DC Air Traffic Control Triggers Mass Flight Ground Stop

Flight operations in the Washington, DC region have resumed after a reported chemical odour at the Potomac TRACON facility in Virginia forced a temporary ground stop. The incident, which affected major airports including Reagan National and Dulles, was traced to an overheated circuit board that was replaced. The disruption caused widespread cancellations and delays, with passengers stranded for hours with limited information. While the site is now safe and delays are decreasing, travel schedules are expected to remain volatile through the weekend.

Key Points: DC Flight Chaos After Chemical Odour at Control Centre

  • Ground stop lifted after HAZMAT clearance
  • Overheated circuit board caused the odour
  • Reagan National hardest hit with 136+ cancellations
  • Delays peaked at over 3.5 hours
3 min read

DC flight operations resume after "chemical odour" at air traffic control centre triggers massive ground stop

A chemical odour at a key Virginia air traffic facility caused a massive ground stop, cancelling and delaying hundreds of flights across DC-area airports.

"Two hours go by, we're still on the runway - no updates - Kristen Rodrigues"

Washington, DC, March 14

Flight operations across the Washington, DC region resumed following a temporary suspension triggered by reports of a "chemical odour" at a key air traffic control facility.

In a post on X on Friday, US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy confirmed the resolution of the incident, stating, "The ground stop is over and operations have resumed."

He further noted that emergency services had cleared the site, adding, "Firefighters from Fauquier County and Prince William County confirm there is no danger to air traffic controllers."

The disruption initially threw air travel across the region into chaos, halting arrivals and departures at several major hubs. According to Duffy, "The temporary ground stop affected Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA), Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD), Baltimore-Washington International Airport (BWI) and Richmond International Airport (RIC)."

Following the safety clearance, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) downgraded the emergency status to ground delays, with authorities confirming that services are gradually returning to regular schedules.

Providing further context on X, Secretary Duffy explained that the disruptions stemmed from the "temporary closure of a crucial air traffic control centre in Virginia" after "FAA employees reported a strong chemical smell in the building."

This facility, Potomac TRACON in Warrenton, manages the airspace for the entire region.

Emergency services and a HAZMAT team eventually found that the issue was "traced to a circuit board that had overheated and was subsequently replaced". Following the repairs, over 30 FAA staff members were medically assessed and cleared to return to their posts.

Despite the site being deemed safe, the fallout has been extensive. CNN reported that flight cancellations are beginning to "tick upward" as crews exceed their legal working hour limits. Reagan National has been the hardest hit, recording over 136 cancellations and 300 delays.

According to CNN, travellers were seen "sprawled out on the floor" on Friday evening as they awaited updates. The network further reported that many passengers are relying on their mobile devices for information, as airline staff are broadly citing an "air traffic control issue" without further detail.

One passenger, Kristen Rodrigues, described a frustrating ordeal to CNN, explaining that she remained on the tarmac for three hours before being returned to the terminal.

"Two hours go by, we're still on the runway - no updates - and I could see that the pilots are pretty frustrated," Rodrigues said, noting she had only received two official notifications from her carrier throughout the afternoon.

While the ground stop has been lifted, the recovery process remains slow. Data indicates that delays at Reagan reached over three and a half hours, while Dulles and Baltimore saw hold-ups of three hours and two and a half hours, respectively.

By late Friday night, average delay times decreased to approximately 90 minutes. However, travel schedules across the DC area are expected to remain volatile through the weekend.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Feel so bad for the passengers stuck on the tarmac for hours. Been there during fog delays in Delhi. The lack of communication from airlines is the worst part. At least they found the issue quickly.
A
Arjun K
A single control centre for a whole region? That seems like a major single point of failure. In India, we have multiple ATC centres for redundancy. Hopefully the FAA learns from this and decentralizes.
S
Sarah B
The real heroes are the ATC staff who went back to work after medical clearance. That's dedication. Travel disruptions are terrible, but safety first is always the right call.
V
Vikram M
With all respect to the US systems, if this happened in India, the media would have a field day blaming "chalta hai" attitude. Here, a simple fault grounded a major hub. Shows these tech glitches are a global problem, not just an Indian one.
K
Kavya N
The cascading effect is scary. Crew duty hours exceeded, leading to more cancellations. This is why direct, honest communication from airlines is so important. Passengers can handle the truth better than silence.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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