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US spending deal provides funding for 2,500 new air traffic controllers, $2.4 billion for Amtrak

By Thomson Reuters Jan 20, 2026 | 7:27 AM

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, Jan 20 (Reuters) – A bipartisan spending deal announced by U.S. lawmakers Tuesday provides funding for 2,500 air traffic controllers and $2.4 billion for U.S. passenger ‍railroad Amtrak, while cutting funds for electric vehicle charging and high-speed rail.

The congressional funding deal also includes $514 million to subsidize air services to rural communities, known as the Essential Air Service program, rejecting a White House proposal to cut the program by 50%, and boosts ‌annual funding to modernize air traffic control ‌towers by $824 million.

The budget bill provides $2 million for an independent study on the airspace in the Washington, D.C. area after a January 2025 crash between a U.S. Army helicopter and American Airlines passenger jet ​killed 67 people and exposed significant weaknesses in aviation safety.

The Federal Aviation Administration is about 3,500 air traffic controllers short ‍of targeted staffing levels, with many ​working mandatory overtime and six-day weeks. Congress last ​year approved $12.5 billion to modernize the aging U.S. air traffic ‍control system, but Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy wants another $19 billion to complete the project.

The bill also redirects $879 million in electric vehicle charging network funds approved under then-President Joe Biden to other infrastructure priorities, and cuts $928 million in high-speed rail grants. It ‍also provides $100 million for supplemental support for transit agencies in the 11 U.S. host cities for the 2026 FIFA World Cup and $94 ‍million for transportation ‍assistance relating to the 2028 Olympic Games.

The bill ​also rejects a funding cut proposed for ​the Transportation ⁠Security Administration by the White House, which ‌had sought a 3-4% cut to TSA staffing levels — with half to stop staffing exit lanes that let people re-enter public areas from secure parts of an airport. The budget includes $300 million to fund exit-lane staffing.

(Reporting by David Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Andrew Heavens ⁠and Peter Graff)